Best Attractions and Places to See in Tosu, Japan
Tosu Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Tosu. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Tosufor You. Discover Tosuas per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Tosu.
This Video has covered top Attractions and Best Things to do in Tosu.
Don't forget to Subscribe our channel to view more travel videos. Click on Bell ICON to get the notification of updates Immediately.
List of Best Things to do in Tosu, Japan
Tosu Premium Outlets
Tosu Stadium
Saga Horse Racetrack
Nakatomi Memorial Medicine Museum
JR Tosu Station
Shintosu Tourist Information Center
Ochozuno-taki
Locomotive No. 268
Tosu Chuo Park
Tosu Premium Outlets in 4K - 鳥栖プレミアムアウトレット -
Tosu Premium Outlets is the wildly popular shopping center, especially for Asian & Pacific tourists. It's on every itinerary.
Tosu Premium Outlets has over 150 different stores and makes a convenient stop for anyone eager to do some shopping in Japan.
For other great sights in Saga, be sure to watch the Saga Playlist:
And to see the best of Kyushu, see the Kyushu Playlist:
For more videos like this, please subscribe:
Please leave some comments below. If you have any questions, feel free to ask.
TOSU SAGA JAPAN to Mental Selfcare JAPAN(鳥栖からメンタルセルフケアジャパンまで)
メンタルセルフケアジャパン(Mental Selfcare Japan)
こころとからだの健康をサポート
滞在ケアプログラムと遠隔医療支援技術であなたの心を元気にします
リアルな出会いとふれあいの街コンイベント毎週水日
LINE ID yoichiido
No copy permitted.
Copyright © 2016 Mental Selfcare JAPAN. All Rights Reserved.
A visit to Ogi Domain
Japanese Castle Explorer:
To read the accompanying post on the JCE blog:
Japan Travel Yoshinogari Historical Park Ancient Japan...Kyushu, Saga01
Japan Travel Yoshinogari Historical Park Ancient Japan...Kyushu, Saga01
The Yoshinogari Historical Park (Yoshinogari Rekishi Kōen) is a remarkable archaeological site in Saga Prefecture. The vast park covers a large settlement from the Yayoi Period (300 BC - 300 AD) where dozens of pit dwellings, elevated store houses and over 2000 tombs were excavated. It is the largest and most important Yayoi Period site in Japan, and the best place for people who want to learn about this era of Japanese history.
The settlements unearthed at Yoshinogari are believed to have been some of the largest moat surrounded villages of their time and are speculated to have been the seat of one of the earliest forms of state government discovered in Japan. Today the ancient site has been preserved with impressive reconstructed villages and visitors can explore and learn about Yayoi life and culture. The careful reconstructions include dozens of elevated store houses, pit dwellings, watchtowers, shrines and other structures, many of which can be observed from inside. Some contain tools and implements, while mannequins re-act jobs and ceremonies in others.
Of the reconstructed villages, the Minami Naikaku settlement placed at the center of the park which is one of the most important. Enclosed by moats and defensive walls, this is where the Yayoi Period kings were thought to have governed from. Nearby is an exhibition house displays tools and clothes of the Yayoi people as well as artifacts,explaining their agricultural techniques. Another section displays burial jars excavated around the site. The exhibitions include detailed English descriptions.
A short walk north is another important enclosed settlement called Kita Naikaku, which is a place for those who were involved in ancient ceremonies. Further north is another museum focusing on the ancient forest that covered the area two thousand years ago. A living center near the East Gate allows visitors to take part in hands-on activities (100 to 500 yen) such as stone carving and building a fire with a bow-drill.
Furthermore, the large park includes other recreational areas such as a sprawling open field where people can picnic and play sports, playgrounds, disc golf and miniature golf courses, and agricultural fields where flowers and various display crops are grown. There is a restaurant and souvenir shop.
Yoshinogari Historical Park
Hours: 9:00 - 17:00 (until 18:00 June - August)
Closed: December 31st and the third Monday and Tuesday of January
Admission: 420 yen
Level of English: Good
Access Information:
From Fukuoka
Via Shinkansen
From Fukuoka's Hakata Station, board the Kyushu Shinkansen to Shin-Tosu where you can transfer to a local train for Yoshinogarikoen Station.
The one way journey will take around 35 minutes with a cost of about 2500 yen (Fully covered by the Japan Rail Pass and Kyushu Rail Pass.) There are good connections once or twice an hour, but keep in mind that not all Sakura trains stop at Shin-Tosu Station along the way.
Via local or limited express train
From Fukuoka's Hakata Station, board a local or limited express train to Tosu and a local train for Yoshinogarikoen. The trip takes between 45-75 minutes and with a cost of 840 yen by local or about 1500 yen by limited express train. There are multiple connections every hour.
From Yoshinogarikoen Station it is a 10-15 minute walk or 700 yen taxi ride to the park's East Gate.
From Nagasaki
Via local or limited express train
Take a limited express train from Nagasaki to Saga and transfer to a local train for Kanzaki Station. The one way trip takes around two hours with a cost of about 3500 yen (Fully covered by the Japan Rail Pass and Kyushu Rail Pass.)
Via only local trains
A few direct local trains go all the way in about three hours and for 2130 yen one journey.
From Kanzaki Station it is a 10-15 minute walk or 700 yen taxi ride to the park's West Gate.
Subscribe link :
Moopon :
facebook:
How to use free Wi-Fi in Japan:
Shinkansen arrival in Fukuyama, Hiroshima prefecture, Japan
gyogan ライブ 11:07pm PST 07/24/2010 in Urawa, Saitama, Japan
iPhone上で録画された動画 in Urawa, Saitama, Japan
Nagasaki to Kobe by Train
Riding Japan Rail from Nagasaki Station to Shin-Tosu and on to Shin-Kobe. Filmed entirely with an iPhone 7 and edited in iMovie.
Kawaguchi, Saitama, Japan Time Lapse
Time lapse video showing 24 hours from a webcam at Kawaguchi, Saitama, Japan. More information about this webcam can be found at
DAY 5 in Japan : พาเที่ยวญี่ปุ่น เมืองหมีดำ Kumamoto (NORTH KYUSHU)
DAY 5: JAPAN TRIP (NORTH KYUSHU) คิวชูเหนือ!
---------------------------
แผนการเดินทาง: Kumamoto และ Nagasaki
Step 1: ตื่นแต่เช้า Check out ฝากกระเป๋าไว้ ที่โรงแรม เดี๋ยวกลับมาเอาครับ
Step 2: จากออกเดินทางไป ที่เป้าหมายแรก ก็คือ Kumamon Square (โดยเมืองนี้เราใช้วิธีการเดินทัวร์เมืองครับ เพราะแต่ละสถานที่ไม่ใกล้กันมาก)
Step 3: เดินตาม google map ผ่าน Shopping street ไม่รู้ชื่ออะไร แต่มี Market เล็กๆให้ดูครับ
Step 4: เนื่องจากไปเช้ามาก Kumamon square ยังไม่เปิด(เปิดเวลา 10.30 am.) เราจึงเดินรอบตึกเจอร้านข้าวกล่องที่ชื่อว่า Fasion Onigiri *อาหารอร่อย เด็ด แนะนำครับ*
Step 5: เข้าชม Kumamon square มันจะอยู่ในตัว Shopping Mall เข้าหน้าประตูก็จะเห็นน้องหมีดำอยู่ใกล้สุดมุมครับ นั้นละครับเป้าหมายเรา
Step 6: เมื่อชมเสร็จเรียบร้อย เป้าหมายต่อไปของเราก็คือ Kumamoto Caslte กับตลาด Sakuranobaba Johsaien ครับ เดินกับต่อครับ ใช้เวลาเดินประมาณ 15-20 นาที ก็ถึงครับ(ออกกำลังกายไปในตัวครับ)
Step 7: ถึงปราสาท Kumamoto Castle แต่เข้าชมไม่ได้ครับ เพราะเขาซ่อมปรับปรุงอยู่กับ เกิดเห็น แผ่นดินไหวทำให้ตัวปราสาทเสียหายครับ ได้แต่มองอยู่ข้างนอก ดังนั้นเราไปตลาดกันแทน
Step 8:เที่ยวตลาด หาของกิน ซื้อของฝาก จนหน้ำใจ จากนั้นก็เตรียมหามื้อเที่ยงกินกันครับ เปิดหาร้านจากพี่ Google วันนี้เลยเป็น เด็กเส้นซะเลย ร้านชื่อว่า Akagumi Ramen เปิด Google แล้วเดินตามโลดครับ
Step 9: กินจนอิ่มท้องแล้ว พร้อมเดินทางกลับโรงแรม เพื่อไปสถานี Kumamoto station ครับ ด้วยเวลาเหลือ 3 ชม. เดินตัดสินใจเดินไปกันครับ เดินจากโรงแรม Ark hotel ถึงสถานี ใข้เวลา 40 นาทีครับ จัดไปครับ
Step 10: ด้วยความอยากรู้ว่า Starbuck ว่า รสชาติเป็นอย่างไร ก็จัดสิครับ ไม่อร่อย แต่อีกร้านกาแฟที่อร่อยกว่าก็คือ Seattle โดยเฉพาะ Ice Chocolate โดนใจผมจริงๆครับ
Step 11: ขึ้นขบวนรถ Shinkansen 18.02 ถึง 18.26 จากสถานี Kumamoto ไป Shin-Tosu
Step 12: จากนั้น Transit ที่ Shin-Tosu เปลี่ยนรถไฟไป Nagasaki ใช้เวลา 1ชม. 50 นาที
Step 13: จากนั้นเดินจาก Nagasaki station ไป โรงแรม APART HOTEL NAGASAKI-EKI MINAMI ครับ โรงแรมจอทีวีใหม่มากครับ ^^
Step 14: จบการเดินทางวันนี้เจอกันพรุ่งนี้ Nagasaki tour
—————————————
DAY1: BKK - HANOI - FUKUOKA
LINK:
DAY2: FUKUOKA - OITA - BEPPU
LINK:
DAY3: OITA - MT.ASO (ASO BOY)
LINK:
DAY4: OITA - YUFUIN - KUMAMOTO
LINK:
DAY5: KUMAMOTO(ONE DAY TRIP) - NAGASAKI
LINK:
DAY6: NAGASAKI(ONE DAY TRIP) - FUKUOKA
LINK: Coming soon
DAY7: FUKUOKA - DAZAIFU
LINK: Coming soon
DAY8: FUKUOKA - MARINE WORLD
LINK: Coming soon
DAY9: FUKUOKA - HANOI - BKK
LINK: Coming soon
► ติดตามผมเพิ่มเติม :
Facebook:
Instagram:
Twitter:
Music Credit:
Say It To My Face (ft. Dylan Emmet) by Leonell Cassio
Creative Commons — Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported — CC BY-SA 3.0
Free Download:
Music promoted by Audio Library
h470 Ogi Suga Jinjaa 小城須賀神社 HD
Ogi Suga Jinja(shrine)/ Ogi Saga Japan
There is this Shinto shrine on a slightly elevated mountain,
and the stairs of the stone of a long steep grade are famous.
MyHP
日本之旅:佐贺县 吉野里历史公园听闻弥生时代人们的声音♪游历日本文化的起点♪ 日本最早州政府之形式的所在地 窖屋(竪穴式住居),高床式仓库 古遗址的重建村庄 佐贺01 Moopon
日本之旅:佐贺县 吉野里历史公园(Yoshinogari Rekishi Koen) 听闻弥生时代人们的声音♪游历日本文化的起点♪ 日本最早州政府之形式的所在地 窖屋(竪穴式住居),高床式仓库 古遗址的重建村庄 佐贺01 Moopon
吉野里历史公园(Yoshinogari Rekishi Koen) 是佐贺Saga县一个着名的考古遗址。从弥生(Yayoi)时代(公元前300年 - 公元300年)园区便占据宽广的面积。有数十个窖屋(竪穴式住居),高床式仓库和挖掘出超过2000个墓穴。这是弥生时代在日本最大和最重要的遗址,若想要了解当时的历史,此地将是提供人们了解弥生时代的最佳场所。
在吉野里所被挖掘出来的土的被认为是当时围绕村庄最大的护城河,并推测是日本最早州政府之形式的所在地。今天,仍保留令人印象深刻古遗址的重建村庄,游客可以探索和了解弥生时代的生活和文化。精细的重建包括数十个高床式仓库,窖屋(竪穴式住居),瞭望塔,神社和其他结构的建筑,其中有许多可从内部进行观察。一些含有工具和器械,还有一些人形重现当时工作和仪式的情形。
在重建的村庄,南内郭定着于公园的中心是最重要的一个区域。从护城河和防御围墙的建构,可看出弥生时代的国王当时治理此地。附近的展示室展览有着弥生时代的工具和人们的衣服及文物,可了解当时的农业技术。另一区域则展示从遗址挖掘出来瓮棺。该展览包括详细的英文介绍。
往北步行几步是另一个重要的围地─北内郭,展示有着古代祭祀和政治礼仪等地方。再往北是古代植物馆,是两千年前就有的古林区域。东门附近的历史公园中心,提供游客参与体验活动(100〜500日元),如石雕、弓铁取火。
此外,公园包括其他娱乐领域,如一个庞大的开放领域,人们可以野餐、运动,作为游乐场,飞盘高尔夫和微型高尔夫球场,以及在农地种植着鲜花和各种类的农作物。并有一个餐厅和纪念品商店。
吉野里历史公园(Yoshinogari Rekishi Koen)
开放时间:9:00 - 17:00(6月至8月开放至18:00)
休馆日:12月31日、1月的第三个星期一和星期二
门票:420日元
英语水平:良好
交通方式:
从福冈
1.坐新干线
从福冈的博多(Hakata)站,搭乘九州新干线往新鸟栖站(Shin-Tosu),在那转车到吉野里历史公园站。单程35分钟,约2500日元(可适用于日本铁路周游券和九州铁路周游券。)一或两小时即有班车,但注意,所有的樱花号(Sakura)列车并不一定于新鸟栖站停车。
2.搭乘普快、特快列车
从福冈的博多站,搭乘普快、特快列车到鸟栖站,再转车到吉野里历史公园站。约45-75分钟,普快列车840日元,特快列车约1500日元。每小时有多班列车前往。从吉野里历史公园站约步行10-15分钟或搭计程车约700日元可到公园的东门。
从长崎
1.搭乘普快、特快列车
从长崎乘坐特快列车到佐贺再转车到神埼站。单程约两小时3500日元(可适用于日本铁路周游券和九州铁路周游券。)
2.搭乘当地火车
约三小时,单程为 2130日元。
从神埼站步行10-15分钟或搭计程车700日元可到公园的西门。
【日本最实惠的优惠券购买网站 Moopon】
Official Website :
facebook:
【姊妹Youtube频道】
The Best Japan Trip ・Useful Information in Japan(English):
旅日首選旅館、飯店、餐飲及娛樂・旅日精選景點(中文繁体):
旅日首选旅馆、饭店、餐饮及娱乐・旅日精选景点(中文簡体):
Wisata terbaik Jepang Informasi di Jepang(Bahasa Indonesia):
日本のおすすめ旅館・ホテル・レジャー・飲食店・日本のオススメ観光地(Japanese):
Shinkansen Bullet Train kodoma speeding To Nagoya
Shinkansen Bullet Train kodoma speeding down to Nagoya
Tokyo Legoland Trip
My trip at Legoland in Tokyo, checking out the cities and stuff.
Sorry if I don't have good quality and or other stuff, but it's because I'm on holidays.
Takeo Matsuri II
A spring festival in my town of Takeo, Saga-ken, Japan.
[drive japan]国道51号線 鹿嶋市-茨城大洗(Route51 Kashima City-Central Oarai) Part.4
[drive japan]国道51号線 鹿嶋市-茨城大洗(Route51 Kashima City-Central Oarai) Part.4
★map★
★site★
★kiimilog★
★google+★
★facebook★
★twitter★
Kurume Sports Garden Skating Rink
This video can only be of interest to English-speaking crazy skaters like myself who enjoy skating at different rinks around the country and the world. Each rink has its own facilities, atmosphere, and characters (skaters/coaches). And these, of course, shift with different times of the day, days of the week, and seasons. My brief visits only can provide a glimpse of each venue.
In March of 2010, I skated at 7 different rinks in 6 Japanese cities from Northern Honshu to Western Kyushu. These trips were enabled by my Japan Rail Pass and allowed me to combine my interests of trains and skating. This video reports on my visit to Kurume Sports Garden - the fourth stop in my series.
About 1:30pm of this day I left Nagasaki and took two trains to Kurume. I had hoped to skate at Kagoshima next, but I was unable to find a rink there still open at the end of March. Arriving at Kurume JR Station (taking a Relay Tsubame train that connects Sanyo and Kyushu Shinkansen routes), it was raining mildly. I had budgeted a little over three hours to find the rink, skate and get back to catch a train into Kagoshima for the night.
Forgetting to check my roller suitcase at the station, I set out in the rain (with no umbrella) to follow my GPS for an estimated 30 minute walk. Along the way , two remarkable people helped me. The first was a woman who wanted to walk along with me, holding an umbrella over my head. I was afraid that if I let her do this, she might feel obligated to walk the whole remaining distance with me. So I found an excuse to go off on my own. I walked further until I arrived at the GPS coordinates I had set, but there was no skate rink in sight. I asked a woman standing next to me at a cross-walk if she knew where Kurume Sports Center was, and she gave me (correct) directions. Several minutes later, still walking in the rain, I heard someone shouting to me from the street. It was the woman from the cross-walk, now in her car. She had been looking for me, concerned that she had given me the wrong directions. She had directed me to the Kurume Sports Garden but started to worry that maybe I had really wanted some place called the Sports Center instead. It was my mistake, but then she offered to drive me there! So I loaded my two bags into her car, sitting next to her kindergarten-aged son, and off we went. Picking up some unknown, soaking wet strange old man this would never happen in urban America! Thank you Okaa-san, whoever you were, for your kindness!
This rink definitely had some good figure skaters. I could barely keep up with some of the tiny young girls. After a while, an instructor, who struck me as Russian, showed up. Anyway, the ice was good, large (Olympic size?), and it was a nice venue for skating.
My trip back to the station was exciting for a different reason. I couldnt find a taxi, but at last found a bus headed to Kurume Station. Unfortunately, there are two such stations, and I arrived at the wrong one with only 25 minutes to catch my train departing from the other station!
The price of skating here was ¥1500 for adults and ¥1200 and for kids. Not sure of the skate rental fees. Supposed to be open all year. Hours were 10am to 8pm on weekdays, opening a couple hours earlier on weekends. Phone number is 0942-34-7007. The rink is a straight (but long) shot from the JR Kurume Station. It is a little back from the street, however, and maybe hard to see from the main street (there is a Mr. Donut close to both the rink and a major intersection). The building seems to be called Spoga Kurume (スポガ久留米).
Address: 福岡県久留米市合川町2125
(Correct) GPS coordinates are: 33°18'52.56N 130°31'51.81E
Web site (in Japanese):
HUIS TEN BOSCH Guide - RTW Day 9 - 2 Minute Travel
Today we left Shin-Osaka bound for the south of Japan, a weird amusement park called Huis Ten Bosch. We caught the Shinkansen from Shin-Osaka to a place called Shin-Tosu, which was a new Shinkansen station literally in the middle of nowhere. Most of the time the Shinkansen stations have massive department stores attached to them, this had nothing. We then transferred to the Limited Express Huis Ten Bosch, which is a train specifically designed to transport people to Huis Ten Bosch. Best thing about the train, you can see the driver and the front of the train, which is awesome.
We walked to our hotel, Hotel Nikko Huis Ten Bosch. At $140 a night, this was our most expensive hotel room in Japan. The room itself was massive, with two big single beds. Strangely, there was no internet. Most Japanese hotel rooms only have wired internet, and a tiny amount have wireless. In fact, the best internet we've had on the trip was the first couple of nights at a hostel!
We then headed to Huis Ten Bosch. Kathryn thought that it would be free, which makes very little sense to me, considering that even going to a temple shrine costs money in Japan, everything has a price here. Because we entered at 5pm, we got an evening ticket for $40 each.
Huis Ten Bosch was designed to be a full size replica of Amsterdam buildings for Japanese people who didn’t wanted to spend all their money going to actual Amsterdam. So it’s all a bit of a caricature of Amsterdam, but in classic Japanese style, so very clean, very polite, very orderly. Probably not the same as real Amsterdam at all, except in the actual buildings.
As night fell, we headed towards the Palace Huis Ten Bosch. This is a massive mansion, that then decided to do a night lights show using Japanese punk music. It was very surreal.
There were a few attractions in the park that you could enter. We entered a Haunted House, which wasn't really Kathryn’s thing. It was a super dark movie theatre, where you listened to a creepy horror story, which was pitch black, except for the occasional flash of something scary on the screen. Kathryn didn’t respond well to this, and I found it to be scary, though the scare factor was somewhat diminished by the fact it was all in Japanese, and I didn't understand any of it except the occasional scream, or screech sound.
We then wandered around the theme park, in much the same way that you wander around Disneyland once you’ve been on all the rides. We ended up walking for 4 hours, which is quite a bit of walking around a fake Amsterdam. It said online that there would be fireworks at 8.42pm, so we hung out in the rain waiting for 8.42pm to come, and then lo and behold, there were no fireworks. Never trust anything written online, including this blog.
Want more?
❖ Equipment ❖
Panasonic Lumix GF7
Lumix G Vario 12-32mm f/3.5-5.6 Lens
Sony FDR-X3000 Action Cam
Sony VCT-STG1 Shooting Grip
名も無い見事な藤棚(佐賀県基山町) Wisteria Nameless(Kiyama, Saga Prefecture, Japan)
佐賀県基山町・つつじ寺として有名な大興善寺近くにある名も無い藤棚、とにかくみ見事! これからのつつじの季節是非、ご覧下さい。