japanese garden pond
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Credit: David McDonald
Drawing from Buddhist, Shinto, and Taoist philosophies, Japanese garden design principles strive to inspire peaceful contemplation. They often combine the basic elements of plants, water, and rocks with simple, clean lines to create a tranquil retreat. You can borrow inspiration from the Japanese garden aesthetic to bring a little Zen to your landscape.
Make an Entrance
bamboo gateway japanese garden
Credit: Edward Gohlich
Use a simple bamboo fence to block views of the world outside your garden and make the entrance clear with a gate and attractive arbor. You can even try growing bamboo plants yourself, which are among the fastest-growing plants in the world. Go for a clumping type, which grows from a central root ball and is less aggressive than other types.
Buy It: Rolled Bamboo Fence ($89, The Home Depot)
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Create Mystery
japanese garden path bird house
Credit: Bob Stefko
A key element in Japanese garden style is creating vignettes that can’t be viewed all at once. Here, a winding path leads your eye past the stone pagoda and invites you to speculate what’s around the next corner.
Grow Evergreens
black layered oriental tower red low planter
Credit: Richard Felber
Japanese gardens often rely on subtle differences in color and texture. Here, conifers provide soothing shades of green for year-round interest. Some echo the pyramidal form of the pagoda while others frame the feature with their low, spreading branches.
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Encourage Moss
moss by stepping stones
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Credit: Edward Gohlich
Moss makes a serene-looking groundcover in moist, shady areas. Because moss doesn’t tolerate foot traffic well, place a stepping stone walkway among the moss to allow passage without damaging its soft surface. If you can’t grow moss in your space, use another type of groundcover plant.
Make a Private Pavilion
japanese garden pavilion
Credit: Richard Felber
Create an intimate space in your Japanese garden with a teahouse or pavilion made of bamboo or wood. Use the structure for entertaining or for viewing the serene landscape.
Try a Pagoda Pillar
pagoda style sculpture japanese garden
Credit: Edward Gohlich
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Add Textural Contrast
Meditation Garden plants with bamboo screen and lantern
Credit: Bob Stefko
Create Structure from Plants
japanese maple over pond
Credit: Mike
Protect Yourself from Evil Spirits
Bridge In Japanese Garden
Credit: Stephen Cridland
Legend has it that a zigzag bridge in a Japanese garden such as this one will protect you from evil spirits. The myth says that evil spirits can only travel in a straight line, so the simple bridge in this backyard Japanese garden traps them, allowing you to escape to safety.
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Provide an Island Getaway
Japanese Tea Garden
Credit: Clint Farlinger
A small island in the middle of this pond creates the illusion of a secluded Japanese garden retreat, even though it is not really meant for visiting. With a larger space and longer span on the bridge, you could create a more accessible island.
Time for Reflection
japanese garden pond
Credit: David McDonald
This small reflecting pool has a decidedly Japanese garden flavor. From the glass Japanese fishing float on its surface to the bamboo fountain, Japanese bloodgrass, stone pagoda lantern, and moss-covered rocks surrounding the pond, all elements blend add up to a distinctly Asian style.
Buy It: Japanese Blood Grass ($39, Etsy)
Feed the Fish
koi pond
Credit: Jason Wilde
A colorful goldfish or koi pond brings hours of enjoyment in Japanese garden design. Goldfish are hardier than koi, but both types may need to be overwintered indoors in cold climates.
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Go with the Flow
japanese garden stream pond
Credit: Mike Jensen
The sounds of moving water from waterfalls add to the soothing nature of Japanese gardens. This stream is punctuated by two waterfalls and ponds. Papyrus, ornamental grasses, and groundcovers bring life to the stream edge.
Deter Deer Naturally
japanese garden bamboo device
Credit: Michael Jensen
This clever bamboo device is designed to keep deer away from the garden. The upper bamboo tube drips water into the larger, lower tube. When the tube fills, the weight of the water causes it to clunk against a bamboo mat resting on a stone. The sudden sound can startle deer and scare them away.
Braced with Bamboo
Miniature Fence Detail
Credit: Edward Gohlich
Bamboo has many uses in Japanese gardens: It’s grown as an ornamental plant, and it serves as an important structural component. This fence uses bamboo shoots as rails and smaller ones tied into latticework to follow the curve of the gravel path inlaid with stepping stones.
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Graceful Gravel Garden
raked gravel garden
Credit: Amy Haskell
Raked gravel surrounding stones represents ripples of waves around islands in this Japanese Zen garden design. This Japanese rock garden idea is created for contemplative thought and is easy to maintain, whether you choose to use gravel or sand as the floor.
Artful Additions
polished stone egg bowl
Credit: Peter Krumhardt
Personal touches in front and backyard Japanese gardens should have connections to nature. These polished egg-shape stones arranged in a bowl are a good example. Backed by the crimson foliage of a Japanese maple, they take on a sculptural quality.
Stone Streambed
stone stream bed japanese garden
Credit: Bob Stefko
One of the Japanese garden design principles is representation. Here, tumbled gray river rocks of uniform size have been carefully arranged in this meandering dry streambed to create the illusion of flowing water. Ferns and evergreens line the stream, softening its “shoreline.”
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