[Machine Translation] The butterbur sprouting out of the snow, the fukijuso (a kind of Japanese butterbur) that gathers the spring sunlight like a parabolic antenna, the lotus that blooms all over the rice paddies, the dainty katakuris that bloom quietly, the nazuna that we used as a "dendro drum," the peepee grass we played with as a grass flute, the silver earwaves of silver silver grass that sway in the wind, the crowberries that have turned bright red, and the seven wildflowers of autumn and spring that have been beloved since the days of Manyo and Murasaki Shikishi. The book depicts the wildflowers of our hometowns that we want to preserve, which color the original landscape of Japan, such as the crowberries, which have been cherished since the days of Manyo and Murasaki Shikibu.