にわしゅう日和 〜Real Japanese Garden at PechaKucha Night Tokyo〜
テーマ:“日記”
2013/08/05 01:24
こんにちは、
お久しぶりです!
Real Japanese Gardens のイエニーといいます。
一月に東京からサンフランシスコへ引っ越しました。
サンフランシスコはとても住み易いだと思いますが、大好きな日本から離れてのはとても寂しかったです。
今は大分アメリカン・ライフスタイルになりましたが、和食、日本庭園等が恋しくなりました。
このため、五月下旬に二週間再来日しました。
Sorry, my Japanese has certainly not improved in the last couple of months, so I have to continue in
English.
(What happened so far: I left Japan in January to move to San Francisco. Although SF is a really nice place to live, I was very sad to be far away from my beloved Japan. Now, I got used to "The American Lifestyle", but I still miss Japanese things like traditional Japanese food and, of course, Japanese gardens. That is also the reason why I returned to Tokyo and Kyoto for two weeks end of May)
The first day I visited of course Hayano-san and all the guys from the Niwashyu Garden Design Studio in Yoyogi. It was so good to meet everyone again - it felt like no time has past at all! We went for lunch in one of my favorite restaurants in Yoyogi - Takase (高瀬 - Takase link). They have exceptionally good lunch sets!
Hayano-san also had the Real Japanese Garden business cards and post cards printed, which I would take along to my trip to Kyoto. One side is in English (Jenny Feuerpeil), the other one has my name in Japanese on it (伊恵弐・フォイヤーパイル)
I spent the next week in Kyoto - visiting a great number of beautiful temples and meeting awesome people. I stayed at a couchsurfing host - Minoru Yonekawa - who has a very unique Ramen restaurant. It is called Mamezen (豆禅) and can best be described as gentle "Kyoto-style Dashi Soymilk Ramen" 豆乳らーめん. (Tabeblog , Kyoto Foodie). The Ramen come with nama yuba and taste like heaven!
I will write more about my Kyoto adventures and the gardens visited (Shisen-do, Manshu-in Monseki, a secret tea garden with a Noh stage in Higashiyama, Chion-in, Entsu-ji, Koto-in, Korin-in and many more) in future blog posts, but for now, I would like to return with you to Tokyo, where I spent my last night of the trip on the PechaKucha stage - again! When I first came to Japan, I wanted to learn more about Japanese (Garden) Design. While I am sure that my journey is nowhere near the end, I wanted to seize the opportunity and summarize what I had learned so far as a garden designer in a 6 minute 40 second presentation.
You can watch this and my previous presentation online on the PechaKucha platform here: 7 Design Lessons from the Japanese Garden
Some impressions from the Pecha Kucha night:
It was a very fun night, a great trip and I was happy to see Hayano-san, Suda-san, Yoshino-san again and meet the new staff member Kamei-san as well.
Hope to see you soon again,
またよろしくお願いします。
伊恵弐
Jenny Feuerpeil
《Real Japanese Gardens》サイトへ
お久しぶりです!
Real Japanese Gardens のイエニーといいます。
一月に東京からサンフランシスコへ引っ越しました。
サンフランシスコはとても住み易いだと思いますが、大好きな日本から離れてのはとても寂しかったです。
今は大分アメリカン・ライフスタイルになりましたが、和食、日本庭園等が恋しくなりました。
このため、五月下旬に二週間再来日しました。
Sorry, my Japanese has certainly not improved in the last couple of months, so I have to continue in
English.
(What happened so far: I left Japan in January to move to San Francisco. Although SF is a really nice place to live, I was very sad to be far away from my beloved Japan. Now, I got used to "The American Lifestyle", but I still miss Japanese things like traditional Japanese food and, of course, Japanese gardens. That is also the reason why I returned to Tokyo and Kyoto for two weeks end of May)
The first day I visited of course Hayano-san and all the guys from the Niwashyu Garden Design Studio in Yoyogi. It was so good to meet everyone again - it felt like no time has past at all! We went for lunch in one of my favorite restaurants in Yoyogi - Takase (高瀬 - Takase link). They have exceptionally good lunch sets!
Hayano-san also had the Real Japanese Garden business cards and post cards printed, which I would take along to my trip to Kyoto. One side is in English (Jenny Feuerpeil), the other one has my name in Japanese on it (伊恵弐・フォイヤーパイル)
I spent the next week in Kyoto - visiting a great number of beautiful temples and meeting awesome people. I stayed at a couchsurfing host - Minoru Yonekawa - who has a very unique Ramen restaurant. It is called Mamezen (豆禅) and can best be described as gentle "Kyoto-style Dashi Soymilk Ramen" 豆乳らーめん. (Tabeblog , Kyoto Foodie). The Ramen come with nama yuba and taste like heaven!
I will write more about my Kyoto adventures and the gardens visited (Shisen-do, Manshu-in Monseki, a secret tea garden with a Noh stage in Higashiyama, Chion-in, Entsu-ji, Koto-in, Korin-in and many more) in future blog posts, but for now, I would like to return with you to Tokyo, where I spent my last night of the trip on the PechaKucha stage - again! When I first came to Japan, I wanted to learn more about Japanese (Garden) Design. While I am sure that my journey is nowhere near the end, I wanted to seize the opportunity and summarize what I had learned so far as a garden designer in a 6 minute 40 second presentation.
You can watch this and my previous presentation online on the PechaKucha platform here: 7 Design Lessons from the Japanese Garden
Some impressions from the Pecha Kucha night:
It was a very fun night, a great trip and I was happy to see Hayano-san, Suda-san, Yoshino-san again and meet the new staff member Kamei-san as well.
Hope to see you soon again,
またよろしくお願いします。
伊恵弐
Jenny Feuerpeil
《Real Japanese Gardens》サイトへ
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