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Saltybe Sea Salt Making Workshop
Sightseeing in the remote prefecture of Kochi is unforgettable...
5 Secluded OnSen in Japan and How To Discover Them
” Yet, they fail to realize that many true Japanese traditions live and breathe most authentically outside of Japan’s bustling metropolises...
Niseko
Over the last decade, Niseko has gained international recognition as one of the best winter resorts in the world, attracting large crowds of skiers and snowboarders...
Rakusuien Tea House
Although the city of Fukuoka opened Rakusuien to the public in 1996 as a Japanese garden complete with a tea house, its history stretches back almost a century earlier and was once the home of a wealthy merchant family...
Daisen White Resort
Little-known compared to other ski destinations, Daisen White Resort is a hidden gem that offers skiers and snowboarders the chance to enjoy Mount Daisen—the highest mountain in Tottori Prefecture and the Chugoku Region...
Kyoto
Japan’s capital for more than 1000 years, the story of an ancient nation is written all over Kyoto’s cobbled streets, endless temples and gardens, and in the traditional way of life preserved by tea merchants and geisha houses...
Otoyo Shrine
While Komainu statues, regal lion-dogs who stand guard at the gates of shrines and temples, are a familiar sight throughout Japan, Otoyo Shrine has an altogether different security detail...
Shimabara Castle
It caused such a strain on the local populace that it was one of the factors behind the Shimabara Rebellion erupting from 1637 to 1638...
Tsuboya Pottery Street
It’s no exaggeration to say that Tsuboya Pottery District is the bona fide birthplace of yachimun - a regional word describing all pottery made by Okinawan artisans that uses only indigenous soil...
Teshima
Somewhere near the edge of the world floats Teshima, a remote and sparsely-populated island sheltering mystifying works of contemporary art...
National Theatre of Japan
The larger theatre often holds performances of the famous traditional Japanese arts like Kabuki, Noh and Bunraku...