What other travelers are saying about Kairakuen Garden
Formed by the 9th emperor 1800-1860 for military training and resting.
He loved plums and they're gone in times of military siege and famine. Can be pickled.
There were many plum trees, 300+.
The steps were too narrow to descend inside the entrance following a Yin Yang suggested route and some areas felt overgrown
There was a tree estimated to be almost 800 years old and another where all the branches bloom different colour flowers (there were October blossoming trees but none today)
We were lost initially near the entrance but it meant we found another Torii Dominos thing and another shrine plus something about the letter Japanese medieval cannon and drum.
Coincidentally, we spent 80 mins each here, Imperial and Hamarikyu
Zero international tourists, and not many of any, sub 20.
No mosquitos and better photos
Did use a squat loo I found before the entrance (first use in 20 years, age takes its toll)
Late February through mid-March is peak season when over 3,000 plum trees bloom. The Mito Plum Festival runs during this period with evening illuminations. The garden opens year-round with azaleas in spring and bush clover in autumn. Visiting outside plum season means free admission and fewer crowds.
Admission costs 300 yen for adults during plum season. Entry is free outside plum season and free year-round for Ibaraki residents. The garden has no closing days.
Tokugawa Nariaki established it in 1842 as a public space for all social classes. It ranks with Kenrokuen and Korakuen for its 100 varieties of plum trees, historic significance, and landscape design contrasting refined gardens with natural cedar forests.
The main feature is 3,000 plum trees in 100 varieties. Visit the Kobuntei house for views of the garden and Lake Senba. Explore bamboo groves, cedar forests, and seasonal flowers throughout the grounds.
One of Japan's three most beautiful garden. Although the season you visit matters a lot as I visited during summer and everything is all green so its not as pleasant eye candy wise. Though forget to visit the villa, its worth the extra entrance fee. I would imagine the garden would look awesome during spring's cherry blossom season and even more during peak fall foliage season.
Visited here during April, plum flower season just ended, but still can imagine how astonishing and beautiful it is during the season.
Enjoyed in the very huge and wide plum flower field.
Also recommend the KOBUNTEI, which is the house from old age. Very chill and nice.
After the KAIRUKUEN, you can go visit park next to it, with a beautiful lake and SAKURA on the lake side.
Visiting the garden on January. The garden is ok despite the fact it is one of the 3 Great Gardens of Japan... I found it (much) less impressive and less scenic than the Okayama one... The traffic road, parkings and train rails do not help to restitute how the garden was originally conceived. Little effort to hide work in progress / maintenance (especially machinery in rest, ...) If you are already in Mito, go ahead but I do not recommend to go there just to visit this garden from Tokyo unless it is plum season...