Yukitsuri: The Japanese Snow Suspenders | Amazing Images.
During the winter months, many Japanese gardens sprout strange
conical structures that rise above the trees like a crown. They are
called Yukitsuri or “snow suspenders”, and their purpose is to protect
the branches of the trees and shrubs from the crushing weight of snow. There
are various ways of constructing yukitsuris, but the most common
technique involves erecting long bamboo poles near the trunk of the
tree, and then lowering ropes from the top of the pole to be attached to
the branches. The ropes prevent the branches from sagging, and
eventually breaking, under the weight of the snow that accumulates on
top. As many as 800 ropes can be used on a single tree. 
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Like many Japanese craftsmanship, yukitsuri is a combination of function and beauty. The ropes are splayed out from the top at even intervals, like rays encircling the trees, their lengths harmonizing perfectly with the heights of the branches. At night, some gardens place lamps under the trees that throw light up on the branches and onto the ropes, highlighting the thick strands. With snow falling softly around it creates a particularly beautiful winter scene.
Although the exact origin of yukitsuri is
unknown, the practice is believed to have started in the Edo period
(1603-1868). It is generally accepted that farmers in Northern Honshu
began the practice to protect apple trees weighed down by fruit and
late-autumn snowfall. It was not until the Meiji era that yukitsuri
arrived in Ishikawa, where aesthetics merged with function to create the
now iconic image of trees encased by rays of rope.
Yukitsuri is a common sight in Kanazawa and Kenrokuen Garden during the winter months. Yukitsuri can also be seen in Hibiya Park, Jindai Botanical Garden, Yoyogi Park and Inokashira Park in Tokyo. Although Tokyo no longer receives much snow, yukitsuris are still erected as a symbol for the coming of winter.
The process of attaching yukitsuri ropes begins in early November and takes about one month to complete. The ropes are kept up until early March, when the snow melts.

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Sources: Wikipedia / The Art of Travel / ishikawa.jp
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Like many Japanese craftsmanship, yukitsuri is a combination of function and beauty. The ropes are splayed out from the top at even intervals, like rays encircling the trees, their lengths harmonizing perfectly with the heights of the branches. At night, some gardens place lamps under the trees that throw light up on the branches and onto the ropes, highlighting the thick strands. With snow falling softly around it creates a particularly beautiful winter scene.
Yukitsuri is a common sight in Kanazawa and Kenrokuen Garden during the winter months. Yukitsuri can also be seen in Hibiya Park, Jindai Botanical Garden, Yoyogi Park and Inokashira Park in Tokyo. Although Tokyo no longer receives much snow, yukitsuris are still erected as a symbol for the coming of winter.
The process of attaching yukitsuri ropes begins in early November and takes about one month to complete. The ropes are kept up until early March, when the snow melts.
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Sources: Wikipedia / The Art of Travel / ishikawa.jp