The leaves are pretty spectacular and in the last weeks I've also been out with the camera
The other reason is nuts...
I don't know who first discovered that you could eat the orange seeds that smell like vomit and give you rashes, but its become a firm favorite among the Japanese during the autumn season.
Apparently they're very delicious in the savory egg custard dish Chawan mushi. The nuts themselves contain a chemical that often causes contact dermatitis (itchy rashes) so you can see the people picking up nuts with chopsticks or wearing gloves. It seems particularly popular with the old folks of Japan- maybe because they know what to do with them, or they have destroyed their sense of smell of the vomity nuts over the years.
Ginkyo nuts look much nicer than they smell.
Some are seriously hard core....
Extreme nut collecting- throw the sticks up into the tree wait for the smelly nut rain to fall
Extreme nut collecting- throw the sticks up into the tree wait for the smelly nut rain to fall
selecting their next prey.....
Who owns these nuts? I'm pretty sure the university does, but within full sight of the security guards, hordes of nut theives with bulging sacks go about their not- so - sneaky business.
The "grey brigade" carefully co-ordinate their routine, with the getaway bike close at hand.
I did a quick search (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ginkgo_biloba) to find about the ginkyo trees and found that the nuts themselves contain chemicals which are potentially beneficial for Alzheimers disease and memory enhancement. Perhaps these nuts are the key to a healthy old age. Personally, I wish someone would engineer a tree that does not have such an awful smelling fruit with such beautiful autumn colour.
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