Top 10 Things to Do in Japan
Kinkakuji (Golden Pavilion Temple) is a World Heritage site and one of Kyoto's most famous attractions.
Photograph by Dina Franchi,
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1. Visit Kyoto’s Ancient Sites
Japan’s capital from 794 to 1868, Kyoto is bathed in history. The most iconic
remnant of the city’s imperial past is the outrageously gilded Kinkakuji, once
a shogun’s retirement villa and now a Zen
Buddhist temple. Perched on the bank
of a serene pond, Kinkakuji casts a famed golden reflection in the water. Just
as captivating are Kyoto’s less ostentatious sites, such as the minimalist and
cryptic dry landscape garden at Ryoanji.
In all, Kyoto boasts 17 World Heritage sites
(Kinkakuji and Ryoanji included), but with some 2,000 temples and shrines
across the city, not to mention numerous gardens, they represent a fraction of
Kyoto’s alluring heritage.
2. Overnight in a Temple
Mount Koya
has been a place of pilgrimage since the monk Kobo Daishi was inspired to found
the Shingon school of Buddhism amid its ancient cedars in the ninth century.
Among the highlights of a visit—besides wandering the eerie, almost primeval
Okunoin cemetery and the multitude of temples built in Daishi’s honor—is the
opportunity to stay with the monks at one of Koya’s mountaintop temples.
Eko-in is one of
nearly 50 such places open to guests, and it offers a typical Koya experience—a
Spartan and tranquil tatami-mat room, a multi-course vegetarian dinner
exquisitely presented on lacquerware, and the chance to join the monks and
pilgrims for early morning prayers.
3. Gallery Hop on "Art Island"
With three major galleries and many smaller art
venues, picturesque Naoshima in
the Seto Inland Sea is a standout on Japan’s contemporary art scene. The best
of the galleries is the Tadao Ando-designed Benesse House, a sleek hotel and
gallery that hosts work by artists such as David Hockney, Bruce Nauman, and
Frank Stella.
But art isn’t restricted to conventional spaces
on Naoshima. Nineteen dazzling outdoor installations dot Benesse’s beachfront
grounds, while in the laidback fishing village of Honmura, several of the old
wooden buildings have been transformed into permanent art installations. Even
the island’s I Love Yu public baths
have had a pop-art makeover. Naoshima has been dubbed “Art Island” for good
reason.
4. Ski Niseko
This small ski
resort town in Hokkaido boasts the finest powder in the country and three
major ski resorts to match: Niseko Village, Niseko Annupuri, and the Grand
Hirafu/Hanazono.
Away from the resorts, the allure is prime
backcountry powder and ample opportunities for ice climbing, telemark skiing,
and boarding through virgin snow. It’s not bad in summer either, when winter
activities give way to summer favorites like whitewater rafting, mountain
biking, and kayaking. And Niseko also has a year-round draw—mineral-rich hot
springs perfect for soaking away aches and pains from a day on the slopes.
5. Experience Traditional Accommodation
The gentle scent of tatami, the understated
elegance of the interiors, the meticulous service, the outdoor hot spring
baths, the multi-course meal of local seasonal produce, the calming silence—all
combine to make a night at a traditional Japanese inn, or ryokan, an
unforgettable experience.
Unforgettable, but not cheap, with room and meals
that can reach ¥100,000 per night. Fortunately, Japan has all bases covered—the
smaller and less formal minshuku, which provide a similarly
traditional though less luxurious experience, are usually less than ¥10,000 a
night.
6. Soak in a Natural Hot Spring
There is something quintessentially Japanese
about getting naked for a soak with strangers. In fact, the Japanese have been
using communal onsen, or natural hot spring waters, to relax and heal
for centuries—the earliest mention dating back 1,300 years to bathers in Dogo,
Shikoku.
Dogo is still one of the country’s most renowned
onsen resorts. The grand, three-storey Dogo Onsen Honkan at the center of the
resort is a 19th-century architectural gem complete with a bathing room (albeit
unused nowadays) set aside for the imperial family.
Not that you need venture to Dogo for a good
soak—there are thousands of public baths and ryokan with onsen across the
country, all worth stripping off for.
7. Explore Tokyo’s Old East Side
Sensoji, a Buddhist temple in Asakusa, is about
as touristy as it gets in Tokyo. Head a few blocks in any direction, however,
and the tourists soon give way to a part of the capital that has never strayed
far from its pre-war status as the city’s premier entertainment district.
Most representative of that is the tiny Hanayashiki Amusement Park,
home to retro rides that include the country’s first (and possibly most sedate)
rollercoaster. Nearby is Rokku Broadway, where historic theaters like Engei
Hall put on a bill packed with slapstick comedy and traditional comic
storytelling. Not surprisingly, the area also teems with good watering
holes—like Kamiya Bar, where the local
tipple is a legendary concoction of brandy, gin, and curaçao aptly named Denki
Bran (Electric Bran[dy]), first mixed here in the 1880s.
8. Hike the Northern Alps
The breathtaking peaks of Japan’s Northern Alps
are considered the country’s premier hiking grounds. And for good reason—from
the small town of Kamikochi,
the gateway to the area, visitors have a choice of easy day hikes or week-long
adventures that would challenge the fittest of hikers.
In the peak of summer, the most popular routes
can crawl with weekend hikers, but come on a weekday or wait for autumn and
visitors get to experience the Northern Alps’ jagged, nearly 10,000-foot peaks
and virgin forests as nature intended—unspoiled by crowds.
9. Tour Hiroshima’s Peace Memorial Park and Museum
Dedicated to victims of the atomic bombing of
August 6, 1945, the Peace
Memorial Park and Museum are poignant and moving monuments to the horrors
of nuclear weapons.
The disfigured frame of the park’s A-Bomb Dome,
one of the few buildings in central Hiroshima to survive the blast, serves as a
vivid reminder of the destruction that befell the city. Other parts of the park
are equally evocative—none more so than the Children’s Peace Monument. Built in
memory of one of the many children who died from leukemia as a result of the
fallout, it’s always decorated with origami cranes of hope sent from children
across Japan.
10. Sample the "B-Grade Gourmet"
Japan is known for fine cuisine like sushi,
tempura, and kaiseki, but its low-cost culinary underbelly (“B-grade
gourmet,” as the Japanese call it) is just as mouth watering. The king of the
B, ramen noodles, are ubiquitous, filling, and something of a national
obsession—some shops are revered enough to have people waiting in line for
hours just for a few minutes of ecstatic slurping.
Not that it’s all good. Some, like the vending machine
hotdog or convenience store fried noodle sandwich, should probably be labeled
"Z-grade." Source Article
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