Japanese garden
Local name: Japanse Tuin
Japanese Garden is the work of Marguerite M. Baroness van Brienen (1871-1939), popularly called Lady Daisy. The garden was created around 1910 and until the death of its owner it was constantly enriched with plants and equipment imported from Japan. Currently, the garden is on the list of national monuments of the Netherlands.
You can admire hundreds of species of flora, including many flowering plants. The impression of surprising peace and quiet is compounded by mosses covering most of the area, which perfectly suppress sounds. The greenery has various lanterns, animalistic sculptures and a statue of Buddhist Saint Jizo, patron of children and travelers.
The garden can be visited only at selected times of the year, only on foot, without four-legged friends, and walks are only possible on strictly determined routes. A special sightseeing path has been prepared for people with physical disabilities, adapted to wheelchairs.