Mallgoers see the wonders of Japan nature art
The art of bonsai cannot be learned overnight. It requires years of training, devotion, inexhaustible patience and many ruined trees before anyone gets it right.
The art of bonsai cannot be learned overnight. It requires years of training, devotion, inexhaustible patience and many ruined trees before anyone gets it right.
BONSAI, the art of cultivating miniature trees in pots, continues to thrive in the Philippines. Proof is the country recently hosting the 2016 Philippines-BCI (Bonsai Club International) Convention and Exhibition.
Suiseki is a Japanese word which means water (sui) and stones (seki). It is derived from the word sansui-seki, which means stone with a total landscape or scenery, or depiction of an object, such as animal, plant, popular person or figure and the like. It originated in China and was introduced in Japan by the Buddhist monks in the 15th century.
A century-old batigue emerged as overall winner or Best in Show at the National Bonsai and Suiseki Show and Competition at the Flower Garden of the Quezon Memorial Circle in Quezon City.
IT’S MAYHEM and pollution along North Edsa, but at the Skytop of SM North Mall, the scene was placid, with collections of elegant bonsai prepared by the Philippine Bonsai Society
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