
Last month we took a little jaunt up the highway to the sea of Japan for what was to be one of the prettiest spots we have yet seen in Japan: Amanohashidate. This thin isthmus on the sea is a paradise of sorts, sandy beaches, beautiful green mountains, azure sea and cobbled streets lined with cute inns. I had heard that this was a must see, listed as one of the "three most beautiful scenic sites of Japan", but is quite crowded in the summer and early fall. Luckily, we arrived on a monday in the "off-season" and were treated to a pristine and quiet, yet still lively scene.
Amanohashidate is a thin ribbon of sand and pine dividing the Wakasa Bay from a smaller bay on the sea of Japan. There are many poems and paintings of this long beach, though the most hilarious aspect is that the Japanese take a gondola up the nearby mountain to look at it upsidedown through their legs, apparently it appears like there are two horizons and the Japanese line up for a while to do this! You have never experienced Japan until you see rows of Japanese bent over looking through their legs.
 Although difficult to get a view of if you do not want to take the ten dollar gondola, we managed to see the overview from this small clearing in the forest.
Although difficult to get a view of if you do not want to take the ten dollar gondola, we managed to see the overview from this small clearing in the forest. 

Wooden sandals lined up for guests at a local inn. Adorable eh?

The streets of the local town are immaculate and house loads of craft vendors, inns and restaurants.

Japanese fortune cat, bigger than usual and beckonning customers to come buy strange snacks to bring home to family.
 Moonrise over Amanohashidate...
Moonrise over Amanohashidate...
 
This is a great blog with good pictures, insights and interesting stories. I found it 5 years after it was uploaded. This was just after relocating from the UK to the Matsumoto area with my partner who used to live in Sanda. Many thanks for the care and attention to details and humour. We too have gadgets that go ping. Our heating system talks to us: danbo o teishishimas and danbo o kaishishimas. One means I am turning off and the other I am turning on. For a gaijin, it is not so easy to distinguish which is which and once or twice it has run all night.
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