Yesterday I went to Hitachi Seaside Park, a national park in
Ibaraki area which is averagely 2-3 hours away from Tokyo depends on which
transport being used. It was outstandingly pretty I have to share it as soon as
possible once I reached home!
Here's an opening photo for you guys, marked this post with this
calendar.
Real time calendar is important for seasonal garden
visit as we have to find the right time to see the fully bloomed flowers!
Special thanks to one friend who visited Japan last year and
informed me about this park presence too; without him I can’t be seeing all of
this magic right now. Since then I’ve been eye-ing this park and have been targeted
to step my foot here in spring, where all the tulips and nemophila will be the
star of the season. And I made it!
The trip from Tokyo itself was quite long and tiring; I used the train with the total of 5 hours round trip up and back. However, with only 410 yen for 1 adult entrance fee to the park, and all of the flowers that I saw (plus another wishlist crossed), it was very, very, worth it.
The park itself was so big it kinda took all of my energy away.
The full park size was around 2 km square; compared to Disneyland Tokyo which
only around 0,45 km square; sure this one is gigantic. It took around 15 minutes
itself from me to walk from the tulip spot to the nemophila hills spot. That’s
why I spent the whole day with the limitation of only visiting all the famous
spots too. I recommend people who wanted to explore every single spot of
this park, better rent a cycling bike for 400 yen/3 hours, additional 50yen/30min, or using the park train trail which stops at several area throughout the garden. Didn't saw the cost though, will just leave all the details to their website here. It's in english, please kindly check as they have flower calendar too there!
I took my first step to this park via West Gate and directly greeted with a massive middle stage
and a very big lake in the middle of the entrance gate.
Looked at how massive this was I instantly have a rough calculation of how tired I will be later and how far I have to walked away from one place to one place today.
Didn’t want to waste my time here on crazy thoughts, I walked directly to the
Tamago no Mori (translated as “The Forest of the Egg”) area on the right side beside the west gate to see the first star of
the season, tulips. Yaaay.
Greeted by them, all of my worry turned to smile and ready-to-take-photos stance in one second. Carpets of tulips, everywhere.
The white one were my favorite! Too bad it was located in the middle of the spot.
The flowers were so beautifully arranged creating one whole
balanced contrast; not to mention that they put every name of the tulips type
near the arrangement too. I never knew that there were so many kind of tulips
before!
Reached the main spot of the tulips, the windmill!
Can see the contrast from the nearby hill too.
What mind-blown me was how can so many people were there
with zero trash to be seen. So clean yet so unbelievable. Try this in Indonesia
huh we’ll see.
Anyway, have cleared half of my phone battery and satisfied with all the photos of the tulips, say and see no more, took fast
steps to the main star of the season to see the nemophila located on the spot
called as Miharashi no Oka (Viewing Hill), 15 minutes walk away from the tulip spot.
Once I reached there, my thoughts once again were stunned by the view. The
4,5 million of nemophila (baby blue eyes flower) had painted the hill blue all
over. Well, at least until mid May. From here, taking pictures seems like the
best thing to do.
Painstakingly pretty and keep mumbling why they didn't have this in Tokyo..
Somewhat the hills become one with the sky. Thanks for the clear
weather too today everything combined so perfectly.
Several last photos of the nemophila hill seen from several angles:
Aaand, done. I hope pictures speaks more than words as I didn't know how can I describe its charm anymore via sentences.
Finished with the nemophila, I visited several spots
too that either once had became the main spot of the season in March or not yet
bloomed such as herb garden on the other side of the park. This one below is located in the Suisen Garden, consist of narcissus
flowers and several other specimen combined. Although some of them are starting
to wither, the beauty still shows.
I have to say even until the end, I’m impressed most by the nemophila hill so far; a view that can’t be seen anywhere in Japan except here. And I make a stupid conclusion (but I think its quite true) that any flowers that were beautifully arranged, bloom at the same time at a massive amount of numbers were not good for the faint hearted people, hahaha.
On the other hand, for additional info too, the hill spot always offer the best seasonal flowers and plants the whole year. For example starting mid June there will be all the 30.000 Kochias (summer cypress) which will fill the hill with refreshing green color and it will turn all red when autumn come. Too bad I won’t be here anymore next autumn; have to try my luck some other time but definitely not this year.
The key point for a garden visit is the best timing, and this year, all of my work schedule, weather condition and the timing were all perfect; thanks for not betraying me, world.
And then, one last mandatory photos so that all of you believe that I didn't took all this photos just from the internet (LOL)
And that's it.
Sorry for the long post, thank you for reading it until the end, and see you again on the next one!!
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