The Komagome station area was pretty calm (since it was the morning I guess). We weren't exactly sure how to get to the garden (we knew it was close but the maps were a bit confusing), so we ended up asking a cashier at a bakery for directions (we also bought bread there which was delicious). The Komagome area wasn't as hip or exciting as other sections of Tokyo, but it was still nice. After about a five minute walk we arrived at the main entrance of the garden. The woman working there was pretty friendly, and gave us English maps.
It was a beautiful morning; not too hot or cool, and the sky was clear blue. The overall atmosphere there was very calming. A lot of wildlife (birds, fish, turtles) could be seen and heard. Rikugien wasn't very crowded when we went. Most of the people visiting the garden were elderly, although there were a few younger looking families with young children. Not very many people were walking around either; most of them were quietly sitting on benches in the shade gazing at the garden and some were taking pictures. I'm assuming most of them come to the garden to relax and view the nature there. I'm curious as to if anyone pays the 300 yen entrance fee often to go there, or if most of them were there for the first time.
As we walked around the garden, it was amazing to note how the picture/scenery you looked at changed when you moved from one place to another. I guess this is pretty obvious, but that point really struck me while I was there (I feel like I ended up taking twenty different pictures of the same thing...haha). I also noticed that the leaves were starting to change colors, an event called koyou in Japanese. I would really like to go back to the garden during other seasons (and I wonder how crowded it gets during certain seasons).
While walking we noticed a tea shop which sold match tea and a snack for 500 yen so we decided to take a break and drink some tea as we sat under a red umbrella and looked at the scenery. The tea was great and the mochi(?) snack was delicious. That was my first real matcha tea in Japan! We walked around some more after drinking our tea (and spent some time at a waterfall/rocky area which was breathtakingly beautiful; my favorite section of the garden probably) and then left the garden after spending a little more than an hour and a half there. Although the nature at Rikugien isn't technically "natural" (since it was man made), that didn't make the area any less beautiful or amazing.
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