Hey there awesome people! This place is amazing, everyone needs to come here at least once, let me know what you think and where you would like to see next!
The most dangerous for wood are mushrooms and insects. Mushrooms need a sufficiently humid environment to develop. Insects, most wood-eating insects (see Termitidae) cannot digest cellulose and/or lignin on their own; the presence (either in the substrate, in their digestive tract or in the wood) of symbiotic fungi or bacteria is essential for the assimilation of wood by woodborers. Something may miss so the insects cannot attack and develop in these building (humidity ? nature of the wood ?). The building are well protected, well ventilated, the wood don't touch the ground, protection from the ground by the rock. it is in the ground that termites build their galleries.
Most of these temple’s have phonebook sized manuals that tell you how to rebuild them, they also use natural preservatives on the wood so it breathes and protects against insects and rot
In my thumbnail... I am, lol. So is the floating support with a dragon on it. In the video, I don't think I look edited, but maybe I'm a glitch in the matrix.
That's immature of you. Not everyone is photogenic or video-genic (not sure if it's a word). sometimes the lightings make it looks weird..this vid from Seinfeld will explain everything: th-cam.com/video/TFeUrC2gR30/w-d-xo.html.
I really love the architecture of ancient Japanese interior homes. Everything from the intricate tea ceremony to the open space and airy rooms. Imagine how peaceful it would have been. Something western culture always lacked
Hey there awesome people! This place is amazing, everyone needs to come here at least once, let me know what you think and where you would like to see next!
The first time I visited Horyuji Temple was when I was in elementary school. Probably. As you get older, you become forgetful.
Quite true, amazing place though
I wish you got more of the structure of that pagoda like you did of the other building.
Has survived 1000’s of earthquakes 🫣
Fruits basket!🍒🥝🍓🍊
Guitar Japan cars man you are hitting all the right notes subbed
This temple would be perfect for rebooting the Game of Death!
Well it's pressure treated wood silly. That's no surprise!
Know more about the architecture of Horyuji Temple here:
www.studypool.com/services/16877487
Pagoda is tartarian building for electricity
Most of the west still isn't on ancient Japan's entireor design level
How can a wooden building last that time?? Where is the insects.☹️
I am not sure how they kept insects out, but it's built in a special way that has kept earthquakes from damaging it too. Amazing
The most dangerous for wood are mushrooms and insects. Mushrooms need a sufficiently humid environment to develop. Insects, most wood-eating insects (see Termitidae) cannot digest cellulose and/or lignin on their own; the presence (either in the substrate, in their digestive tract or in the wood) of symbiotic fungi or bacteria is essential for the assimilation of wood by woodborers. Something may miss so the insects cannot attack and develop in these building (humidity ? nature of the wood ?). The building are well protected, well ventilated, the wood don't touch the ground, protection from the ground by the rock. it is in the ground that termites build their galleries.
Most of these temple’s have phonebook sized manuals that tell you how to rebuild them, they also use natural preservatives on the wood so it breathes and protects against insects and rot
@@winphet Made from Japanese cypress, a species endemic to Japan
This cypress wood has the effect of repelling insects
@@AersionTV Horyuji Temple has an earthquake-resistant structure, which is also used in the structure of the Tokyo Skytree.
is that twerly from aqw that red stuff toy🤔😅
Haha! Yes, it is Twilly! Great catch!
Why does it looks like you're edited on the screen? 😂
In my thumbnail... I am, lol. So is the floating support with a dragon on it. In the video, I don't think I look edited, but maybe I'm a glitch in the matrix.
@@AersionTV has anyone told you that you look Abit like that guy who plays the saxophone on the streets? 😆
Can't say I've heard that before, lol
WaxyJaxu
look view no look face
You married that face? yikes.
That's immature of you. Not everyone is photogenic or video-genic (not sure if it's a word). sometimes the lightings make it looks weird..this vid from Seinfeld will explain everything: th-cam.com/video/TFeUrC2gR30/w-d-xo.html.
@@lightfootwind4068 The problem isn't the camera bro. The are in daylight.
@@based9930 Look my boyfriend/partner/friend/BFF/MyEverything does not look good on camera/pictures. But when he is nekked and live, he looks great!
@@lightfootwind4068 You are biased and lying. The camera bypasses your perceptual bias. That's why even YOU think they aren't good looking in photos.
Your disregard for the old Japaneses ways of simplicity with nature is appalling.
I don't disregard that. Why would you think so?
I really love the architecture of ancient Japanese interior homes. Everything from the intricate tea ceremony to the open space and airy rooms. Imagine how peaceful it would have been. Something western culture always lacked