Today, we’re in Tokyo to see a colorful array of autumn leaves floating just above some goldfish. It’s a centuries-old tradition in Japan to wander through gardens and forests while taking in the show of colorful leaves. The Japanese call it "koyo" or "momiji-gari," terms which literally mean "hunting red leaves." The autumn colors of Japanese maples, ginkgoes, and other native trees first come to the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido, usually in early October, then move slowly southward until they reach the rest of the island nation. The leaf-peeping season is as popular in Japan as the springtime cherry blossom season—both phases of the year are rhapsodized over as symbols of the transient nature of life.
Red-leaf hunting in Japan
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Honoring our veterans
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Storm rolls over the grasslands
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World Nature Conservation Day
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A path lain with petals
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Mute swans
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A unique elephant encounter in Nantes
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Ready for takeoff
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Earthrise on Moon Day
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Channel Country, Australia
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A light at the edge of the world
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Grand finish of Le Tour
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Step into the dark
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Happy Thanksgiving!
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Après-ski in the Dolomites
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Chilling out in the Arctic
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World Giraffe Day
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Winter in the Finnish wilds
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A personal collection becomes an institution
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Satla marshland in Bangladesh
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Asteroid Day
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Duomo Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence
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White trilliums blooming in Ontario, Canada
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Gulf Islands National Seashore, Florida
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Great hornbill, Thailand
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From the mind of Frank Gehry
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Wildlife Conservation Day
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Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary
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World Photography Day
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Killer whales in Spildra, Norway
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It’s not a pinecone, it’s a pangolin
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

