Koyama Ease of Water

Koyama Ease of Water

Info

20 minutes by JR Oyama Station → Station East circulation bus, bus stop: Keyo D2 front and drop, short walk
23km35 minutes from Tōhoku Expressway Sano Fujioka IC via Route 50
250 units/free

Business Hours

10 o'clock ~ 0 o'clock the next day (reception is from 23 o'clock, Saturday and Sunday, and public holidays from 9 o'clock)

Price

Adult 750 yen (850 yen on Saturdays and Sundays, holidays), 3 years old to elementary school student 350 yen

Spot Category

Hot Spring Spots and More

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.

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The old shrine was founded by Fujiwara Hidego [Fujiwara no Hidesato] from Yasaka Shrine in Kyoto, Japan, and founded it in Tenkei 3rd year (940). The shrine was later dedicated to the shrine land and the shugami koshi [Akamikoshi] by Tokugawa Ieyasu, who made a prayer for Sekigahara. Every year at the Gion Festival in July, a two-tonne weight of Daijin is repaid.

Koyama/Shigawa Onsen

A day-trip hot spring facility located in Oyama City. The single-sex large bath house has a stately style with cypresses on the edge. The open-air bath with a full sense of openness, built with the flow of Shikawa, is a lively rock tub. In addition, there is also a bath of Shigaraki ware. Sauna while watching the river flowing to the front is the best.

Masita

A craft handed down by the Watanabe family from generation to generation, the Japanese string is made by assembling the silk threads of various herbaceous silk threads of gold thread and silver thread. It is transmitted from the Kamakura era in a technique that involves attaching weights to each end of the thread and then cleverly crossing them to produce laces with intricate patterns while the thread is always strung. At present, it is used for bril and banori strings, and is mainly used for women's wear, but it was previously used for samurai armor due to its strength. For sale in stores, such as strap 1000 yen (body). Braid experience 1000 yen (reservation required).

Mount Chausu

Mount Chausu at an altitude of 1915m, which is a troupe of the 100 Great Mountains of Japan and also the main peak of the Nasu Renzan. The mountain side still has white smoke from what is called the Invisible Hell. If you use the Nasu Ropeway over the mountain, you can easily descend to the 9th station of the mountain, and from there you can walk about 50 minutes on the mountain trail and climb to the summit. The 360-degree view from the summit is amazing. In addition, the autumn leaves of the surrounding mountains such as Ubagadaira and Mt. Asahi and Mt.

Seongshan Park

The park was created on the site of a castle built by Mr. Sano in Karamasawa during the Kamakura period, which is said to have been moved from Gyeongsang 5 (1600) to Gyeongsang 19 (1614). It is especially busy during the cherry and azalea periods. There are Manba no Sato/Shiroyama Memorial Hall (free entry, time: 9-17 o'clock, regular holiday: Monday (open for public holidays), the next day of public holidays (open for public holidays), New Year holidays (open for public holidays), New Year holidays).

Jikoji Temple

Yashima, Yukanishi, the village where the fallen of the Heike, who was defeated by Genji in the battle of Nonoura, fled and went into hiding. This settlement still has its own customs of the fallen people who lived away from the eyes. Jikoji, located on a hill overlooking the settlement, is known as Heike Rakujin's Bodhi-ji, and anecdotes still say that the Rakujin came to visit the shrine in an attempt to give him a child treasure.

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Notes

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