No matter where you are coming from, , "the land of the rising sun" intrigues you like no other country. You come back overwhelmed by a remarkable civilization and the first thing you know is to get as many books about the country and read them if you did not do your homework before the trip. Eastern mentality is known to be radically different from the western one but in things get on a different scale. Apparently everything that surrounds you is unexpected, the rigid social etiquette, the relations between spouses, the morale where the notion of "biblical" sin does not exist, the shyness that people have if they can not perform an act perfectly, for example like speaking English properly, and why not the fact that the trains are precisely in time no matter of what category they are. But in the same time what fascinates the traveler are the famous ese traditions, derived from Rinzai zen, the tea ceremony, ikebana, calligraphy and the ukyo-e, the floating world, the art of the geishas, the way of the samurai, the exquisite gardens, the quiet pavilions with immaculate ponds, etc. is an interesting combination of a dynamic modern society with a strong traditional weave, cloth they wanted badly to shed in the years after the war. The deliberate destruction of traditional city line to be replaced by, some time, monstrous, modern buildings is an example of this fight with the past. It is a sort of exorcism of a society which dealt deftly with dictatorship and closeness for 600 years, out of which a recent 250 years were extreme in that sense. Come with us to visit aboard the Shinkansen, the bullet train, caring us from Tokyo, to Nikko, the burial place of the Tokugawa clan, to Kamakura, the capital of the first shogunate, to Kurashiki, a city untouched by the bombs in the war,to the magnificent garden of Okayama, to Nagasaki, to Hagi on the shore of the sea of , to the holy island of Miyajima, to Kyoto and Nara the famous capitals of for hundreds of years, to the gardens of Kanazawa and deep in the ese Alps to the wooden architecture of Takayama, and finally to Koya San, the sacred place of esoteric Buddhism, the place where is buried the man who invented the most important of the present ese alphabets, Kobo Daishi. is a melange of far east exoticism and modernity of an extremity never achieved elsewhere which you'll never forget. Come and see it in our travel video .
2 years ago
Flying Monk