Hanazawa No Sato Community Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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19 Reviews
Guslamyan
Shizuoka 2017_3
Interesting old houses of Edo era on both side of the road. We went there in a rainy but quiet afternoon. Bought some tangerines from an unmanned store and saw a wild grey heron flying out just in fro...
For those who are interested in this place, I'd like to recommend followings; a) You had better investigate about this area before you visit. There are some historical buildings of Edo era, but you m...
It is a village located in a valley along the "Yakitsube no Koji" written in Manyoshu, and while people live, it preserves the buildings built in the Edo period ~ Meiji period to create a unique landscape. The route to the entrance of the village after leaving the Nihonzaka tunnel is difficult to understand, and although the navigation system is not reliable, there is a reasonably large tourist parking lot. After a pretty splendid house 々 built on a flat land with stonework, and walking on the mountain road toward Kurakake pass, the whole village ...
I took a bus from Yaizu Station. After getting off the nearest bus stop, walk on a slope with ups and downs for about 40 minutes. It's about 40 minutes, but it's a little hard for the elderly because there are ups and downs, so I recommend a car if you go. There are about 1 ~ 2 buses per hour. The village doesn't feel like the Edo period, but it feels like a rural town in the 1930s. You can take a time slip for about 50 years and enjoy the houses leisurely. Buy at an unmanned store in the village ...
A group of traditional buildings standing along the mountain stream. It is a rare form. If you go up the road in the mandarin orange field 々, you will reach Hanazawa no Sato.
Shizuoka 2017_3
Interesting old houses of Edo era on both side of the road. We went there in a rainy but quiet afternoon. Bought some tangerines from an unmanned store and saw a wild grey heron flying out just in fro...
Nice to watch old buildings of latter Edo era
For those who are interested in this place, I'd like to recommend followings; a) You had better investigate about this area before you visit. There are some historical buildings of Edo era, but you m...
A good view from the high ground
It is a village located in a valley along the "Yakitsube no Koji" written in Manyoshu, and while people live, it preserves the buildings built in the Edo period ~ Meiji period to create a unique landscape. The route to the entrance of the village after leaving the Nihonzaka tunnel is difficult to understand, and although the navigation system is not reliable, there is a reasonably large tourist parking lot. After a pretty splendid house 々 built on a flat land with stonework, and walking on the mountain road toward Kurakake pass, the whole village ...
Older people should drive.
I took a bus from Yaizu Station. After getting off the nearest bus stop, walk on a slope with ups and downs for about 40 minutes. It's about 40 minutes, but it's a little hard for the elderly because there are ups and downs, so I recommend a car if you go. There are about 1 ~ 2 buses per hour. The village doesn't feel like the Edo period, but it feels like a rural town in the 1930s. You can take a time slip for about 50 years and enjoy the houses leisurely. Buy at an unmanned store in the village ...
Important and unified construction complex の
A group of traditional buildings standing along the mountain stream. It is a rare form. If you go up the road in the mandarin orange field 々, you will reach Hanazawa no Sato.