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7-Nights Japan Kumano Kodo Walking

Japan
7-Nights Japan Kumano Kodo Walking
Japan
MT Sobek
Vacation Offer ID 1494348
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Overview

MT Sobek

This immersive journey contrasts Japan's cityscapes with its spiritual countryside and ancient pilgrimage traditions on the Kii Peninsula. Start in Osaka, the bustling business hub of modern-day Japan, and end in Kyoto, Japan's former ancient capital and the repository of its cultural heritage. Hike along the spectacular Nakahechi section of the UNESCO-listed Kumano Kodo, an age-old web of pilgrimage routes. Soak up stunning scenery, marvel at sacred shrines, rest in ryokan inns, dine on the freshest local ingredients, and end rewarding days of hiking by relaxing in natural hot springs.

Highlights:
  • Hike the mystical Kumano Kodo pilgrimage trail strewn with stunning sacred shrines
  • Experience charming traditional onsen baths and ryokan inns along the trail
  • Take in the historic landmarks and cultural highlights of Kyoto and Osaka

Important Trip Details:
Moderately paced hikes of up to seven miles a day on mostly dirt trails, plus walking during cultural touring and scenic train rides. The route includes some uneven ground and a number of steep ascents and descents.

Minimum Age: 16

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Kyoto

Kyoto

If you can visit only one city in Japan, Kyoto is the one. This ancient city, 30 mi/50 km northeast of Osaka, was the capital of Japan for more than 1,000 years and still is considered the country's spiritual capital. Thousands of shrines and temples dot the city, including more than a dozen on the UNESCO World Heritage list. That list is far from all-inclusive, and many excellent places that might be the star attractions of other cities crowd the streets of Kyoto. It is a center of Japanese Zen and has several huge monastery complexes where serious students still sit in meditation.

Kyoto is also the nation's capital of traditional arts. Whether your interest be in pottery, textiles, dance, the tea ceremony or any of the other innumerable arts, Kyoto has excellent galleries, museums, shops and tea houses. Japanese people from the countryside and foreign students flock there to learn under the great masters. Much of what is considered Japanese haute cuisine was developed there too, as an offshoot of the tea ceremony.

Kyoto is Japan's heartland of history. With 1,300 years of tumultuous existence, the city's past intrudes upon the present day as in few other Japanese cities. In Gion, you can spot a geisha (or geiko, as they are called in Kyoto), one of the last hundred or so in Japan, slipping down a side-street to entertain rich guests with witty conversation, dance or music. A shopping arcade may suddenly fill with discordant clanging music as a shrine festival passes among the shoppers, or you may hear the long chant as Zen monks pass through the neighborhood, calling for alms.

Kyoto is an understated city that might disappoint visitors at first (at first glance, it is a large city with modern buildings that might not align with one's original perception); its charm lies in small details, pocket gardens, tiny traditional restaurants and refined artwork.

Destination Guide
Osaka

Osaka

This large, bustling port is the starting point for tours to the ancient cities of Kyoto and Nara, the cultural fountainheads of classical Japan. Kyoto's Old Imperial Palace and the shogunal Nijo Castle remain glorious symbols of the power the city held for over 1,000 years. Until 1868, Kyoto was the capital of Japan, filled with elegant timber buildings and, perhaps more than any other Japanese city, imbued with Kami, the divine spirit. You'll sense it everywhere, for there are hundreds of Shinto shrines and over a thousand Buddhist temples, as well as sacred treasure-houses of religious sculpture, painting and exquisite gardens. Nara, City of the Seven Great Temples, lies in an idyllic setting.
Destination Guide

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Valid Date Ranges

November 2024
11/26/2024 12/03/2024 Call for pricing
March 2025
03/12/2025 03/19/2025 Call for pricing
03/22/2025 03/29/2025 Call for pricing
April 2025
04/16/2025 04/23/2025 Call for pricing
May 2025
05/14/2025 05/21/2025 Call for pricing
05/23/2025 05/30/2025 Call for pricing
September 2025
09/24/2025 10/01/2025 Call for pricing
October 2025
10/22/2025 10/29/2025 Call for pricing
November 2025
11/12/2025 11/19/2025 Call for pricing
11/26/2025 12/03/2025 Call for pricing
Prices subject to availability and change without notice. Some restrictions may apply.

All fares are quoted in US Dollars.