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Chuo-ku Tourism Association correspondent blog

Introducing Chuo-ku's seasonal information by sightseeing volunteer members who passed the Chuo-ku Tourism Association's Chuo-ku Tourism Certification and registered as correspondents.

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Autumn leaves

[Sam] Nov. 25, 2016 18:00

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DSC_0006RSQRS (2)G.jpgHasenoki (Haji tree) is deciduous Takagi of the family Urushi.

It's also known as squirrel. It is said to be native to Indochina, China, and was first introduced from Ryukyu, so it is also called Ryukyuhaze.

What can be seen in the mountains of Kyushu from Honshu today is thought to be that what was planted to collect wood wax has escaped.

The leaves are odd feathered compound leaves consisting of 4 to 6 pairs of leaves, gathering near the tip of the branch. dioecious.

At the Hamarikyu Onshi Garden, the autumn leaves of Hakkeiyama and Gozenoki at Mt. Ochinyama are at their best around the tide pond (Oizumi).

There is a time when the "foliage" that leaves the green are mixed, and as the autumn leaves progress, the whole gradually changes from a little modest scarlet to a bright red red-red red color.

Hazemomiji, which beautifully turns red in the world of Haiku, is called Hazemomiji, and is considered a seasonal word for autumn, but it is a tasteful autumn leaves.

The exact color of the song "I found a small autumn" is the perfect color for the lyrics "Haze leaf red and I entered the day ...".

When photographed with backlight, the autumn leaves become even more prominent.

Around the goby tree at Hakkeiyama overlooking the Tsubame Ochiya, the fallen leaves fill their feet like a red carpet, and the sign of late autumn is thick.