My romance with moss began last year. Just weeks after the
horrifying earthquake overwhelmed parts of Japan, my daughter and I visited serene
TenryĆ«-ji, a Zen temple in Kyoto’s Arashiyama district where, along with throngs
of Japanese visitors, we viewed Sakura
in bloom. At TenryĆ«-ji’s open-air gift shop I came across a book about Zen
gardens. Later, back home in the Lowcountry, I allowed my eyes to linger on
each photograph in the book, Samadhi on
Zen Gardens, and that is how I became aware of Tofuku-ji’s checkerboard of
moss and stone.
Tofuku-ji's famous moss garden |
Gazing at the photograph, I thought perhaps I’d found a
solution for my front lawn with its bald places. I sought to borrow the idea
from Buddhist monks and transform the shady expanse beneath my live oak with something
similar. I started by pulling a patch of chartreuse-colored moss off the front
steps where it grew freely as a volunteer. I moved the tiny patch to a bald
area and watered it when I remembered. During times when it received sufficient
water, the patch grew, but it never adhered to the soil. Often it didn’t get
enough water – from me or from the sky.
This isn't where I want the moss to grow! |
In the county library I located Schenk’s excellent book Moss Gardening and after reading his
words realized that perhaps I should just encourage what grows here naturally.
I began noticing places where moss grew, hidden or in plain sight. When I carried carafes of rainwater from the
barrel, where I’d captured it, to gardenias and hydrangeas I’d recently planted,
I made sure to allow water to drip on the volunteer moss. And the moss is even
now expanding – not as rapidly as I would like, but increasing its territory
nonetheless.
Moss Gardening has
a chapter entitled “In the Gardens of Japan.” It begins “Mosses invited
themselves to the gardens of Japan and thereby invented moss gardening.”
Late last year I returned to Japan for another visit with my
family. When my daughter asked which place I most wanted to visit, I said, “Tofuku-ji,
to see the moss checkerboard.” We traveled there by train and, before locating
the checkerboard, were dazzled by the brilliant red leaves of Tokufu-ji’s
valley of maple trees.
A moss garden at Tofuku-ji's Abbot's Hall |
Before last year, I was mostly oblivious to moss, but since
then, I’ve noticed it not only in temple gardens and along wild streams in
Japan, but on hillsides in Scotland, and growing unfettered between sidewalk
and street near the corner of East Bay and Chapel in Charleston.
The volunteer moss continues to spread |
Reading List
- Moss Gardening – George Schenk (Timber Press, Portland, 1997)
- Gathering Moss – Robin Wall Klimmerer (Oregon State University Press, Corvallis, 2003)
- Samadhi on Zen Gardens: Dynamism and Tranquility – Mizuno Katsuhiko and Tom Wright (Suiko Books, Kyoto, 2010)
Tofuku-ji’s Website
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