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Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Shopping & Souvenirs: Gokase Winery Wine Hall At Gokase Winery, we use 100% grapes grown by local farmers who work closely with the region’s strict yet generous natural environment. These proud wines are gathered in the Wine Hall. Niagara Premium, the Wine Hall’s exclusive, ages Niagara grapes in tanks to develop a calm aroma and a smooth taste, and it is our number one favorite. Hours: 9:30–17:00 Closed: during the New Year holidays Contact: Phone number: 0982-73-5477
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Souvenir
  • Shopping
  • wine
  • Specialty
  • Sightseeing
  • Travel
  • Local PR
  • Tourism Association
  • ...and 2 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Shopping & Souvenirs Speciality Center Gokase Located along National Route 218 on the border between Miyazaki Prefecture and Kumamoto Prefecture, Speciality Center Gokase Local specialties from Gokasecho and fresh vegetables grown by nearby farmers are displayed here. In the diner you can enjoy Gokase udon or soba topped with a whole simmered yamame trout in sweet soy glaze, and Tokuhoru-don, which won the grand prize at the Miyazaki B-grade Gourmet Contest. Hours of operation Shop: 9:00–18:00 Diner: 11:00–16:00 Closed days Shop: Open year-round Diner: During the New Year holidays Contact Phone: 0982-82-1400 Fax: 0982-82-1252
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Souvenir
  • Shopping
  • Sightseeing
  • Gourmet
  • Lunch
  • Specialty
  • vegetable
  • Local PR
  • ...and 4 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Hiking and Trekking: Kabakidake Rising at the heart of the Kuwanouchi district, the mountain is known locally as Shiroyama, or Castle Mountain, because an ancient mountain fortress called Kabakidake Castle once stood there. It is cherished by the local community. With Mt. Masugata to the east as its backdrop, the mountain offers wide views to the west, south and north. Its shape—easy to defend but hard to attack—has made it famous as the representative mountain of Kuwanouchi.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Mountain Climbing/Hiking
  • Nature
  • Great view
  • Sightseeing
  • History
  • Instagrammable
  • Photogenic
  • Photography
  • ...and 3 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
[Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Mountaineering and Trekking] Mt. Masugata Mt. Masugata in the Kuwanochi area The summit offers a full 360-degree panorama, with views of the Aso mountain range, Kuju mountain range, Mt. Sobo, Mt. Unzen Fugen, and the gorge of the Gokase River all visible at a glance. You can also see a sky full of stars at night, but be aware that the trail to the summit is rugged and there are no streetlights.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Mountain Climbing/Hiking
  • Nature
  • Great view
  • Sightseeing
  • History
  • Instagrammable
  • Photogenic
  • Photography
  • ...and 3 others
Kiso Tourist Federation
Jul. 4, 2024
[July 2024 Kiso Festival] Kiso will be the festival Information of July, which will be held in various places. Starting with the famous Mikoshi portable shrine roll in Fukushima, Kiso Town, you can enjoy colorful festivals in various places. Please come and visit us! ♦July 12 Fri, 13 Sat Yabuhara Shrine Annual Grand Festival Kiso Village Yabuhara A powerful festival in which two lions, male and female, perform a dance of two lions, male and female, on the stalls of making << total Cypress trees. >> ♦July 13 Sat, 14 Sun Higashiyama Shrine Summer Annual Grand Festival Nagiso Town Midono <portable shrine parade carrying a portable shrine while singing a song. > ♦July 14 Sun, 15 Mon Susao Shrine Festival Okuwa Village Nojiri << they carry their portable shrine and Parade Town, and at the end, they are led by the flame of torches to enter the mountain. >> ♦July 22 Tue, 23 Wed Mizunashi Shrine Festival Mikoshi portable shrine roll Kiso Town Fukushima << "Sosuke! Kiso's strange festival that excitingly sprees Mikoshi horizontally and vertically with a shout. fireworks will also Gari on the 22nd. >> ♦July 23 Wed, 24 Thu Wachipo Shrine Summer Annual Grand Festival Tsumago juku <<, with a shout of "goodbye to Gemo", the portable shrine parade the Shukuba. >> ♦July 26 Fri, 27 Sat Deer Shrine Festival Okuwa Village Suhara <<, the fierce pushing of the portable shrine with the shout of "Let's give it to you, let's put it back" is a sight to behold. >> ♦July 27 Sat Cypress trees summer festival Agematsu town << in preparation for next year's Sacred Tree Festival, we will hold a fireworks festival with Mikihiki. >> ♦July 27 Sat, 28 Sun Ontake Shrine Annual Grand Festival Otaki village << "Three Swords Dance" and dances by priestesses are Dedication. >> Information about the Festival is also Publication on the Home Page "Kiso Valley Torippu"!
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  • Festival
  • Nagano Prefecture
  • kiso
  • Events
  • Local PR
  • Unique festival
  • Tradition
  • Japan
  • Summer
  • Photogenic
  • ...and 2 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
[Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Mountaineering and Trekking] Gionyama This mountain is said to be the birthplace of Kyushu, first emerging from the sea as the current Kyushu rose from tectonic movement, and fossils dating back 430 million years have been excavated here. During the mountain opening season, you can enjoy flowers such as the fully blooming akebono azaleas. Some sections require using ropes to advance.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Mountain Climbing/Hiking
  • Nature
  • Great view
  • Sightseeing
  • History
  • Instagrammable
  • Photogenic
  • Photography
  • ...and 3 others
Fukui Awara Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
A direct shuttle bus connecting Awara Onsen and the Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum will operate again in fiscal 2024!! From fiscal 2024 the service is by reservation only. Please make reservations via the Hapi Bus website. ●Service period: Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays from April 5, 2024 (Friday) through September 29, 2024 (Sunday) During the Obon period, August 13–15, the bus runs daily ●Timetable and fares Direct shuttle fare: flat rate of ¥2,800 each way (elementary school students ¥1,400) ・Outbound 9:50 Depart Awara-Yunomachi Station 10:00 Depart JR Awara-Onsen Station 11:00 Arrive Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum ・Return 14:50 Depart Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum 15:50 Depart JR Awara-Onsen Station 16:00 Arrive Awara-Yunomachi Station ●Notes The service is strictly reservation only and boarding with cash is not accepted. A flat handling fee of ¥200 will be charged for refunds due to customer circumstances. Please note that changes or refunds are not possible after departure. 📍Inquiries Keikan Kotsu TEL: 0776-78-6234
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  • Dinosaur
  • Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum
  • sightseeing bus
  • Awara
  • Fukui Prefecture
  • Sightseeing
  • Awara Onsen
Fukui Awara Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
While children are having fun, they will expand their interest and interest in "work". By deepening your understanding, you can have a longing for a profession, Finding a new dream, Held in with the hope that you will learn about the structure of society through real experiences! Let's enjoy the exciting and exciting challenge! 【Job Introduction】 ・Engineer Toyota Corolla Fukui ・ Hertz clerk prefectural residents ・Sales Driver Yamato Transport ・Carpenter Mr./Ms. Shoei Construction ・Confectionery shop nishikando ・Bakery Okawa Bread ・ Locksmith / security work master key ・Photographer Photo Studio Happy Door ・Kids model Iwamoto Bridal House ・Cheer Dancer Manabi Site Cheer Dance Class ・ Driver, vehicle attendant, station staff Happy Line Fukui ・Nurse Mr./Ms. Fukui Prefectural Nursing Association ・ Otofu making Takeda's Aburaage Taniguchiya * Only on the 21st ・ Firefighter Awara Fire Station * 20 days only ・ Mr./Ms. Awara Fire Station Flare Police Box * Only on the 21st Date: July 20, 2024, 10:00 – July 21, 2024, 16:00 Venue: Affrea Square, Affrea Hall
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  • Kids
  • Sightseeing
  • Events
  • Awara
  • Fukui Prefecture
  • awaraonsen station
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Traditional Performing Arts of Gokasecho, Miyazaki Prefecture — Usu-daiko Dance The Usu-daiko dance performed at the autumn grand festival of Gion Shrine was once offered on the lunar calendar date of September 9, so it is also called the "kunchi dance," and it has been passed down for more than 400 years. It is said to have begun when members of the defeated Taira clan, driven from Kyoto and wandering in exile, reached the mountain hamlet of Shiiba on their way to safety and, while remembering the glittering capital, danced in the village of Kuraoka. The dance shows a poised, dignified movement within its grace, evoking the hearts of people from the capital, and it is offered each year at Gion Shrine’s autumn festival. <Legendary Events>-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- In the first year of Bunji (1185), near the end of the Genpei conflicts, remnants of the Taira clan who were defeated at the Battle of Dan-no-ura fled into the interior to evade the Genji pursuit. They reached the village of Kuraoka and, on their way to Mt. Shiiba, left the weak, women, and children in the mountains near Kuraoka Hakki because of the steep, treacherous roads. In Genkyu 2, the Kamakura shogunate did not ease its pursuit of the Taira remnants and ordered Nasu Daihachiro Munenaga to hunt down the clan that had fled into the Kyushu Mountains. Receiving the order, Nasu Daihachiro's party entered Kuraoka intending to head for Shiiba, and finding the Taira fugitives in Kuraoka lacking the will to fight, they staged a dance of shared company to comfort them after the long journey, setting aside the victors' arrogance to show compassion for the defeated. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The dance described above became the foundation of the Kuraoka Usu-daiko dance, which, after cycles of prosperity and decline and several relocations over the ages, is said to have survived in its present form. Dancing to the beat of drums and bells, performers display dignified movements within an overall elegance. In recent years, the Gion Shrine Usu-daiko Dance Preservation Society, with the cooperation of children from Gokase Nature School and local parishioners, has carried on the dance. Schedule for the Usu-daiko dance: every year on October 9.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Traditional entertainment
  • Tradition
  • Traditional culture
  • Sightseeing
  • History
  • Shrine
  • Local PR
  • Instagrammable
  • ...and 5 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Traditional Performing Arts of Gokasecho, Miyazaki Prefecture: Kuraoka Staff Technique The Kuraoka staff tradition follows the Ōkuruma school, said to be a martial art founded by Marume Kurando (one of the four greats of the Shinkage tradition) from the Higo Sagara domain. Also called Shinkage Ōkuruma Musō-ryū, documents show the earliest mention of Kuraoka in the early Edo period. After that, the art passed through Mamimahara and Omae in Shiiba Village before returning to practitioners in Kuraoka at the local end of the line. Kuraoka staff techniques use two kinds of staff: the long staff, 6 shaku 2 sun (about 188 cm), and the short staff, 3 shaku (about 91 cm). The forms are basically defensive. There are over thirty paired forms, including long staff versus short staff and staff versus sword. Forms that employ the sword are commonly called shiraha (white-blade). The Kuraoka Staff Preservation Society offers a shiraha dedication at the summer grand festival of Gion Shrine and provides instruction to students at Kuraoka Junior High School.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Traditional entertainment
  • Tradition
  • Traditional culture
  • Sightseeing
  • History
  • Shrine
  • Local PR
  • Instagrammable
  • ...and 5 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Traditional Performing Arts of Gokasecho, Miyazaki Prefecture: Murono Yoi Kagura The Murono Yoi Kagura at Mikasho Shrine is said to have been handed down during the Meiji era from the Iwato Kagura lineage, specifically the Kuwanouchi Shrine Kagura and the Furudono Shrine Kagura. The sake-straining dance has become a merry performance portraying a farming couple. In the mid-Meiji period, Minosuke Kai, the first head of the Murono district, brought kagura from Furudono to the Konpira-yama festival, central to the Murono and Akatani districts, and passed it down to the present day. The tradition once died out, but it was reformed when kagura was requested for the Tsuhana Tunnel breakthrough ceremony in 1972 (Showa 47). Murono Yoi Kagura schedule: the second Saturday in December
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Traditional entertainment
  • Traditional culture
  • Tradition
  • History
  • Shrine
  • Sightseeing
  • Local PR
  • Instagrammable
  • ...and 5 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
[Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Traditional Performing Arts] Kuraoka Gion Kagura Kuraoka Gion Kagura is a kagura preserved at Kuraoka’s Gion Shrine. Its origins are said to trace back to dances performed in the broad courtyard of the ancient Kogamure Shrine recorded in the Engishiki. In Genryaku 2 / Juei 4 (1185), after the Heike clan’s defeat at the Battle of Dan-no-ura, members of the Heike fled through the Kyushu mountains and reached Kuraoka, then pressed further into the remote mountains toward Shiiba. At that time, court entertainments and sacred music from Kyoto—gigaku, gagaku—and Ise-style kagura that the Heike brought with them blended into the existing local kagura, and over time this fusion developed into a distinctive form. The kagura’s sound is said to have been shaped by a drum made from the trunk of a walnut tree grown in the hidden recesses of Mt. Shiraiwa, stretched with deerhide taken from the remote mountains and bound at both ends with hemp twine; a flute made from bamboo with holes bored in it; and graceful, capital-style rhythms and hand clapping. These elements combined into the unique musical pulse of the Kuraoka kagura. In July 2023, the Kuraoka Gion Kagura Preservation Society revived this ancient kagura drum. Kuraoka Gion Kagura schedule: mid-July (Gion Shrine), early October (Gion Shrine), mid-November (Amanatsu Shrine)
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Traditional entertainment
  • Traditional culture
  • Tradition
  • Shrine
  • History
  • Sightseeing
  • Local PR
  • Instagrammable
  • ...and 5 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Traditional Performing Arts: Kuwanouchi Shrine Kagura Kuwanouchi Kagura is believed to have begun in the early Meiji era. A surviving costume is dated Meiji 3, and the shrine’s relocation to Habu in the same year suggests the kagura started around that time. The masks used are mainly the hannya mask, more frequently employed than in other kagura, and the performance is characterized by a faster tempo. The whole community works together to pass the tradition to future generations, putting great effort into training successors. In spring and autumn, the kagura is offered at the Kuwanouchi Shrine grand festival. In January, a night-long kagura dedication prays for a bountiful harvest and the well-being of residents. Kuwanouchi Shrine Night Kagura Schedule…Every year on the second Saturday of January
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Traditional entertainment
  • Traditional culture
  • Tradition
  • Shrine
  • History
  • Sightseeing
  • Local PR
  • Instagrammable
  • ...and 5 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
[Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Traditional Performing Arts] Furutono Shrine Kagura During the Muromachi period, local jinkagura and Iwato kagura were offered together here for rites, but through several revivals Ise kagura became blended in, producing a slower-tempo (roku-choshi) kagura that continues to the present day. The origin of this kagura is the “Amano-Iwato Opening,” and it was performed to pray for a bountiful harvest and household safety. From Taisho 6 (1917) it also included prayers to calm fires; today it additionally includes traffic safety prayers, and a night kagura festival is held every January. Furutono Shrine night kagura schedule…mid-January
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Traditional entertainment
  • Tradition
  • Traditional culture
  • Shrine
  • History
  • Sightseeing
  • Local PR
  • Instagrammable
  • ...and 5 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Traditional Performing Art of Gokasecho, Miyazaki Prefecture: Ara-Odori (UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage) The Ara-Odori of Gokase is a style of elegant festival dance that was designated a National Important Intangible Folk Cultural Property on January 8, 1987 (prefectural designation: May 15, 1962). In February 2021, a group of 41 nationwide “furyu odori” (elegant festival dances), including Gokase’s Ara-Odori, was selected as a candidate for inscription on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list. A nomination dossier was submitted to UNESCO in March of the same year, and the dances were officially inscribed on November 30, 2022. “Furyu odori” embodies the spirit of flamboyance and eye-catching elegance. Performers wear elaborate costumes and carry decorative props as they dance to songs and the sound of flutes, drums, and small gongs. Across Japan, 42 furyu odori entries (covering 25 prefectures and 43 municipalities) are designated National Important Intangible Folk Cultural Properties. In Miyazaki Prefecture, Gokase’s Ara-Odori is the only designated example. These dances carry prayers from local communities for protection from calamities, memorials for the dead, prosperous harvests, and rain. Villagers of all ages take part during festivals and annual events. Each locality’s history and natural environment are reflected in its performance, and the dances serve as a vital source of community energy. The Ara-Odori of Gokase is said to have begun in the Tensho era (1573–1592) when Sakamoto Iga no Kami Masayuki, lord of Sakamoto Castle (upstream of the Mikasho River), started the dance to raise his troops’ morale before going to war. Later, in the Keicho era (1596–1615), his grandson Sakamoto Yamashiro no Kami Nyudo Kyukaku established a ritual code for offering the dance to the guardian deity Futakami Daimyojin (now Mikasho Shrine). At that time, it is said that a successor from the temple called shinbochi oversaw funerary rites, and a monkey kept at the temple was also made to join the dance. One theory holds that the dance originated in Sakamoto, in Ōmi Province (modern Shiga Prefecture). However, the Nisshu Takachiho Kokon Jiran-ki (collected in Volume 4 of the Hyuga Local Historical Materials) records that descendants of Sasaki Rokkaku Takayori from Ōmi fled to Takachiho and served the Mitai clan; their descendants later took the names Saho, Sakamoto, and Masaki. The Sakamoto mentioned here is not the Sakamoto of Sakamoto Castle but the Sakamoto from Mukoyama to Kanegase, a separate lineage with its own origins distinct from the Minamoto, Oogami, or Fujiwara clans. Ara-Odori schedule: every year on the fourth Sunday of September
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Cultural Property
  • Traditional entertainment
  • Tradition
  • Traditional culture
  • History
  • Shrine
  • Sightseeing
  • Local PR
  • ...and 6 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
[Gokasecho, Miyazaki Prefecture Tourist Spot] Myoken Shrine Founded about 1,100 years ago in the 11th year of Jōgan (870) during the reign of Emperor Seiwa, it has been venerated as a water deity. The spring water emerging from a limestone cave layer on Mount Gion and flowing into a corner of Myoken Shrine is called “Four Hundred Million-Year Drop: Myoken Sacred Water.” It has long been known as the sacred nursing water and was selected as one of the 100 Famous Waters of the Heisei era. Autumn festival: early November
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Sightseeing
  • Nature
  • Shrine
  • History
  • Summer
  • Instagrammable
  • Photogenic
  • Photography
  • ...and 3 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Tourist Spot: The starry sky of Gokasecho According to the International Dark-Sky Association, Gokasecho has a Class 2 night sky. You can see many stars with the naked eye throughout the town. They are especially clear on clear winter nights. Some locations can be dangerous at night, so caution is necessary. Gokase Nature School holds occasional "Star Parties" where astronomy enthusiasts from inside and outside the town gather.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Sightseeing
  • Starry sky
  • Great view
  • Nature
  • Instagrammable
  • Photogenic
  • Tourism Association
  • Kyushu region
  • ...and 1 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Sightseeing Spot: Gion Shrine Gion Shrine was founded around the 16th year of Emperor Kinmei’s reign (around 525 AD) when an epidemic swept the Chihogō area in central Kyushu. It was established in Kuraoka, at the heart of the region, as a protector deity prayed to for the removal of disease and misfortune. Locals affectionately call it “Gion-san.” On the shrine grounds stands a zelkova tree said to have been planted by Nasu Daihachiro and Munemasa when they visited in Genkyu 2 (1205). Designated a town natural monument, this giant tree is about 37 meters tall and has an estimated age of roughly 800 years. Deities enshrined: Sobo no Kami / Susanoo no Mikoto, Izanami no Mikoto, Oonamuchi no Mikoto, Kushinadahime no Mikoto, Itsuse no Mikoto, Somin Shorai, Kotan Shorai, Tenman Tenjin, Ashinazuchi no Kami, Tenazuchi no Kami, Inari Daimyojin
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Shrine
  • History
  • god
  • Natural monument/Protected species
  • Sightseeing
  • Local PR
  • Instagrammable
  • Photogenic
  • ...and 4 others
Suwa Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Continuing from 1949 Showa 24, it is loved not only by people who and Suwa history, but also by fireworks lovers in Japan and abroad fireworks festival 🎆 In the midst of the chaos after the end of the war, the ticket sales deadline for the 76th Suwa Lake Festival Fireworks Display on Lake Suwa in 2024 until 23:59 on Sunday, July 7 is approaching since the "Naryo Suwa Lake fireworks festival" was Held in for the first time in Suwa Lake on August 15, the 76th anniversary of the event. Mr./Ms., have you already applied? The application deadline is this weekend! If you haven't applied yet, hurry up! To apply for tickets, please search for "Suwa Lake Fireworks"! Japan one of the fireworks festival of domestic one of the best, Suwa Lake Festival Fireworks Display on Lake Suwa!!!! Use Akippa for parking from last year, and you can reserve a parking lot in advance. You can 🚗 come with plenty of time to spare! The fireworks take about one and a half hours, and you can 🎇 enjoy the magnificent fireworks festival We look forward to seeing you 🎶 in Suwa
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  • Suwa
  • Nagano Prefecture
  • Sightseeing
  • Travel
  • Japan
  • Suwa Lake Festival Lake Fireworks Festival
  • Good things about Suwa
  • Suwa Travels
  • Kami-suwa Onsen
  • Suwa Lake
  • ...and 10 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Sightseeing Spot: Furuto-no Shrine The founding date is unknown. According to shrine tradition, when the loyal retainer Shibahara Matazaburo Nyudo Shotora of the Yoshino court moved from Shibahara in Osekata Village to Kuwanochi Yokodori, he is said to have brought the three deities of Kumano that had been worshipped in Shibahara to this site. Since ancient times the shrine has been revered as the Shrine of the Fire God. When a parishioner’s house faced fire, mysterious sounds would reportedly arise within the shrine to warn of it, and the parishioners would stay at the shrine to perform rituals to avert the fire. On the grounds stand three giant cedar trees about 580 years old and over 30 meters tall, designated as town natural monuments. A kaya tree likewise designated as a town natural monument is a giant estimated at about 600 years old and 34 meters tall. Spring Festival: Early April Grand Annual Festival: September 23 Night Kagura: Early January Deities enshrined: Izanagi no Mikoto, Izanami no Mikoto, Kagutsuchi no Mikoto, with Fujiwara no Michizane also enshrined.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Sightseeing
  • Nature
  • Shrine
  • History
  • god
  • giant tree
  • Natural monument/Protected species
  • Tourism Association
  • ...and 4 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Tourist Spot: Uge Falls There is a legend about Uge Falls. “Long ago, when people hosted celebrations or received guests, they would ask the waterfall pool, ‘Please lend me a bowl,’ and by the next morning a bowl would be floating in the pool. Once, someone returned a bowl with a piece missing, and the gods became angry and stopped lending bowls.” To protect the water of Uge Falls, a water deity is enshrined at the foot of the falls. The site has been cherished by previous generations as an important water source for Ohara Iseki Park and the Mikasa Sakamoto district, and it continues to be carefully preserved.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Sightseeing
  • Waterfall
  • Great view
  • Nature
  • Instagrammable
  • Photogenic
  • Photography
  • Tourism Association
  • ...and 2 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Tourist Spot: Shimonohara Terraced Rice Fields The Shimonohara terraced rice fields are among the largest in Gokase, and such an extensive set of rice terraces carved into a mountain valley is rare. The embankments form graceful curves that create a magnificent terraced landscape. In the Uchino-kuchi district of Shimonohara, a siphon—an important irrigation structure—exists in three places, and the first siphon was built in the Taisho era. Although only the bridge piers remain today, a siphon erected near the entrance commemorates the Shimonohara terraces and the great achievements of those who came before.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Sightseeing
  • Great view
  • Rural scenery
  • Instagrammable
  • Photogenic
  • Photography
  • Tourism Association
  • Kyushu region
  • ...and 1 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Tourist Spot: Torinusu Rice Terrace Torinusu Rice Terrace features rice terraces that spread in two directions, offering a panoramic view over the village to the east and west that is well worth seeing. There is a bust of Togoro Goto, a pioneer who opened three irrigation channels at Josenji Temple, and information indicates that Torinusu Rice Terrace is located nearby. A branch irrigation channel from Torinusu Rice Terrace receives drainage from the mountainside, helping to protect farmland, roads (National Route 503) and other public facilities downstream. The terraces also collect water, contributing to flood prevention.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Sightseeing
  • Great view
  • Rural scenery
  • Instagrammable
  • Photogenic
  • Photography
  • Tourism Association
  • Kyushu region
  • ...and 1 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Sightseeing Spot: Hikage Rice Terraces The water for the Hikage rice terraces comes from the spring water of Myoken Shrine in Kuraoka. The spring at Myoken Shrine is so popular that people come from other prefectures to collect it, and it is famous as a local tourist attraction. Behind the Hikage rice terraces stands Gion-yama, said to be the birthplace of Kyushu, creating a scenic harmony with the village and the mountain. The area also hosts events such as Gokase Highland Ski Resort activities, the Gion Shrine Festival, and the Myoken Shrine Grand Festival, and the community is working to revitalize the village by making the most of its landscape.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Sightseeing
  • Great view
  • Rural scenery
  • Instagrammable
  • Photogenic
  • Photography
  • Tourism Association
  • Kyushu region
  • ...and 1 others
Miyazaki Gokase Tourism Association
Jul. 4, 2024
Miyazaki Prefecture Gokasecho Tourist Spot: Unoko Falls Unoko Falls features a 20-meter drop and a plunge pool covering 5,000 square meters. Surrounded by dramatic columnar jointing rock formations, the magnificent falls overwhelm any onlooker. A riverside trail from the Mitsukawa Iwagami area brings visitors close enough to feel the waterfall’s power, and a viewpoint on the opposite bank offers a full view of the falls and plunge pool, revealing different moods through the seasons.
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  • Gokase
  • Miyazaki Prefecture
  • Sightseeing
  • Great view
  • Waterfall
  • Unoko Falls (Nishiusuki)
  • Autumn leaves
  • Four seasons
  • Nature
  • Instagrammable
  • ...and 3 others

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