• travel guides Travel guides
    Tips to experience holidays as a local
  • Miami Miami
    Florida colors
  • Seoul Seoul
    Oopan Gangnam style!
  • Cape town penguins South Africa
    Rainbow vibes
  • Bangkok Bangkok
    City of angels
  • French Polynesia French Polynesia
    6 islands in the South Seas
  • Skyline Hong Kong
    Skylines, bar streets, markets & islands
  • Sydney Opera Australia
    Sydney's NYE, Gold Coast & Great Barrier Reef
  • Gecko Hawaii
    Aloha nature wonders
  • Japanese Wedding Japanese Wedding
    The dark side of the rising sun
  • Yakushima Yakushima
    Hiking the Princess Mononoke Forest
  • Ishigaki Lighthouse Ishigaki
    Okinawa's shades of blue
  • Yuki Matsuri Hokkaido
    Powder Snow Festival
  • Daikanyama Daikanyama
    Tokyo's SoHo
  • Cosplayer Comiket
    The Biggest Cosplay Event
  • Cherry Tree Blossom Hanami (花見)
    Sakura by the skyscrapers
  • Hiroshima bomb time Hiroshima
    The Bomb & Miyajima
  • top of mount fuji guide to climb Japan
    Top of Mt.Fuji
  • Kyoto & Nara Nara & Kyoto
    Ciervos nadando en lagos de roca
  • Formentera House Formentera
    Mediterranean Sun
  • Stockholm Stockholm
    5 year resident, to guide around the local wonders

29.11.13

Loving November in Tokyo II: Autumn colors「紅葉」



In Japanese,「紅葉」can be read as koyo autumn colors or momiji maple tree. Koyo is to fall what hanami is to spring. A celebration of beauty, as well as a reflection on its volatility.



Maple tress are my favorite.

Red leaves are like cherry blossom (sakura). A materialization of the mono no aware (物の哀れ). Literally "the pathos of things", also translated as"a sensitivity to ephemera", is a Japanese term used to describe the awareness of impermanence (無常 mujō), or the transience of things, and a gentle sadness (or wistfulness) at their passing.

Just like with the hanami, certain spots in Tokyo as well as throughout the country (Nagano, Hiroshima, Kyoto) get crowded.

Today, we visited Icho Namiki, near Jingu-Gaien (Gaienmae Station), which is said to be the main koyo spot in town. It was a bit disappointing, as there were only ginkgo trees. With very beautiful yellow leaves, but no variety (which is what I really like about the fall, the tone-over-tone).

Ginkgo is the tree of Tokyo. Hence the popularity. At the end of the avenue, there are stalls selling seasonal products (e.g. roasted sweet potato) from all over Japan. We were on wheels, so we didn't come close.



After Jingu-Gaien, we walked to Jingu-Mae which is more of our territory. 

Yoyogi Park is packed with all the colors you'd expect and less of an annoying crowd. That's the beauty of it. To be able to meet a mixof the Japanese Society in a spot, just like the degradé along the trees.



Wedding in Meiji-Jingu. Traditional umbrella, as red as the maple leaves.



Look at me mum, I'm riding like a kid.



That's the mix.





As usual, no photoshop used in any of these pictures.



Some ginkgo also in here. No crowd. Much better.



Maple trees, too. Against green, brown & sky blue. Really dreamy.



Ah. If I could chose only one place in Tokyo, that would certainly be Shibuya.

SHARE:

4 comments

theROOM said...

Enrique estaba de buen humor :)

Anonymous said...

Que fotos más bonitas!!
Estuve en Tokio hace unos años, sólo por unos días y por trabajo, a veces reconozco la ciudad en tus post, pero otras, como hoy me sorprendes muchísimo
C

Clau said...

No como este finde, que le toca trabajar :(

Clau said...

Gracias <3 así cuando vuelvas, ya sabes que hay vida más allá de Roppongi :)
La verdad es que Yoyogi es un sitio que nos encanta. Allí puedes ver a la gente "normal" que la hay en Japón y en gran cantidad. Aunque la tv sólo muestre las locuras, que tb hay muchas, merece la pena observar cómo vive y se comporta la sociedad en general.

© dontplayahate. All rights reserved.
DONTPLAYAHATE