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Destinations Locals In Japan Capture The Country's Most Beautiful Attractions Without The Crowds
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Locals In Japan Capture The Country's Most Beautiful Attractions Without The Crowds

Japan's closed borders and Coronavirus fears caused international tourist numbers to plummet to 4.12 million in 2020. Read more here.

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By: DANIELLE DEMETRIOU Published: Jun 16, 2021 12:49 PM IST

Locals In Japan Capture The Country's Most Beautiful Attractions Without The Crowds
CREDIT: COURTESY OF INSIDEJAPAN TOURS

A centuries-old Kyoto temple with rainbow flags fluttering above a wooden walkway. Forested mountains daubed with pink bursts of sakura cherry blossoms. And a solitary shrine gate on the rocky shores of a volcanic island. Each of these scenes instantly evokes the essence of Japan, a destination long loved for its unique culture, rich heritage, and seasonal sensitivity. But there is perhaps one detail that is subtly amiss: there are no overseas tourists. By Danielle Demetriou

Japan
CREDIT: COURTESY OF INSIDEJAPAN TOURS

Over the past decade, the number of international visitors to Japan — filling temples, shrines, skyscrapers, and karaoke parlours across the country — spiralled to dizzying heights, peaking at 31.88 million in 2019.

However, in a familiar pandemic pattern echoed globally, Japan’s closed borders and coronavirus fears caused international tourist numbers to plummet to 4.12 million in 2020, according to the Japan Tourism Agency, The Japan Times reported.

The impact of this is captured in a series of real-time images, shot by on-the-ground guides from InsideJapan Tours. The photographs not only remind the world of the beauty and diversity of the nation’s most compelling attractions, but they also depict the unusual absence of the usual hordes of overseas visitors.

Kyoto is one such place. The romanticism of the former ancient capital — a treasure trove of temples, shrines, and cultural highlights ranging from tea ceremonies to craftsmanship — normally lures sky-high numbers of international tourists.

So much so that before the pandemic, overseas visitors were regularly reprimanded by Kyoto authorities and local businesses over etiquette issues — as reflected in the Gion district, where signs request tourists to kindly refrain from ill-mannered behaviour, such as following geishas down the street to take their picture.

But since the pandemic, the city’s once heaving landmarks have been rather quiet, with surges of domestic-only tourists waxing and waning, depending on the regional state of emergency declarations.

CREDIT: COURTESY OF INSIDEJAPAN TOURS

One spot captured in the InsideJapan Tours photographic series is Tanukidani Fudo-in, a temple wrapped in the hills of Higashiyama in northeastern Kyoto, which appears empty of tourists.

The temple has long been famed for its traditional stilted wood architecture, scattered raccoon statues (tanuki, meaning raccoon in Japanese), and car blessing ceremonies (yes, really — mountain priests traditionally bestow good fortune on vehicles).

Another exquisite image depicts cherry blossoms in full bloom across the dense mountains of Yoshino, in Nara Prefecture — an area which, for all its far-flung remoteness, is regarded as one of Japan’s most scenic springtime spots, resulting in annual flooding of sakura lovers.

Japan
CREDIT: COURTESY OF INSIDEJAPAN TOURS

Meanwhile, Nishinoshima, part of the Oki archipelago, is another popular spot. One of a clutch of four volcanic islands off the west coast in the Sea of Japan, Nishinoshima has long been popular thanks to its rich topography (it’s a UNESCO Global Geopark, with green clifftops and roaming horses).

Other images capture two temples: Unpen-ji and Tsubosaka-dera — the former, a misty mountain-top temple with bursts of hydrangeas, and the latter, renowned for its big Buddha statue surrounded by cherry blossoms. Unpen-ji can also be found on the famed Shikoku pilgrimage route, which connects a loop of 88 temples around Shikoku island.

Japan
CREDIT: COURTESY OF INSIDEJAPAN TOURS

There’s also the dreamy blue Seto Inland Sea, its horizon peppered with thousands of small fishing islands (among them, “art island” Naoshima), as well as the dramatic forested gorges of Takachiho, hidden in Kyushu’s dense interiors in southern Japan (also home to a cave where Japan sun goddess Amaterasu reportedly hid, plunging the world into darkness, according to legend).

Japan
CREDIT: COURTESY OF INSIDEJAPAN TOURS

While Japan’s borders currently remain closed to international visitors, the team at InsideJapan Tours has come up with a way for travellers to experience the unusual calm of many of the country’s top tourist spots — with a series of live virtual tours.

“Having already run a live walking tour of Kyoto during peak cherry blossom season back in March, it became obvious that there was a demand for these live events,” said Jeff Krevitt, InsideJapan Tours’ vice president of marketing in the Americas.

“Over 1,000 people joined us live, with a further 7,000 or so watching the recorded version post-event. We were inundated with glowing feedback from nostalgic past customers, excited clients still waiting to travel, and inspired potential customers pondering their next trip.”

For those itching to get back to the Land of the Rising Sun, these virtual experiences offer perhaps the best chance of enjoying the nation’s epic highlights without other overseas tourists on the scene.

Editor’s Note: Keeping the current situation of the pandemic in mind, T+L India recommends every reader to stay safe and take all government-regulated precautions in case travel at this time is absolutely necessary. Please follow our stories on COVID-19 for all the latest travel guidelines.

Related: Future Travels: 12 Bucket List Places For Solo Travel

Written By

DANIELLE DEMETRIOU

DANIELLE DEMETRIOU

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