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Japan-Korea Dream Team Game
Japan and Korea have faced off against each other many times over the years, so much so that even matches held all the way back in 2006 and 2009 are still celebrated as historic events to this day.
Now, for this once-in-a-lifetime event, a team of these legendary players will break out their mitts and come out of retirement for one final game in Hokkaido.
This event is set to deliver an unforgettable experience for baseball fans from Korea, Japan, and beyond.
The match will be played in the world-renowned, cutting-edge ES CON Field Hokkaido stadium, which first opened in March 2023.
The venue offers an unparalleled match-watching experience unlike anything you've ever seen before.
Want to watch the game while soaking in a natural hot spring? The ES CON Field Hokkaido stadium has you covered with its hot spring and sauna facilities, the first of its kind in the world.
If you'd rather watch the game from the comfort of your own room, the stadium hotel has views that span the entire baseball field, the first of its kind in Asia.
Finally, you can grab a freshly brewed beer in the world's first stadium-side craft beer brewery, complete with its own view over the entire field, a dining area, a viewing booth to watch the game with your four-legged friend, and a play area spanning 1,900m2 for children to get their energy out.
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Niigata Sake Fair on Sado Island / Kitazawa Flotation Plant & Niigata Sake Fair 2024
The Niigata Sake Fair is brimming with Japanese sake, beer, wine, and more, all available for tastings on the day for those with pre-purchased tickets. Tickets can also be purchased on the day of the event for refills. There are also some exclusive cups to be won in a raffle. There will be food stalls offering local delicacies and treats along with a variety of entertaining programs, including Furumachi Geigi dance, traditional arts, and a vibrant music stage. The event will be held in two locations this year: The Furumachi area in Niigata City's Chuo Ward, and Sado Island, which is expected to be registered as a World Heritage Site. Come raise your glass at Kitazawa Flotation Plant, one of Sado Island's most wondrous and beautiful locations!
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Ascetic Training Programs at World Heritage Site Koyasan
1. Goma Fire Prayer Ritual
Offer your prayers to the sacred flame and get a feel for how such prayers have been carried on through the generations at the temples of Koyasan.
2. Acts of Service
Commit yourself to acts of service and cleanse the mind as you get up close with the Buddha statues in some of the Main Halls of Koyasan's temples, including Bekkaku Honzan, Jun-Bekkaku Honzan, or temples with long-standing connections to daimyo and warlords.
3. Furumaizen Cuisine Experience
Furumaizen is a traditional cuisine prepared especially for the high priests by the priests of Koyasan, and it is said to be the origin of Japanese hospitality.
The average visitor does not usually get the opportunity to try these dishes prepared by priests, for priests, but this memorable dinner experience offers illuminating insights and explanations into the meticulous preparation process.
● Participants will be granted special permission to view the main hall of temples where entry is usually prohibited. (permission only granted when accompanied by temple staff) -
Enjoy the rich history of Tokyo's Senju-shuku district with its traditional festival and the tale of Adachihime
This winter, the residents of Kita-Senju, Tokyo, will celebrate 400 years of history, tradition, and culture at a special event in the former post town of Senju-shuku.
The festivities will take place on December 18 and 19, 2024 at Jigenji Temple, Tokyo Arts Center, and rojicoya. Special programming for foreign visitors is available.
The main venue is historic Jigenji Temple. There, participants will enjoy martial arts, the sounds of koto zither and shinobue bamboo flutes, the glow of jiguchi andon lanterns, and impressive shishimai lion dances. Spend the day reveling intraditional performing arts and Senju's local charm.
At night fall, an opera based on the local legend of Adachihime will be performed. This historic tale will be brought to life on stage with song and dance to transport the audience into a world of fantasy.
A newly-developed Japanese tea beer, named ""Adachihime,"" will also be offered at this event. It is fermented with Japanese tea and has hints of cherry blossom flavor.
*Sales of Adachihime beer and samurai, koto, and tsugaru-shamisen programs are offered year-round at rojicoya (reservation required). -
Experience Edo period culture with nighttime cherry blossom viewing at Kinugawa Onsen
Nighttime cherry blossom viewing and hot spring banquets are a long-cherished pastime in Japan. Experience what life was like for the townspeople of Edo at Kinugawa Onsen's ""Kinugawa Kaleidoscope"" nighttime cherry blossom light display, or put yourself in the shoes of an upper-class samurai during Edo Wonderland's special nighttime hours.
Special seating will be arranged for the nighttime cherry blossom light display. Participants will also get the chance to carry a portable mikoshi shrine and play traditional hayashi music. At Edo Wonderland, participants can take a special ride on a yakatabune, a traditional Japanese pleasure boat used for dinner parties.
Shuttle buses and taxis run between the hotel, Kinugawa Onsen, and Edo Wonderland, so feel free to sit back and enjoy each event at your own leisure! Local sake will be provided at the banquet. -
Yokohama Sakura & Geisha Cruising
In Japan, there is a tradition of enjoying unique seasonal sights and sounds: cherry blossoms in spring, fireworks and cicadas in summer, colored leaves and the harvest moon in autumn, and snow in winter.
On this special tour, you will ride a traditional yakatabune boat with Yokohama Geisha to enjoy Yokohama’s spring pastime of viewing cherry blossoms at night.
The Ōoka River is one of the most popular cherry blossom viewing spots in Yokohama, and is the perfect place for a cruise. In addition to the trees in full bloom, you can enjoy petals floating on the water’s surface and dancing in the wind like a snowstorm.
The cherry blossoms are not the only riverside sight. The nighttime view of the modern port city of Yokohama is bound to impress with its giant Ferris wheel, Marine Tower, Yokohama Landmark Tower, and other Minato Mirai waterfront structures.
The cruise will serve a unique blend of Japanese and Western cuisine that is befitting of Japan's first modern international trading port. The fresh seafood is sourced from Yokohama and other nearby fishing ports. Local alcoholic beverages such as Yokohama beer and wine will also be served.
Since the opening of Yokohama’s port, the Yokohama Geisha have served foreign guests and developed skills in foreign languages, Western dinner etiquette, and playing Western instruments such as flute and piano. They respect traditional culture but are not bound by it, thereby offering a unique blend of stylish Japanese and Western hospitality in this dinner party on a yakatabune boat. -
UBE Biennale: Sculpting a legacy of art and community
Finally, Ube in Yamaguchi Prefecture has the honor of being the first city in Japan to hold a large-scale outdoor sculpture exhibition. Started in 1961 as a citizen-led project to beautify the town with greenery and public art, the Ube City Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition has been held every two years since and eventually evolved into the UBE Biennale. The city has amassed a collection of roughly 400 pieces, which remain on display in Ube’s plazas, public facilities and airport.
Perhaps the most scenic location of all is lakeside Tokiwa Park, where several of the largest and most noteworthy installations are on permanent display. This is also the customary viewing venue for new award-winning sculptures. With the festival’s upcoming 30th iteration scheduled for October 27 to December 22, 2024, visitors taking a stroll around Tokiwa then won’t just be going for a walk in the park, but a walk through 60-plus years of contemporary sculpture on vibrant display. -
Forest Festival of the Arts Okayama: Celebrating northern Okayama Prefecture’s bountiful nature through art
Okayama’s most famous attractions, like Okayama Castle and the canals of Kurashiki, are in the southern part of the prefecture. Head north into the mountains, though, and you’ll be ensconced in beautiful mountain woodlands, where the Forest Festival of the Arts will take place from September 28 to November 24, 2024. Through its featured exhibits, this festival shines a light on forests and Japanese nature as a source of inspiration for community engagement. This cooperative nature of the festival aspires to create a “new form of capital” that enrichens the local area.
A wide genre of domestic and international creators that include artists, musicians, dancers, architects, designers, flower artists, chefs and more will showcase their work at the festival, which will be spread across a dozen venues in the towns of Tsuyama, Nagi, Niimi, Maniwa and Kagamino in the Chugoku Mountains of Western Japan. These installations will transform and further enhance the already stunning locales, including Tsuyama’s historic Joto district, Niimi’s Makido Cave and Kagamino’s Okutsu river valley, famous for its vivid autumn colors. -
The Sado Island Galaxy Art Festival: Bringing art to Sado’s ports
Over the centuries, Sado Island off the northern coast of Japan’s Niigata Prefecture was a remote exile site and the location of one of Japan’s largest gold mines. These days, the beautiful bucolic community has become a hidden travel destination gem, welcoming visitors to the annual Sado Island Galaxy Art Festival.
Ryotsu Port, the primary gateway for visitors arriving by ferry, hosts the majority of the installations, but not all of them. Others can be found at historical buildings and scenic sites of the natural landscape elsewhere on the island, rewarding those who take the time to venture further into a part of Japan most tourists never see.
The Galaxy Art Festival is more than a purely visual celebration of the arts, too, as the program has included Sado’s unique folk songs and “onidaiko,” a dance and drum performance by a masked musician dressed as an oni, a ferocious demon or ogre from Japanese folklore. This “demon drumming” is a Sado tradition that dates back centuries as a means of warding off evil and giving thanks for good harvests, making it a perfect fit for the Galaxy Art Festival, whose goal is to introduce and preserve the island’s culture.