Oxford University Society: Spectacular Japan Tour, Spring 2009

Miyako Odori Kyoto Japan

Detailed itinerary description

Day Schedule

Wednesday April 1st

Departure for Japan

We meet at 16:30 at All Nippon Airlines (ANA) counter, Heathrow Terminal 3 Departures, before assisting you with check-in. Our flight is non-stop ANA 202 departing 19:35 with a flight time of 12 hours.

Thursday April 2nd

Arrival in Japan
Stay at Kyoto Hotel

We change in Tokyo for ANA flight 2179, which we will board after customs and immigration, arriving at Osaka airport at 19:15 local time. We’ll reach Kyoto about an hour later and you are invited to join us for dinner soon after the check-in formalities are completed.

Friday April 3rd

Kyoto:
Gion
Kiyomizu Temple
Stay at Kyoto Hotel

On our first morning in Kyoto, we visit Gion with its traditional wooden buildings, cobbled streets and renowned Geisha. You may even be lucky enough to see them, shuffling along in their kimono and clogs. From Gion, a short walk takes us to Maruyama Park and its complex of temples, in the foothills of the mountains east of Kyoto. This is a good opportunity to take part in some temple traditions like throwing a coin and ringing the bell at the temple entrance. The gods will welcome you inside - as long as you take your shoes off!

We stroll from temple to shrine, pausing for lunch on the way, then head uphill gradually to another Kyoto icon - Kiyomizu. The main temple rests against the hill slope with 20 metre high wooden stilts supporting it. From here, there are fantastic views over the whole city and you can try the 'love walk' - finding a path from one ancient boulder to another with eyes closed. Superstition states that if you make it, you will be lucky in love but if you don't, there are always plenty of good luck charms to buy instead! As the day comes to an end, we walk back to the hotel or take a taxi for comfort.

Saturday April 4th

Kyoto:
Golden Pavilion
Miyako Odori
Stay at Kyoto Hotel

We start the day in the northwest of Kyoto and the world famous Golden Pavilion and Ryoanji temples. As with Christianity, Buddhism has many denominations and each famous temple is often the seat of one particular sect. More religious Japanese people may consider it a personal pilgrimage to visit such temples. The glittering Kinkaku-ji Temple is a three-storey structure overlaid with gold leaf, which was restored in 1988. The stone garden at Ryoan-ji Temple represents Zen philosophy, consisting of fifteen stones of different sizes placed in white sand representing an image of islands and an expanding sea. The simple beauty of Zen inspired rock gardens is intended to give people a blank space in which to imagine their own landscape. The garden is also referred to as 'The Crossing of Tiger Cubs' as it resembles a mother tiger carrying her cubs across dangerous river torrents.

After lunch, we enjoy the seasonal performance of 'Miyako Odori'. This is a special celebration of spring in Kyoto which has been held since 1872, supposedly to maintain the city's pride after the capital moved to Tokyo. It is performed by twenty Maiko and Geiko (the real name of Geisha in Kyoto!) on a set adorned with cherry blossom. The eight dances are characterised by the bent shuffling legs of the artists which gives them the appearance of floating across the stage.

After the performance, you will have some free time to rest or explore the town centre.

Sunday April 5th

Nara
Stay in Kyoto Hotel

We take the hour-long train journey to Nara following an ancient route through the countryside between Japan's two former capitals. When we arrive at Nara we visit the huge Deer Park which, in addition to the more popular temples and giant buddhas, has many quieter areas of natural beauty. There are also opportunities to try Japanese snacks from traditional food stalls, watch turtles in the ponds and walk in the hills for views over the parkland. As the name suggests, the park is home to many deer - visitors need to be brave to feed them as they are likely to be buffeted from all sides by the greedier ones! For your own meal, you can choose from a traditional bento (lunch box) in the park or a restaurant lunch.

We finally make our way back to the station via the main arcade. Even if shopping is not your idea of fun, it is well worth wandering through shopping areas to see how Japanese people live day to day - it is quite different from the average UK high street. We arrive back at the hotel in Kyoto in time to rest before dinner.

Monday April 6th

Shinkansen to Kyushu
Beppu
Stay at Yufuin Ryokan

We experience the shinkansen on its fastest stretch, travelling west from Kyoto and on to Beppu. We enjoy a bento lunch on the train, reaching Beppu in the early afternoon. The city was founded on 1st April 1924 and is famous for its thousands of sacred onsen (hot springs).

Beppu is Japan's onsen capital, containing nine major pools sometimes referred to as the ‘Nine Hells of Beppu’. It is a beautiful setting - the sea to one side and mountains on the other with onsen always evident by their columns of rising steam. Most people walking around Beppu wear traditional yukata (kimono-style cotton robes) provided by their Ryokan (Japanese Inn). It is very comfortable and makes a picturesque scene as people potter through the town trying the different baths. We guide you to the various hot baths and the ‘devils pools’ to see bubbling, boiling mud. For the really ambitious there is usually time to try the hot sand baths at Takegawara Spa. After arriving at the ryokan we leave you to relax and sample the outdoor baths, before we try some elaborate traditional cuisine in our ryokan (Japanese inn).

Staying at a Ryokan allows you to enjoy the very best of Japanese hospitality from a tradition that has hardly changed in the last century. As you enter your room, the distinctive scent of tatami floors and paper and wood doors set the scene. The yukata (kimono-style cotton robes) are neatly folded, ready for you to change and head to the onsen as soon as you arrive. In the evening, enjoy sumptuous Japanese cuisine with round twenty tiny dishes brought to you in stages by your hostess. You may struggle to recognise most of them but you should certainly try them all. With meticulous attention to aesthetics and detail, this is just as much a feast for the eyes as the stomach.

Tuesday April 7th

Mount Aso
Stay at Yufuin Ryokan

We enjoy a traditional ryokan breakfast before visiting the active volcano, Mount Aso. Soon after leaving Beppu, you get a sense of the volcanos crater as the coach climbs up to the valley that enters from the east side. As the view opens out before you, the scale is immediately clear as the towering volcano stands in the centre of a vast caldera. The coach winds to the top of Mount Aso and we make two stops to take in the views and walk up to the boiling mud cauldron. The volcano was so powerful that the gases here are noxious and constantly monitored to protect visitors.

After lunch, we travel back down into the crater and up one side to enjoy more panoramic views. The floor of the crater is almost perfectly flat and very fertile making it ideal for the rice fields and other crops which give it a stunning patchwork appearance.

Wednesday April 8th

Onta Pottery & Hiroshima
Stay at Hiroshima Hotel

We enjoy another traditional breakfast before heading off for the pottery village of Onta. Here you'll have a chance to see the famous Onta-Yaki being made and observe the folk potters at work. Later, you'll be travelling east by train towards Hiroshima. We arrive late afternoon and will make a brief visit to the Atomic Dome and Peace Park. The Heiwa Kinen Shiryokan (Peace Memorial Museum) documents the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima on 6th August 1945 and its aftermath, with exhibits demonstrating the tragic destruction of the city and its people and the events leading up to it.

Thursday April 9th

Miyajima
Stay at Hiroshima Hotel

We reach Miyajima island by ferry from Hiroshima. The temple on the shoreline and the red torii (temple gate) at high and low tides deserves a full day on any schedule. The inland sea swells around the temple stilts at high tide and the torii appears to float magically on the water. At low tide you can stroll across the sand to the huge gate.

The village has lots of interesting shops and the park surrounding the area is populated by placid deer patiently waiting for food. We then take the cable car to the island summit for great views or, for the more energetic, there is time for a gentle hike if you don't mind being joined by a few of the local monkeys!

Friday April 10th

Okayama & Hakone
Stay at Hakone Hotel

A short journey by Shinkansen takes us to Okayama where we see one of Japan's three famous walking gardens, Korakuen. Completed in the 17th century, the name means “Garden of Pleasure After”, referring to a Confucian quote stating that a wise ruler must attend to his subjects’ needs first and only then attend to his own.

The first impression may be that of a giant lawn, crisscrossed with wide paths and the occasional teahouse but as you explore you find waterfalls, tiny shrines, miniature maple forests, a lotus pond, and traditional red bridges creating many different but very Japanese landscapes.

After lunch, we travel on to Hakone and our first views of Mount Fuji.

Saturday April 11th

Hakone
Kamakura & Tokyo
Stay in Hakone Hotel

We begin the day by enjoying the morning views of Mt Fuji and then enjoy a steamboat ride on Lake Ashi. Later we head on to Kamakura, which, surrounded by mountains and the open water of Sagami Bay, is a natural fortress. During the Heian period, it was the chief city of the Kanto region and from the 12th to 14th centuries, the Minamoto Shoguns ruled Japan from here. Kamakura is now famous for its temples and shrines. A tsunami destroyed the temple housing the Great Buddha in the 15th century but the statue survived and has weathered the elements ever since. After Kamakura we will travel on to our final destination, Tokyo

Sunday April 12th

Tokyo
Stay at Tokyo Hotel

We start the day with a visit to the Imperial Palace Gardens, home of the Japanese royal family. They are more protected and detached from mainstream society than the British monarchy and it is likely to be many years before it is possible to enter the Palace proper.

From tradtional Tokyo we move to Akihabara, one of the mesmerising shopping districts. This could be considered sightseeing in itself and it is certainly fun to marvel at the flashing lights and electronic gadgets on display in Akihabara known as 'Electric Town'. The more serious shopper will have a chance to continue bargain hunting the following day.

It is a short journey to Asakusa to visit the Asakusa Kannon Temple. This is the oldest in Tokyo and you may recognise the colossal lantern at the entrance. There is also an avenue leading up to Senso-ji temple, lined with traditional souvenir stalls.

We return to the Hotel via Sumida River sea bus and a stroll through the Hamariku Gardens.

Monday April 13th

Tokyo
Stay at Tokyo Hotel

We make an early start, before breakfast, to visit Tsukiji Fish Market. With an area approximately the size of 30 football pitches and 15,000 people working there, it is not hard to believe that this one of the world’s largest markets.

After breakfast, we visit Shibuya, a visually amazing district and one of the centres of Japan's youth fashion. We also visit Yoyogi Park, one of the main locations for the 1964 Olympics and now a favourite for buskers. After lunch, we take you to other areas of interest or leave you explore.

Tuesday April 14th

Return to UK

After breakfast at the hotel, we escort you to Narita Airport and assist with check-in for the flight back to the UK.

All Nippon Airlines Flight 201 departs at 11:30 arriving at Heathrow Airport (terminal 3) at 16:00 (flight time approx 12 hours)

Back to top >>