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    Kinugawa-onsen Eki
    Creative Commons License photo credit: -ratamahatta-
    nice mountain river
    Creative Commons License photo credit: w00kie
    dinner in the room
    Creative Commons License photo credit: w00kie

    Kinugawa-onsen is a hot spring village filled with nature, located along the Kinu-gawa River which runs through Nikko National Park.

    Since early times, people have loved this hot spring saying, “Kawaji-onsen for wounds and Kinugawa-onsen for burns.” It is conveniently located and takes only about two hours travel from Asakusa, Tokyo.

    There are also a number of theme parks and skiing areas nearby. If you go a little further, you can also enjoy a visit to Nikko to see Nikko-tosho-gu Shrine, a world heritage site, as well as Nikko-Futarasan-jinja Shrine and Rin-o-ji Temple. This is what makes Kinugawa-onsen one of the most popular destinations in Japan.

    Kinugawa Hot Spring Village

      

    Odawara Castle - 10
    Creative Commons License photo credit: Kabacchi

    Odawara Castle - 02
    Creative Commons License photo credit: Kabacchi

    Odawara Castle - 01
    Creative Commons License photo credit: Kabacchi

    Odawara Castle (Odawara-jo) was transformed into a large-scale structure in 1495 by the daimyo Hojo Soun, who carried out a major refurbishment of a comparatively simple structure surrounded by a mound.

    After that, it became the castle of generations of the Hojo family. Odawara Castle had very strong defenses, as it was situated on a hill, surrounded by moats with water on the low side, and dry ditches on the hill side, with banks, walls and cliffs located all around the castle, enabling the defenders to repel attacks by the great warriors Uesugi Kenshin in 1561 and Takeda Shingen in 1569.

    But after it was surrendered to Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who ruled Japan in the latter half of the 16th century, it changed hands time and time again because of war. It was demolished in the latter half of the 19th century when political power changed from the Edo shogunate to the Meiji government and it was condemned as the symbol of samurai.

    It was reconstructed in 1960. It is a fine three-tiered, five-storied donjon, the top floor of which is an observatory. The moat and stone wall remain as they were in olden times.

      

    Grand Castle
    Creative Commons License photo credit: Tagosaku

    see and dog
    Creative Commons License photo credit: kobakou

    Odawara -feel the Segoku period-

    During the Sengoku period, Odawara developed as a castle town and capital of the domains of the late Hojo clan, which covered most of the Kanto region. Odawara castle was called “So-gamae” castle, which is different concept any other castle.

    The Hojo were defeated by Toyotomi Hideyoshi in the Battle of Odawara in 1590, despite the impregnable reputation of Odawara Castle, and the territory came under the control of Tokugawa Ieyasu.

    Under the Tokugawa shogunate, Odawara became a Odawara Domain, a feudal han ruled by a succession of daimyo. The castle town prospered as Odawara-juku, a post station on the Tokaido highway connecting Edo with Kyoto.

    After the Meiji Restoration, Odawara Domain briefly became “Odawara Prefecture”, which was merged with the short-live “Ashigara Prefecture” before joining Kanagawa Prefecture in 1876. During this period, the center of economic and political life in Kanagawa shifted to Yokohama, and Odawara suffered a strong decline in population, which was made more severe when the original route of the Tokaido Main Line bypassed the city in favor of the more northerly route via Gotemba.

    Besides Odawara Castle, Odawara is a major transit point for the Hakone hot springs resort area and the sightseeing locations of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. Within the city itself, the Yugawara area is also a well-known hot spring resort.

    Enoura, a coastal area of Odawara known for its pristine sea, has an abundance of kumamomi, a type of fish which prefers clear and clean water. Sea turtles are also sometimes present there. Because of the clear water and plentiful undersea life, many people come to Enoura for scuba diving. Traditionally, Odawara is known for its production of kamaboko processed fish, stockfish, umeboshi salted plums and traditional herbal medicines.

    odawara

     

    Kamakura Station
    Creative Commons License photo credit: jetalone

    I recommend you to use Odakyu line.

    Check the Odakyu’s website:

    http://www.odakyu.jp/english/freepass/enokama_01.html

    From Shinjuku Station

  • Odakyu Line
  • Pass Name: Enoshima-Kamakura Freepass
  • Price : adult ¥1,430 / child ¥720 (From shinjuku)
  • Duration : 70min
  • The Enoshima-Kamakura Freepass can be used for unlimited boarding on the Enoden Train, and the Odakyu Line(between Fujisawa Station and Katase-Enoshima Station)
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    If you want to use JR Line as follow.

    From Shinjuku

    • JR Shonan-Shinjuku Line (connect to JR Yokosuka Line)
      • Price : ¥890
      • Duration : 1 hour

    From Ikebukuro

    • JR Shonan-Shinjuku Line (connect to JR Yokosuka Line)
      • Price : ¥890
      • Duration : 1 hour

    From Shibuya

    • JR Yamanote Line &  JR Tokaido Line & JR Yokosuka Line
      • Price : ¥890
      • Duration : 1 hour
      • You have to change trains at Shinagawa from JR Yamanote Line to JR Tokaido Line, and at Totsuka station change to JR Yokosuka Line.
    kamakura

     

    The Great Buddha of Kamakura
    Creative Commons License photo credit: Jake Keup

    Hachimangu Tree Restoration 2
    Creative Commons License photo credit: geraldford

    Kamakura – The origine of Samurai -

    Before the establishment of the Kamakura shogunate, civil power in Japan was primarily held by the ruling emperors and their regents, typically appointed from the ranks of the imperial court and the aristocratic clans that vied there. Military affairs were handled under the auspices of the civil government. The system of government he established became formalized as the shogunate.

    Kamakura has many historically significant Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines, some of them, like Sugimoto-dera, over 1,200 years old. Kotoku-in, with its monumental outdoor bronze statue of Amida Buddha, is the most famous.

    This iconic Daibutsu is arguably amongst the few images which have come to represent Japan in the world’s collective imagination. Kamakura also hosts the so-called Five Great Zen Temples (the Kamakura Gozan).

    The architectural heritage of Kamakura is almost unmatched, and the city has proposed some of its historic sites for inclusion in UNESCO’s World Heritage Sites list.

    Kamakura has many festivals (matsuri) and other events in each of the seasons, usually based on its rich historical heritage. They are often sponsored by private businesses and, unlike those in Kyoto, they are relatively small-scale events attended mostly by locals and a few tourists.

    January in particular has many because it’s the first month of the year, so authorities, fishermen, businesses and artisans organize events to pray for their own health and safety, and for a good and prosperous working year. Kamakura’s numerous temples and shrines, first among them city symbols Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gu and Kencho-ji, organize many events too, bringing the total to over a hundred

     

    Access to Hakone Yumoto station

    • from Shinjuku
      • use odakyu Line (From Shinjuku to Hakone Yumoto Directly)
        • Price : ¥2020 (fare¥1150+express fee ¥870)
        • Duration : 1h40min
      • use Shinkansen and Hakone Tozan Line
        • You have to go to Shinagawa station(JR Yamanote Line) and get on Shinkansen.
        • And you should change trains at Odawara from Shinkansen to Hakone Tozan Line.
        • Price : ¥1750 (JR Line’s fare ¥1450 + Hakone Tozan Line’s fare ¥300)
        • Duration : 1h40min
    • from Shibuya
      • go to Shinjuku and use odakyu line
      • go to Shinagawa station and use Shinkansen
    • from Ikebukuro
      • go to Shinjuku and use odakyu line
      • go to Shinagawa station and use Shinkansen

    Hakone’s Train Tips

    Hakone’s Information Office

    Hakone Yumoto

     


    Creative Commons License photo credit: y_katsuuu

    If you get to Misaki, you should buy one-day, or two-day pass at Keikyu Shinagawa or Yokohama Station.

    • Misaki Maguro Pass ( Misaki Tuna Pass) [recommend!]
      • one day pass
      • Adult ¥2,980 / Child ¥2,240 (from Shinagawa)  | Adult ¥2,880 / Child ¥2,190 (from Yokohama)
      • You can buy this pass at Keikyu Shinagawa or Yokohama Station
      • Includings as follow
        • Round trip ticket from Shinagawa to Misakiguchi
        • Free ticket for Keikyu Bus (*Misaki area)
        • Lunch Voucher Ticket (*You can select the list, check the list http://www.keikyu.co.jp/train/img/maguro.pdf sorry Japanese only, if you want English menu, give us your comment on this article)
        • Spa Voucher Ticket  (*You can select the list, check the list http://www.keikyu.co.jp/train/img/maguro.pdf sorry Japanese only, if you want English menu, give us your comment on this article)
    • Miura Peninsula One day Pass
      • one day pass
      • Adult ¥1,900 (from shinagawa) / ¥1,400 (from Yokohama)
      • You can buy this pass at Keikyu Shinagawa or Yokohama Station
    • Miura Peninsula Two day Pass
      • one day pass
      • Adult ¥2,000 (from shinagawa) / ¥1,600 (from Yokohama)
      • You can buy this pass at Keikyu Shinagawa or Yokohama Station

    From Shinjuku

    • JR Yamanote Line and Keikyu Line
      • You have to change trains at Shinagawa from JR Yamanote Line to Keikyu Line.
      • From Shinjuku to Shinagawa : ¥190(*You should buy Free Pass Ticket at Shinagawa Station)
      • Duration : 20min( to Shinagawa) / 70min(from Shinagawa to Misakiguchi)

    From Ikebukuro

    • JR Yamanote Line and Keikyu Line
      • You have to change trains at Shinagawa from JR Yamanote Line to Keikyu Line.
      • From Ikebukuro to Shinagawa : ¥250(*You should buy Free Pass Ticket at Shinagawa Station)
      • Duration : 30min( to Shinagawa) / 70min(from Shinagawa to Misakiguchi)

    From Shibuya

    • JR Yamanote Line and Keikyu Line
      • You have to change trains at Shinagawa from JR Yamanote Line to Keikyu Line.
      • From Shinjuku to Shinagawa : ¥160(*You should buy Free Pass Ticket at Shinagawa Station)
      • Duration : 12min( to Shinagawa) / 70min(from Shinagawa to Misakiguchi)

     


    Creative Commons License photo credit: y_katsuuu

    Do you know Misaki ?

    Misaki is a harbor at the extreme south of the Miura Peninsula, in the Kanagawa Prefecture of Japan. It is administratively part of the city of Miura.

    Misaki is an important fishing harbor, mainly specializing in the processing of tuna, for which it is the second largest harbour in Japan.

    Closing the harbor to the south is the island of Jogashima, connected to the city by a bridge. It is a popular destination for week-end tourism. The lighthouse on top of Jogashima was built by the French engineer Léonce Verny at the end of the 19th century.

    Misaki is one of the closest tuna wharf around tokyo, so many Japanese go to have nice tuna and other fresh fish there, you can feel different from fish market.

    misaki port

     

    From Shinjuku

    • JR Yamanote Line & Tobu Tojo Line
      • You have to change trains at Ikebukuro from JR Yamanote Line to Tobu Tojo Line.
      • Price ¥600
      • Duration 40min

    From Ikebukuro

    • Tobu Tojo Line
      • Price ¥450
      • Duration 30min

    From Shibuya

    • JR Yamanote Line & Tobu Tojo Line
      • You have to change trains at Ikebukuro from JR Yamanote Line to Tobu Tojo Line.
      • Price ¥610
      • Duration 50min

     

    Chichibu
    Creative Commons License photo credit: *pb*

    From Shinjuku

    • Seibu Shinjuku Line & Seibu Ikebukuro Line
      • You have to change trains at Tokorozawa station for Seibu Chichibu
      • Price : ¥750
      • Duration : 2 hours
      • Seibu Shinjuku station is different from JR Shinjuku station.
    • Seibu Shinjuku Station

      Seibu Shinjuku Station

    From Ikebukuro

    • Seibu Ikebukuro Line
      • Price : ¥750
      • Duration : 1hour 45min

    From Shibuya

    • You should go to Shinjuku using JR Yamanote Line and change to Seibu Shinjuku Line.
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