It's funny goodluck http://thumbzilla.fun thumbzilla.com This interest in trees and mountains can be traced to prehistoric traditions of animism, shamanism, feng shui and the belief in mountain and forest spirits – a religious spectrum known as Seondo. These traditions seem still to exert some hold over Korean attitudes to nature. On the vernacular level, there is a “village grove” tradition in Korea: a revered copse with supernatural qualities at the edge of a village. Animistic beliefs were later incorporated into Buddhist teaching, with almost all the 3,000 temples in Korea including a mountain spirit shrine or painting. The oldest traditions of garden-making in Korea were concerned with the construction of simple pavilions and walks through unadorned nature, revealing as little human intervention as possible.