Best Attractions and Places to See in Nemuro, Japan
Nemuro Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Nemuro. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Nemuro for You. Discover Nemuro as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Nemuro.
This Video has covered top attractions and Best Things to do in Nemuro.
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List of Best Things to do in Nemuro, Japan
Cape Nosappu
Northern Pavilion Bokyono Ie
Ochiishi Cape
Kotohira Shrine
Meiji Park
Shunkunitai Wild Bird Sanctuary
Nemuro Kurumaishi
Higashi Nemuro Station
The Nortern Island Comunity Center, Hokkaido
Shunkunitai
Parks, Temples and a hunt for sushi in Tokyo.
This is my first full day in Tokyo, I went around a park and walked into Tokyo city centre. The day was a good start to what is to come. Sadly the guy I was with left that day but have already met some great new people. Already working on my next video and it is looking great so far. For more great vlogging videos please subscribe and like :)
Tokyo Trip - Kitsuney X Elchikito - Is This a Normal Day ?
Kitsuney X Elchikito
Tokyo Trip Episode #3
Shot with Nex-5 and Gopro Hero2
Music : Vitalic Allan Dellon
Kitsuney.com
Elchikito.com
Secret Shrine Arahira-Tenjin worships Learning God (Kanoya City, Japan)
I happened to fine an interesting shrine to when we drive along the west coast of the Osumi Peninsula.
The beautiful shrine gate stands alone in sandy beach.
We stopped the car and visited the shrine to make a prayer.
It was evening and sunset is sinking to the Satsuma Peninsula which is on the other side of the Kagoshima Bay.
(Arahira Tenjin)
The shrine is very closed to the Kanoya City.
It was clear on the video but you can see beautiful shape of Mt.Kaimon and Mt.Sakurajima from the shrine. We were lucky to see the eruption of Mt.Sakurajima when we visit the shrine.
It is a very beautiful place. Later I found that the shrine is one of the eight most beautiful spots of Kanoya City.
(You can get a good luck)
The road to the shrine building is very steep and you have to use rope. You can enjoy a thrilling sense and have a good exercise!
Because you have to pay lots of efforts to reach the shrine, I definitely believe that your efforts will be rewarded and get good luck.
(Who does the shrine worship?)
The shrine worships Mr.Michizane Sugawara (Tenjin).
He is known as the God of Learning. Many shrines worships him at many places in Japan but I had never known that there is Tenjin Shrine at this place!
I found many papers on the wall of the shrine building which says I want to pass exam!. Many students seem to visit this place.
If I had visited at this shrine before I took university entrance exam, I might enter better university.... Oh no!
(Summary of Arahira Tenjin)
- It is very closed to Kanoya City.
- Sunset time is the best to see beautiful scenery.
- The road to shrine building is very steep, but your efforts will be rewarded!
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Hokkaido
Hokkaido (北海道, Hokkaidō, literally Northern Sea Circuit), formerly known as Ezo, Yezo, Yeso, or Yesso, is Japan's second largest island; it is also the largest and northernmost of Japan's 47 prefectures. The Tsugaru Strait separates Hokkaido from Honshu, although the two islands are connected by the underwater railway Seikan Tunnel. The largest city on Hokkaido is its capital, Sapporo, which is also its only ordinance-designated city.
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【散歩動画】札幌初詣2018|New year's day 2018 at Sapporo
Sapporo TV tower, Shinzenkouji, Hokkaido shrine
Camera: GoPro HERO5 Black
New years day in Japan.
New years in Japan is a little different to other countries. It is rather sedate; no dragons dancing down the street and no huge fireworks display... Read more at
New years is celebrated with a midnight visit to a local shrine, and then a new years day visit again. These shots are of the visitors going to Zenkoji, a very popular temple in Nagano.
Zenkoji is listed as a national treasure, one of the few remaining real pilgrimage points and is one of the few to welcome visitors from every sect and religion.
For those reasons Zenkoji is not only a great but very busy place to visit on new years day and to experience a Japanese new year.
เที่ยวญี่ปุ่นด้วยตัวเอง (ใบไม้เปลี่ยนสี 2014 by iphone 5s)
ผ่าน YouTube capture
Credit Music: heldon McQueen-Too Late
Sapporo in Japan
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Sapporo (札幌市 Sapporo-shi?) About this sound listen (help·info) is the fourth-largest city in Japan by population, and the largest city on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido. Located in Ishikari Subprefecture, it is the capital of Hokkaido Prefecture, and an ordinance-designated city of Japan.
Sapporo is known outside Japan for having hosted the 1972 Winter Olympics, the first ever held in Asia, and for the city's annual Yuki Matsuri, internationally referred to as the Sapporo Snow Festival, which draws more than 2 million tourists from around the world. The city is also home to Sapporo Brewery and the famous white chocolate biscuits called shiroi koibito (白い恋人?, white sweetheart).Before its establishment, the area occupied by Sapporo (known as the Ishikari Plain) was home to a number of indigenous Ainu settlements.[2] In 1866, at the end of the Edo Period, construction began on a canal through the area, encouraging a number of early settlers to establish Sapporo village.[3] The settlement's name was taken from the Ainu language sat poro pet (サッ・ポロ・ペッ), and can be translated as dry, great river.[4]
In 1868, the officially recognized year celebrated as the 'birth' of Sapporo, the new Meiji government concluded that the existing administrative center of Hokkaido, which at the time was the port of Hakodate, was in an unsuitable location for defense and further development of the island. As a result it was determined that a new capital on the Ishikari Plain should be established. The plain itself provided an unusually large expanse of flat, well drained land which is relatively uncommon in the otherwise mountainous geography of Hokkaido.
During 1870–1871, Kuroda Kiyotaka, vice-chairman of the Hokkaido Development Commission (Kaitaku-shi) approached the American government for assistance in developing the land. As a result, Horace Capron, Secretary of Agriculture under President Ulysses S. Grant, became an oyatoi gaikokujin and was appointed as a special advisor to the commission. Construction began around Odori Park, which still remains as a green ribbon of recreational land bisecting the central area of the city. The city closely followed the Western-style grid plan with streets at right-angles to form city blocks.
The continuing expansion of the Japanese into Hokkaido continued, mainly due to migration from the main island of Honshu immediately to the south, and the prosperity of Hokkaido and particularly its capital grew to the point that the Development Commission was deemed unnecessary and was abolished in 1882.
Edwin Dun (oyatoi gaikokujin) came to Sapporo to establish sheep and cattle ranches in 1876. He also demonstrated pig raising and the making of butter, cheese, ham and sausage. He married a Japanese woman. He once went back to the States in 1883 but returned to Japan as a secretary of government.
William S. Clark (oyatoi gaikokujin) who was the president of the Massachusetts Agricultural College (now the University of Massachusetts Amherst) came to be the founding vice-president of Sapporo Agricultural College (now Hokkaido University) for only eight months from 1876 to 1877. He taught academic subjects in science and lectured on the Bible as an ethics course, introducing Christian principles to the first entering class of the College.
In 1880, the entire area of Sapporo was renamed as Sapporo-ku (Sapporo Ward),[5] and a railroad between Sapporo and Temiya, Otaru was laid. That year the Hōheikan, a hotel and reception facility for visiting officials and dignitaries, was erected adjacent to the Odori Park. It was later moved to Nakajima Park where it remains today. Two years later, with the abolition of the Kaitaku-shi, Hokkaidō was divided into three prefectures: Hakodate, Sapporo, and Nemuro. The name of the urban district in Sapporo remained Sapporo-ku, while the rest of the area in Sapporo-ku was changed to Sapporo-gun. The office building of Sapporo-ku was also located in the urban district.[5]
Come with me to Tokyo ~ Summer 2019
In summer of 2019 I went to Tokyo for a Harvard research program. In lieu of writing a summary post I decided to make a sappy sappy video compilation of iPhone video I took there. Much of this made possible by my Instagram, particularly my Instagram Stories. I am the Baby of Technology and Social Media and duly ashamed.
Music: Beautiful by oh sunshine (Japanese version)
Follow: @jennyyuwang for my face, or @peanutbutter__jenny if you only want food
Places shown, in order:
Tokyo from Skytree
Tokyo subway map
Shibuya scramble crossing
Akihabara
View from Mori Art Museum
teamLab Borderless – Odaiba
Shibuya
Shinjuku from a rooftop
Lush - Harajuku
Totti Candy Factory Shop – Harajuku
Takeshita St – Harajuku
Tokyu Plaza – Harajuku
Sumida River boat
(Instagram Story various places)
Adachi fireworks festival
Hie Shrine
“Creepy” Vending Machine Corner – Akihabara
Owl Café Akiba Fukurou – Akihabara
Meiji Jingu Stadium (Swallows section)
teamLab Planets – Odaiba
Genki Sushi – Shibuya
Nemuro Hanamaru – Ginza
Cup Noodle Museum – Yokohama
Maidaru – Kappabashi-dori
Monjayaki – Tsukishima
Bunkyo-ku from a rooftop
Okonomiyaki – Tsukishima / A Happy Pancake – Ginza
(Instagram Story various places)
Ueno Park
Asakusa
(Instagram Story)
Robot Café – Shinjuku
Sanrio Puroland
Mt Fuji
teamLab Planets
Aowa Dori festival – Kagurazaka
Kamakura
Aowa Dori festival – Kagurazaka
teamLab Borderless – Odaiba
(Instagram Story food)
Narita International Airport
Sushi + Cherry Pie Frappe, Rikugien Gardens & Koiwa Shopping [VLOG] Day 12
Hanging out with Akira
Lunch - Hanamaru Sushi in Kitte
Starbucks American Cherry Pie Frappe - Only in Japan!!
Shopping Koiwa Flower Road
Tokyo, Japan
Kodak 4K 360: Seaside (Corrected)
Once upon a time (Japan) / Sub: ENG-SPA
Little 6 year old Mei was lost near Lake Toya in Hokkaido, Japan. They never found her. According to the legend, the girl's tears, not finding her mother Haruhi, gave rise to Tsuyu, the rainy season that runs through Japan from north to south on a magical and beautiful route.