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Travelling Photographer

Photos and commentary from my travels around the globe

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kyoto

Japan Tour 2025 Day #10

Started the day at Arashimaya Bamboo Forest located in the village of Sagano in Kyoto– and with a rickshaw ride among its soaring stalks of bamboo was other worldly but it was a fun experience. Also, a highlight of the area is the Togetsukyo Bridge, which is 155 meters built across the Katsura River, a well-known place of scenic beauty – so they say.

Our next stop was the Golden Pavilion, or Kinkaku-ji, whose top floors are completely covered in gold leaf. This is a Zen Buddhist temple in Kyoto. It is designated as a world heritage site and one of the 17 historic monuments of Kyoto. The temple was a retirement villa of a shogun.

On to a Tea Ceremony instruction and our hands-on effort to learn the style and significance.

From the Tea Ceremony and lunch, we headed to the Todaiji Temple (The great eastern Temple), a Buddhist Temple complex in Nara and one of the powerful 7 great temples. It was started in 728 and finished in 1709. The main hall (Big Buddha Hall) houses one of Japan’s largest bronze statues of a sitting Buddha at 15 meters tall. The south gate of the Temple is known as the Nanadaimon Gate and is guarded by two fierce-looking statues, which were completed in 60 days.

Dotonbori in Osaka for dinner. It is a canal-side entertainment district with restaurants, shops, small bars, and izakaya taverns. Area of sensory overload.

Japan Tour 2025 Day #9

Our first stop of the day was the Samurai Ninja Museum in Kyoto, where the legendary world of Samurai and ninja comes alive. This interactive, hands-on museum is where Samurai dress, armor, and skills come alive. Ninja swordsmanship skills, blowgun techniques, and shuriken throwing (we tried our hand) are demonstrated.

Fushimi Inari Shrine is dedicated to the Shinto God of Rice. It is famous for its thousands of vermilion Torii Gates, which straddle a network of trails and offer good views of Mt. Inaii, which stands at 233 meters.

Ninenzaka Food  Market is a 150-meter road lined with stalls selling all kinds of street food and plenty of ice cream (known in Japan as soft cream).

Dinner was a sit- down with a traditional Japanese fair and the added entertainment of a Geiko and Maiko in their traditional makeup with gilded hair in full kimono.

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