Kita-Ibaraki City Family Camp Village Hanazono Auto Campground

Kita-Ibaraki City Family Camp Village Hanazono Auto Campground

Info

JR Isohara Station → 30 minutes by car
常磐道北茨城ICから日立いわき線経由15km25分
20台/サイトにそれぞれ駐車場あり

Business Hours

8:30 to 17:00

Price

オートキャンプサイト4400円、モーターホームサイト5500円、ワイドサイト6600円、フリーサイト2200円、ケビン2万2000円~

Spot Category

キャンプ・バーベキュー、紅葉スポット


Auto Camp Site


モーターホームサイト


Barbecue House


Large Baths

The information provided reflects the details available at the time of the survey.
Please note that facility details may change due to the facility’s circumstances, so please check for the latest information before visiting. This content has been translated using machine translation.

Information provided by: JTB Publishing

The content uses an automatic translation service, which is not always accurate.
The translated content may be different from the original meaning, so please understand and use it.

Related Spots

Karakuri Clock

It is located at the east exit of JR Isohara Station, where children's songs are played by local native Ai Noguchi. The performance is seven times a day at 9 o'clock, 12 o'clock, 14 o'clock, 16 o'clock, 17 o'clock, 18 o'clock and 19 o'clock. Along with the song, "Karakuri Doll" appears. There is also an image of a children's song of rain in the station.

Rokkaku-do

Around May of the year 1903, Okakura Tenshin visited Goura under the guidance of Shūzan Oita, and two years later he was fond of this place and built Rokukaku-do. He is said to have served as a base for international activities, including working at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston in the winter and indulging in musings in front of the Goura Sea in the summer. The Nagayamon and Tenshin Houses are listed as registered tangible cultural property, and the Tenshin House, Garden, Daigoura and Kogoura are listed as registered monuments, respectively.

Tenshin Memorial Goura Museum, Ibaraki

The museum is located on the Goura coast, where Okakura Tenshin was the base for his activities in his later years. He raised Taikan Yokoyama and Harusa Hishida as principals of the Tokyo School of Fine Arts (now Tokyo University of the Arts), and later founded the Nihon Art Institute. In addition to the permanent exhibition of materials related to Tenshin and the works of his disciples, he also holds planned exhibitions focusing on modern Japanese paintings from time to time. At the former Tenshin residence (Ibaraki University's Goura Institute of Art and Culture), which is about 0.5km from the museum, there is a Rokkakudo hall in which Tenshin indulged in meditation.

Hongkei Temple

The year of Oei 21 (1414) is a famous temple of the Jodo sect, reportedly as the Genjon. A great deal of donation was made by the Tokugawa family to rebuild the main hall and bell tower (currently under reconstruction facilities and cannot be seen), from where they were deeply devoted to the tenth-generation Ryokujinjin, and established it as a bodhi-ji temple. The main hall, which is the best of the temple architecture of the early Edo period, is renovated in 2007. You can feel the power of the Tokugawa shogunate in the Buddhist tools and furnishings. On the left side of the main hall is the tomb of Chihime.

Shomei Temple

A temple of the Jōdo Shinshu Hongan-ji school. The first generation of the Seiki family, Asamitsu, who also participated in the shogunate as a sensei crowd, invited the younger brother of the clan, Shinbutsu, to open. It is said that the name of the temple, the name of the temple, is derived from the name of the law that Asamitsu came to the house and gave it to him. It holds a number of cultural treasures, including the "Shōjo Kanashu", which is said to be the autograph of Kinji, as well as portraits and wooden statues of the morning light, the Mireya Gate, and the Nijomon. At the back of the precinct, where there is a large ginkgo tree and a bronze statue of the saint, there are tombs ranging from the first morning light to the fourth generation Tokihiro.

Private Gardens

An ancillary facility of the Kasumigaura City History Museum, which was a relocation of a wealthy local farmhouse from the Edo period, consisting of two buildings: a thatched main building and Itakura, which used to be a grain warehouse.

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