So it is that, after parting with 500 yen to a faceless vending machine, I find myself face to face with a “no drones” sign. Well, there’s no need for such contraptions here: a colourful map gives me the lay of the land quite well enough.
As I’m starting at the northern gate, I will saunter southwards and hence backwards through time, from the more recently created park-like grounds to the original “stroll gardens” as they were laid out by the local daimyo and his successors from the seventeenth century onwards.
Compared with yesterday’s mountainside, it seems as if biodiversity will be restricted. Although “Ritsurin” means “chestnut grove”, the park looks to pine trees, more than a thousand of them, variously trained and manicured, for most of its greenery.
This handsome stand of conifers, a sign tells me, was planted by “members of the British royal family” on a state visit in 1922. Tactfully it omits that one of them was the future Edward VIIII and Duke of Windsor.
After so many pine trees, it’s quite a relief to find a grove of tropical cycad trees, presented by a southern daimyo centuries ago. They look like one of those museum dioramas of the Carboniferous age.
On this warm Sunday morning, the garden settles into a genial groove. Families with children wander here and there. Couples sip tea in rustic pavilions, or admire curiously coiffured conifers. Nobody is wielding selfie sticks, shooting video, or – heaven forfend – flying drones.
Of course, there’s nothing here for the influencer types. You see, Ritsurin is not one of the “Three Great Gardens of Japan”. Loraine Kuck, my favourite author on Japan’s gardens, doesn’t see fit to mention it in her The World of the Japanese Garden. As for Itoh Teiji, another horticultural heavyweight, he consigns it to his book's appendix as the forty-seventh garden out of fifty, where it’s damned with faint praise:
The antics of an egret interrupt my southward stroll. Unabashed by the presence of its fans, it seems to be seeking applause as it flits across a small stream and strikes a pose on the opposite bank.
Of course, there’s nothing here for the influencer types. You see, Ritsurin is not one of the “Three Great Gardens of Japan”. Loraine Kuck, my favourite author on Japan’s gardens, doesn’t see fit to mention it in her The World of the Japanese Garden. As for Itoh Teiji, another horticultural heavyweight, he consigns it to his book's appendix as the forty-seventh garden out of fifty, where it’s damned with faint praise:
Once a villa of the Matsudaira lords, the Ritsurin is now a park. The Kikugetsu-tei pavilion adjacent to the Nanko pond is well cared for, and the park in general is a fully equipped public facility…
And hardly less dismissive is Donald Richie in his picaresque progress around The Inland Sea:
I could imagine an antiquarian daimyo having built this [pavilion] for himself. He purposely chose the architecture of another, earlier, better age, that of Heian-kyo, with its T’ang influenced roofs, its elegant verandas stretching into the waters. Like the Ashikaga shogun, Yoshimasa, he was sick of his own times, of the wars, and the police-state government. Like Beckford or Horace Walpole, he built this anachronistic pavilion, surrounded by acres of woodland and high walls with guards on them, and created the kind of life he thought he ought to have.
Richie’s intuitions were pretty much on the money. It was a youthful Ikoma Takatoshi (1611–1659), Takamatsu’s daimyo, who set out the garden’s main features. This was in 1625. Fifteen years later, the shogunal authorities attaindered him on charges of misrule – it seems his wife weighed in too, irked by his taste in “male favourites”. Or so Grokipedia insinuates. Ikoma did get to keep his head on his shoulders – not a given in those police-state days – but had to accept a transfer to a smaller, chillier province up north, where no cycads were likely to grow.
None of this unfortunate history seems to be troubling the folk who are enjoying shaved ice and possibly even less salubrious refreshments on Lord Ikoma’s lakeshore.
Sampans with straw-hatted passengers ply the waters as if they've drifted out of a Hiroshige print. Another chilled-out egret, perched on a pine branch, surveys the scene.
From the bank, children ogle the carp, and they in turn ogle the children – alas, carp fodder is sold out for today, a sign says, for the sake of the fishes’ “helth”.
I stroll onwards up an artificial hill that, a sign tells me, resembles Mt. Fuji. Be that as it may, its summit provides the perfect perspective for viewing Lord Ikoma’s handiwork.
In the background is a real mountain, Shiun, whose granite cliffs bound the garden on its western side. This “borrowed scenery” melds harmoniously with that of the “fully equipped public facility”.
So why didn’t the Ritsurin make it to the top three gardens list, I wonder. Could it have been the misguided or downright shady characters in the backstory? Or was Takamatsu simply too far for the arbiters of taste to bother with ?
As if to counterpoint these musings, I happen on one of those neat wooden signs, which tells me (in English) that the Michelin Green Guide has awarded the garden its "highest rating" of three stars. And, it adds – almost plaintively but in Japanese only – back in the Meiji period, an officially approved school textbook once opined that, for its arrangements of stones and trees, the Ritsurin surpasses even the top three…
While pondering this appeal, I stroll up another eminence only to find, to my mild astonishment, that this one too supposedly resembles Mt. Fuji. As if to underscore the claim, the second hill even goes by the name of Fuyō, a poetic name for the top mountain.
Now, finally, I'm starting to get it. As a garden with a brace of Mt. Fujis side by side, the Ritsurin must be in a class of its own. Meizanologically speaking, it would be unthinkable to lump this garden in with those other three, the ones with their merely monadic Mt. Fujis, if any...
On the way out, a spray of white petals is glimpsed hanging over another tea-green pool. Just the merest hint of spring, of course, as if mediated through the most refined display of ikebana. So the cherry blossom front has arrived in Takamatsu. Now it really is time to go home; the Sensei's garden will soon need weeding...
On the way out, a spray of white petals is glimpsed hanging over another tea-green pool. Just the merest hint of spring, of course, as if mediated through the most refined display of ikebana. So the cherry blossom front has arrived in Takamatsu. Now it really is time to go home; the Sensei's garden will soon need weeding...

























































