Angelica ursina |
A recent trip to Japan (the purpose of
which will have to wait until another blog post) has been a wonderful
opportunity to see some wild habitats on the other side of our
continent. Always too briefly, as I am sure I spent far more time
rattling along in suburban trains than I managed to be out in natural
habitats. Precious moments snatched have to be made the most of.
The main purpose of my trip was
actually in Hokkaido, the great northern island, which looks and
feels a totally different place to the rest of Japan. Sparsely
populated, with huge forests and extensive agriculture it has a sense
of space impossible to find anywhere else. Botanically I think it has
more in common with the Russian far east. Long cold winters end with
a thorough soaking with snow melt topped up with summer rainfall.
Warm, without the suffocating humid heat of further south, make for a
brief but intense growing season.
The two metre plus meadowsweet
Filipendula camschatense is also very common. Judging by how well it
grows with us (our one day a week gardener Diana says it is her
favourite plant in the garden), I am surprised it has not escaped
from cultivation. Maybe in time it will.
Petasites japonicus and Aralia cordata |
The other plant that you can't avoid
noticing along Hokkaido roadsides is what looks like a slightly
squashed version of another of our bête-noires, giant hogweed,
except that it isn't. You can shake hands with Angelica ursina
without burning your skin, which is just as well as the plant is
everywhere, its vast leaves common in woodland but only seeming to
flower in sunlight.
Otherwise the woodland floor is a solid
mass of things we pay good money for in nurseries back home: aralia,
aruncus, astilbe, aconitum, glaucidium, hosta, cardiocrinum – and
trilliums earlier on apparently. The woodland itself seems dominated
by some very nice looking oaks, with much larger foliage than ours
and maples. So frustrating to be here, at what feels like a very very
long way from home, for such a short time. Definitely a place to come
back to.
A dear friend from Sheffield (in
oriental terms we are classmates, a very important bond), Ayako
Nagase, now an asst. prof. at Chiba University had, some time ago,
told me of her interest in sea coast flora for green roofs. I was
surprised we in Europe hadn't paid more attention to those tough
little plants that grow on the very thin soils of clifftops. Indeed,
it was at Ayako's prompting that I spent some time crawling about the
clifftops of the Gower peninsula in south Wales only a few weeks ago,
in search of the seed of the little blue bulb Scilla verna, which
hardly appears to be in cultivation (we found plenty).
Ayako Nagase with her green roof based on Jogasaki coast flora |
Japan's coastal flora is very different
to what we can offer. She took me to Jogasaki, one of those rare
places on the eastern Tokyo to Osaka coastal strip which is not built
up. A pleasant green seasidey town, where it feels like people come
to have fun (a rare commodity here – people work far too hard),
Jogasaki's volcanic coast feels like an exotic Pembrokeshire. The
flora includes some amazingly high quality foliage plants like
Chrysanthemum pacificum and Farfugium japonicum. Sometimes these arrange
themselves into compositions which look, well, designed. A very
attractive flora indeed. These are plants which are not necessarily
exposed to salt spray but are to cold northerly winds, and grow in
little more than crevices in lava. Other species include **
See the Jogasaki flora here on Flikr.
Another Japanese friend, Yuko Tanabe,
had once told me about a place called Ibukiyama (Mt. Ibuki) not that
far from Kyoto, with an incredible perennial flora. So, accompanied
by several other colleagues, we all got the bullet train down from
Tokyo and then piled into a hire car to have a look. Arriving halfway
up a massive limestone mountain, we find that a great many other
people had come with the same idea, including Yuko's mother who had
come on a coach trip. In Japan and China one so often has to share
nature with a great many others, but at least here the visitors are
quiet and respectful and seem to be mainly interested in
photographing the flowers.
They're all here to photograph the flowers |
Ibukiyama is pretty incredible. The
summit is covered in perennials, with the occasional gnarled shrub
(often a hydrangea). No grasses or sedges – not until our way down
did we come across a few grass tussocks. Filipendula multijuga in
bright pink and Ligularia stenocephala in yellow made for a
combination that garden designers always try to do their best to
avoid. There are also Angelica pubescens, Veronicastrum sibiricum,
Lilium leichtlinii and Veronica subsessilis in full flower. On the way down we
past through acres of aconitum and actaea species just about to come
into flower and Leucosceptrum japonicum - a plant I had only ever seen one
of before, at Chanticleer; marvelling at it, I never believed I would
be hiking through acres of the stuff half a year later. The dominant
plant in terms of biomass though is Boehmeria tricuspis. In fact I
would say that an awareness of this genus was one of my big
discoveries of the trip – fantastic well-shaped foliage plants, the
only point against them being that they look a bit too like their
relative, the stinging nettle.
Ibukiyama is an extraordinary place. As
you look around at the surrounding mountains and hills all you see is
forested summits. Here, for some reason, massive snowfalls occur
(including the heaviest every recorded) and appear to prevent tree or
shrub growth. Most extraordinary though is what Yuko explained about
the history of the place. During the 15the century it was used as an
enormous herb farm, with medicinal herbs from all over Japan being
grown here. When it fell into disuse, the plants took over. It really
is an enormous garden gone wild.
Thank you for the beautiful Jogasaki flora photos.
ReplyDeleteGreat glimpse: you have fanned the flames of my desire to get to Japan (that's the scenery and plants I want to see there!): Angelica ursina is awesome! Looks like a must have. More! We want more! (posts on Japan that is...)
ReplyDeleteJapanese gardens have long been among my favorites! I went to the Japanese Garden in san fran, as a kid, and it inspired me to get into keeping bonsai for a long time. :)
ReplyDeleteGood to see a demonstration of the Japanese use of moss. I believe they get quite a lot of rain?
ReplyDeleteWhy do British gardeners whenever they see moss covered soil always want to dig it up.
Interesting to see Petasites used too. Most of us regard it as a weed, although I do myself grow the one known as Winter heliotrope. Beautiful scent from a thug.