The Japanese garden appears so calm, so removed from its origins as a heart-racing, chance-taking, Google-fueled labor of amateur love.
Its creators, Marlon Reynosa and Maureen Reynosa-Braak, are proof that you don't have to know all the Latin names if you have enough enthusiasm.
"People walking by always ask, 'Did you go to school to learn this?' " Reynosa-Braak said of the artful mix of greenery, textures and shapes in their front yard, riven by a white path that runs through the plants like a ray of moonlight.
Reynosa smiled and shrugged: "You don't have to be an expert to do something you like."
He's not entranced by technology, but "Thank god for Google," he added. Online searching has helped the couple research plant varieties, source materials and envision garden designs. Most crucially, it enabled Reynosa-Braak to nurse their trio of Hindu-Pan pines back to health after a tough winter took its toll.
The carefully pruned trees look like giant bonsai, if that's not a contradiction in terms. Each appears to hover on a slight rise, yet they anchor the garden, which encompasses every inch of the yard, from front stoop to curb.
The couple moved into Minneapolis' Longfellow neighborhood 12 years ago, loving the classic bones of their house, but knowing that the yard would be a challenge.
"The front yard was all crappy grass and this sort of 'Blair Witch' crabapple tree that was poorly pruned to keep squirrels off the roof," Reynosa-Braak said.