Urayakotan Parking Park Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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the front is kiritappu cape.
Original Text
We took the road 142, which is named "Pacific Seaside Line", east from Kiritappu in Hamanaka Town to Nemuro City. There was a parking zone on the coast side just past the village called "Benhorodo" when I entered the eastern part of Hamanaka Town. That is this Enkotan Parking Park. "Enkotan" is read as "Uraya Kotan". From a small parking park, you can see the Pacific Ocean. What you can see in front of you is Cape Kiritappu, which we had a little while ago. ...
If the weather was nice, it would have looked cleaner.
Original Text
There was a lot of fog and the visibility was bad, but I could still see the magnificent view. The parking lot is large and high from the coastline, so if you look on your left, you can see the city and the cape.
Superb view spot of the North Pacific Seaside Line
Original Text
If you run along the road along the sea without passing National Highway 44, you will find Enkotan Parking Park. It is an observatory where you can see the sea up close. It is a recommended spot where there are few tourists and you can enjoy the view comfortably. You can enjoy the scenery that is typical of Hokkaido.
It is a parking park on a hill along the seaside line of Nemuro-Kushiro-Tokachi, which is located on the North Pacific Seaside Line, and is a parking park on a hill along the sea overlooking Cape Kiritappu and Hamanaka Bay. There is nothing but a view, and shops and rest areas do not include the nearby village of Enkotan. It's a good place for a touring break. When I visited, I found that it was a place with a surprising history that Australian ships drifted in the Edo period.
There was a Ura and Kotan parking park on the road around the city of Kiritappu, which ran east on the Pacific Seaside Line 20 for a minute. I climbed a little east from the village called Pomporoto in the foreground. The area is a plain (wetland?) And the south side is the Pacific Ocean. It's hardly a car passes through, and it may seem like it's not Japan for urban people.
the front is kiritappu cape.
We took the road 142, which is named "Pacific Seaside Line", east from Kiritappu in Hamanaka Town to Nemuro City. There was a parking zone on the coast side just past the village called "Benhorodo" when I entered the eastern part of Hamanaka Town. That is this Enkotan Parking Park. "Enkotan" is read as "Uraya Kotan". From a small parking park, you can see the Pacific Ocean. What you can see in front of you is Cape Kiritappu, which we had a little while ago. ...
If the weather was nice, it would have looked cleaner.
There was a lot of fog and the visibility was bad, but I could still see the magnificent view. The parking lot is large and high from the coastline, so if you look on your left, you can see the city and the cape.
Superb view spot of the North Pacific Seaside Line
If you run along the road along the sea without passing National Highway 44, you will find Enkotan Parking Park. It is an observatory where you can see the sea up close. It is a recommended spot where there are few tourists and you can enjoy the view comfortably. You can enjoy the scenery that is typical of Hokkaido.
Kiritappu is almost there.
It is a parking park on a hill along the seaside line of Nemuro-Kushiro-Tokachi, which is located on the North Pacific Seaside Line, and is a parking park on a hill along the sea overlooking Cape Kiritappu and Hamanaka Bay. There is nothing but a view, and shops and rest areas do not include the nearby village of Enkotan. It's a good place for a touring break. When I visited, I found that it was a place with a surprising history that Australian ships drifted in the Edo period.
I read it as "Urayakotan."
There was a Ura and Kotan parking park on the road around the city of Kiritappu, which ran east on the Pacific Seaside Line 20 for a minute. I climbed a little east from the village called Pomporoto in the foreground. The area is a plain (wetland?) And the south side is the Pacific Ocean. It's hardly a car passes through, and it may seem like it's not Japan for urban people.