Tea garden
A tea garden is a garden associated with the drinking of tea. Types include:
- a roji, an entry garden to a Japanese teahouse, intended to set the mood of guests arriving for the Japanese tea ceremony[1]
- a pleasure garden designed for the drinking of tea and for strolling
- a garden at a teahouse
- an herb garden specializing in herbs that are consumed as tea, such as chamomile, bee balm, peppermint, lemon balm, and lavender.[2][3]
Famous tea gardens
- Cuper's Gardens, 17–18th century pleasure gardens in Lambeth, London
- Japanese Tea Garden (San Francisco, California)
- Oklahoma Botanical Garden and Arboretum (Stillwater, Oklahoma)
- The Orchard (Grantchester, UK)
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tea gardens. |
- List of garden types
- British tea culture
- Japanese garden
- Japanese rock garden
- Tea culture
- Moss garden
- Tsubo-niwa (miniature urban version)
References
- "Landscape architecture". Encyclopedia Britannica.
- Carroll, Jackie (April 5, 2018). "Herbal Tea Gardens: How To Use Tea Plants For A Garden". gardeningknowhow.com.
- McLaughlin, Chris (June 29, 2013). "Plant an Herbal Tea Garden". Fine Gardening.
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