🍵HANGING THE MOSS🌱
Just as people are beginning to take down their New Year decorations, a bundle of green appears in the tea room.
Known in English as ground pine, wolf’s-foot clubmoss and stag’s-horn clubmoss, 'hikage-no-kazura' (日陰蔓) will adorn the alcove for a few weeks.
With the spread of Omicron, we've put our official Hatsugama (初釜 first tea ceremony of the year) on hold😑...but rather than feeling glum, we've been toasting the fresh year here in the office with Nijō Wakasaya's (二條若狭屋) 'New Year Amabie' (アマビエ~ニューイヤー~) 🥳🎉
Nijō Wakasaya's seasonal Amabie-themed sweets have been a constant delight throughout the pandemic.
➡️@616wakasaya
'New Year Amabie' mimics a kagami mochi (鏡餅)🍊🤣
A previous thread about the disease-deflecting 'deity' Amabie⬇️
in the eaves
the remnants still cling...
blooming New Year's herbs
雨だれの名ごりおしさよ花わかな
-小林一茶.
Hikage-no-kazura is considered a symbol of strength and vitality...an apt display in this season, when thoughts turn to fresh beginnings.
Photo- ameblo.jp/nanakoarikawa/
The plant features in the story of Amaterasu (天照大神), the 'Sun Goddess', hiding away in the 'Heavenly Rock Cave'.
Her brother Susanoo (須佐之男), 'God of the Sea & Storms', attempted (unsuccessfully) to drag her out by ensnaring her long sleeves in hikage-no-kazura (日陰鬘).
It's recorded that hikage-no-kazura was used originally to adorn the hair of the dancers that performed in the palace harvest celebrations in the 11th month.
4 or 5 unmarried women from noble families participated in the Gosechi Dances (五節舞).
In Heian times the vines were substituted with silk braids & paper mulberry bark.
The dancers wore hikage-no-kazura in honour of Japan's first dancer Ame-no-Uzume (天宇受売命). The goddess (of dawn/mirth & the arts) wore the vine during her dance to lure Amaterasu from the cave.
The closest major shrine to our office (at Camellia Garden teahouse) is Kitano Tenmangū (北野天満宮), so we headed over for hatsumōde (初詣 the 'first shrine visit').
Now that the New Year crowds have ebbed away, there is a lot more time to admire the fresh hana-chōzu (花手水).
It is absolutely not New Year without hanabiramochi (葩餅), especially for practitioners of tea ceremony.
This year Nao-san is going for some kind of record...
...at the last count she'd eaten hanabiramochi from 6 stores.
And January is far from over😂
There are many auspicious symbols at this time of year🎍🐶🤣
Senbon Tamajuken (千本玉壽軒) utilize two for their 'matsu-no-yuki' (松の雪 'snowy pine') and 'hatsu-warai' (初笑 'the first laugh of the year').
The kanji for laugh '笑' is made up of the characters for bamboo '竹' & dog '犬', & thus both images are used for luck. Dogs are also used as charms for an easy childbirth.
'笑' regularly appears on New Year decorations, inviting happiness into the home⬇️
Some of you may have seen images of small dogs with bamboo baskets (笊 'zaru') on their heads.
'Zaru-kaburi inu' (笊かぶり犬), often papier-mâché, are a play on words...
...if you break the character '笊' (like 笑) into its component parts it is literally bamboo on a dog (竹 犬).
'Zaru' (笊) were commonly bought by parents or relatives around the same time a newborn was taken for their first shrine visit.
The baskets were hung by the baby's bed, a charm to let any sickness or troubles flow away just like water through a colander. #Japan
Kyōto was once home to the greatest statue of Buddha in all Japan.
4m taller than Tōdai-ji's Daibutsu, the statue stood in an immense hall in precincts now taken up by Toyokuni-jinja and Hōkō-ji (remnant of the original Buddha's home).
The great hall and last (vastly smaller) incarnation of Kyōto's Daibutsu are sadly lost, but within the neighbourhood (where once the temple precincts sprawled) are a series of wonders.
They include a great bell that brought down a ruling clan, an exploding cow, & a tomb of ears.
1) THE CHIMES OF DOOM🔔
Having seized control of the country after the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, Tokugawa Ieyasu calmly waited for an excuse to destroy the rival Toyotomi clan.
His chance came with the forging of a new bell and an inscription that could be read as a threat.
🙊THE MONKEY'S SLIDE🛝
At first glance the teahouse garden appears to be made up of mostly moss, pine & camellia...but if you look more closely the borders are packed thick with dozens of varieties of plants.
One of the most beautiful at this time of year is the "Monkey's Slide".
More commonly known as crape myrtle (百日紅), older generations in Japan fondly call the tree 'saru suberi' (サルスベリ the "monkey's slide").
The bark of the tree is so smooth that even monkeys struggle to get a foothold!
#Kyoto #京都 #Japan #百日紅 #サルスベリ #IwataMonkeyPark
Crape (also crepe) myrtle gets its name from the appearance of its flowers, which look very much like crepe paper.
Blooming from mid-summer through to autumn, the flowers (commonly bright pink) are also known in Japan as 'hyakujitsukō' (百日紅 'red for 100 days').
One of the Shōren-in's (青蓮院) most striking features greets you as you enter the drawing room...a series of bold coloured lotuses, blooming across 60 panels.
Begun in 2005, the work was created by the artist 'Ki-yan' (キーヤン/Kimura Hideki 木村英輝). #Japan
When visiting Shōren-in, Kimura was suddenly inspired to fill the drawing room's plain fusuma with colour.
It took him two years to complete the 3 sets of lotus paintings (蓮三部作)...
🪷"Blue Illusion" (青の幻想)
🪷"Amitabha's Pure Land" (極楽浄土)
🪷"Hymn of Life" (生命賛歌)
Why all the blue lotuses?🤔
Shōren-in was originally constructed atop Mt Hiei as a lodging facility for monks serving at Enryaku-ji.
Shōren-bō was named after a nearby pond in which blue lotus flowers bloomed ('shōrenge'). Many famous monks, such as Saichō & Ennin, lived here. twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
It's been a while since I've done a #folklorethursday, so here's some local, rather less well-known tales.
Demizu was once home to Toyotomi Hideyoshi's lavish palace 'Jurakudai' (聚樂第), and the area has many strange wonders. #Kyoto#京都
Kannon-ji's 'Gate of 100 Lashings' (観音寺 百叩きの門) belonged originally to the prison at Fushimi Castle (伏見城). When the castle was dismantled the doorway was gifted to the temple🏯🚪🩸😰👋
The gate is just 1 of the '7 Wonders of Demizu' (出水の七不思議). #Kyoto#京都#出水
Before prisoners were set free they underwent a final punishment at the prison gate...a warning to stay on the straight & narrow.
They were lashed 100 times with a piece of split bamboo across the back. It was agonizing, & sometimes deadly!
'May Sickness' (五月病 'gogatsu-byō') is a term for a seasonal disorder that strikes just as Golden Week comes to an end.
After the flurry of changes that take place each April, it may seem like May should be smooth sailing, but returning to work/school after the break is tough.
It may seem like a small thing, but sweets absolutely help lift a gloomy mood...
🌫️🌩️☁️😶🌫️🌥️🌤️🌞
Kameya Yoshinaga (亀屋良長) has done the impossible and perfectly captured the blue skies & cotton puff clouds of May in sweet form☺️
The wonderful 'hikōki-gumo' (ひこうき雲)✨
While 'May Blues' doesn't sound particularly serious, in some cases it can lead to depression, anxiety & insomnia.
In April the new school/work year begins, and there's a feeling that Golden Week only helps exacerbate feelings of disorientation, mental exhaustion, & apprehension. twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Astonishingly the temperature will soar close to 30 degrees today...the hottest day of the year so far😓
As this heat is a little unexpected we swooped on Ishidatami (石畳) for their famous matcha soft serve (抹茶ソフトクリーム). Fresh matcha is kneaded into the ice-cream🍵🍨🙌
Fresh matcha as an ingredient in cooking and baking tends to lose its flavour quickly, and so Ishidatami doesn't serve ice-cream older than 3 hours, preferring instead to make new batches throughout the day😮