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Is your GP a tree? Cherry Blossom Festival dips into ‘Forest Bathing’

Straight from the evergreen forests of Japan, the Sydney Cherry Blossom Festival is inviting Sydney-siders to put away their screens and digital distractions
10 Jul 2019 - Events
Forest for Cherry Blossom Festival

19 July 2019 - Media Release

Straight from the evergreen forests of Japan, the Sydney Cherry Blossom Festival is inviting Sydney-siders to put away their screens and digital distractions and try the Japanese practice of “shinrin yoku” at the Auburn Botanic Gardens.

Inspired by ancient Shinto and Buddhist practices, “shinrin yoku” is translated into English as “forest bathing” from:

  • shinrin = “forest”
  • yoku = “to bathe, shower, bask in”

The idea is to conscientiously spend time in a forest or woods and let nature enter the body through all five senses, including taste.

The benefits, supported by nearly four decades of research in Japan, include lower blood pressure, strengthened immune system and better mental health outcomes.

The practice is officially backed by the Japanese government as a preventative health program and has spread overseas as countries grapple with an epidemic of lifestyle diseases.

One of Australia’s foremost practitioners of forest bathing is Alima Clarke of Forest Therapy Blue Mountains.

“The bathing is not literal bathing but an invitation to ‘bathe’ in the natural essence of the forest or treed parkland,” Alima said. 

“Facilitators gently guide participants through a series of sensory experiences that promotes the relaxation of our sympathetic nervous system (fight or flight response).

“Overactivity of our fight or flight response can equate with increased cortisol (stress) levels, anxiety, tiredness and exhaustion, lowered immunity and digestive problems.

“Most of us live busy lives, in a high-tech and fast paced world, where busyness and constant achievement is an expectation.

“This constant engagement, be it with screens, social media, emails and work means it is harder for us to relax, switch-off and take time for rest and renewal.

“Individuals need to take charge and give themselves ‘permission’ to take time-out for restorative rest and renewal, and the forest is a perfect place to achieve this.

“In offering forest bathing experiences, we see the forest as the ‘teacher.’ At Forest Therapy Blue Mountains our guiding phrase is, ‘The forest is for-rest.’”

One hour forest bathing experiences will be offered on select days of the Sydney Cherry Blossom Festival.