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How to make a zen garden
Many people approach oriental style gardening to find a peaceful corner in the chaos of everyday life and in the chaos of the city, thus creating a microcosm that contains meanings, symbols and the philosophy of life.
HOW TO MAKE A ZEN GARDEN
Before designing a classic Zen garden, one must understand and understand its true meaning. The Forma Mentis of this type of garden is to create an elegant and comfortable garden using very few elements, all natural, positioned in a precise and orderly manner. This philosophy strongly recalls the philosophy of life, in fact it must be bare of frivolous and useless things. The Zen garden must essentially be a place in which to rediscover one's mental and physical well-being surrounded by nature alone.
Advisable before starting to work, take a pen and paper, and scrupulously create a sketch of what will be our garden with all the elements that are needed.
THE FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
The fundamental principles for the good realization of a Zen garden are simple and are: asymmetry, disparity, contrast and nature.
The asymmetry concerns the shapes of the elements contained in the garden, in fact all that is symmetrical is artificial, the forms in fact must be sinuous and pleasant.
The contrast is fundamental in Zen gardens, in fact contrasting combinations are made, for example of large and tall trees near low trees, a reed near the path and rocks near the ponds.
The disparity is used to avoid the symmetries of the elements contained in the garden, in fact if you look carefully each group of elements always calls for a triangle.
Nature is the principle and the fundamental source for those who design or create a Japanese Zen garden. Logic wants that in a small space it is possible to create a natural landscape in miniature.
THE ELEMENTS AND THEIR POSITIONING
The elements present in the Zen garden and therefore useful and indispensable for their own realization are gravel, white sand and stones.
The stones must be semi-finished roughly, and have irregular shapes. They should be arranged randomly but with precise aesthetic rules to create a driveway. The path created with stones must never be closed and must not return to itself, it must be linear and lead to a place not visible at the entrance, such as a lawn or small grove.
Water is one of the elements that are always present in the Zen garden, in fact, even in figural form it is often represented by gravel or sand, normally two millimeters in diameter. The gravel or sand is moved creating the effect of the waves by means of undulating or rounded designs. The main plants that we can insert inside the Zen garden are the classic plants of Japanese origin such as bamboo, pine, maple, rhododendron, these types of plants are planted because they transmit in the observer, a sense of peace and harmony besides being evergreen plants even during the winter period, the Japanese Zen garden is always green. Moss is also often found on ornamental stones. An important distinction must be made between the female plants and the male plants, the first have a low and rounded shape, while the second are high and angular, in these types of gardens it is difficult to find a large quantity of male plants, in fact they are found mostly female plants, strictly flower-like and are placed mostly along the path symbolizing beauty and fragility. Most of the male plants can be found only at the entrance to the garden and are mostly large and deciduous so as to force the visitor to bend down before the splendor of the garden.
Waterfalls are another rather important element, in fact it gives a lot of importance to the way the water falls and the noise it causes.
To give a sense of perspective to the garden and therefore make it appear even larger it is good to place the smaller plants at the bottom of the garden while the larger ones in the center.
The ponds or streams created must be formed in such a way as to simulate a lake that extends into the distance. All the elements must be in odd numbers, the number three very recurrent, this to highlight the randomness of the composition very similar to that visible in nature.
How to make a Zen garden: MINIATURE ZEN GARDEN
On the market there are real gardens in Zen style in miniature, which are also called table gardens for their small sizes, in fact they reach the maximum size of 200 x 150. They are exploited as a corner of reflection and meditation and do not require excessive maintenance. Although in miniature they reflect all the traditional canons like the positioning of the stones, the waves represented by the sand etc. Therefore, for those who do not have a garden on which to create a Zen-style garden, they can "settle" for a table, thus recreating the emotions and settings of the great Japanese Zen gardens in their own homes.