Japan, day 15 (September 17): Tokyo’s Hama-rikyu Gardens

Exploring Hama-rikyu Gardens, Tokyo.

Our final day was relaxed, a chance to pack before our evening non-stop flight to Boston.  So we took the opportunity for a morning walk around the Hama-rikyu Gardens… one last chance to enjoy the art and beauty of Japan! Donated to the public in 1945, “it was remodeled as a public garden on the site of a villa belonging to the ruling Tokugawa family in the 17th century.” These gardens (which we also visited late the day before) are unusual in that they are “surrounded by a seawater moat filled by Tokyo Bay” [Wikipedia]. Most of the original buildings are gone – destroyed by fire, earthquake, or war, but a 300 year-old black pine tree survives; likely planted by Tokugawa himself. Read on…

The large pond at Hama-rikyu Gardens, Tokyo, Japan.
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Japan, day 14 (September 16): Tokyo, Meiji Shrine, Senso-ji temple, Geisha

We visit the Meiji Shrine and Senso-ji temple, then dinner with Geisha performers.

For our only full day in Tokyo we boarded buses to visit the Meiji Shrine, a Shinto shrine meant to memorialize Meiji, who ended the Shogun period and became the architect of Japan’s modernization.  He died in 1914, and the city built the Shrine in 1920.  Unfortunately, it (and much of Tokyo) was destroyed in WWII, but quickly rebuilt after the war.  Today, despite pouring rain, it was crowded with tourists, as well as many young families with babies; it is customary to bring a newborn (at 30 days of age) to pray for their good health. Read on to see where we went in the afternoon!

Rainy visit to Meiji shrine, Tokyo.
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