
Japan is a world apart – a cultural Galápagos where a  unique civilisation blossomed, and today thrives in delicious contrasts of  traditional and modern. The Japanese spirit is strong, warm and incredibly  welcoming. 
 
Savouring the delights of Japanese cuisine on its home  turf is half the reason to come to Japan and you can easily build an itinerary  around regional specialities and sublime restaurants. Eat just one meal in a  top-flight 
Tokyo sushi restaurant – or gulp down fresh noodles at a station counter – and you’ll  see why. The Japanese attention to detail, genius for presentation and  insistence on the finest ingredients results in food that can change your idea  of what is possible in the culinary arena. 
The wonders of Japan’s natural world are a well-kept  secret. The hiking in the 
Japan  Alps and Hokkaidō is world class, and with an extensive hut system you can  do multiday hikes with nothing more than a knapsack on your back. Down south,  the coral reefs of 
Okinawa will have you wondering if you’ve somehow been transported to 
Thailand. And  you never have to travel far in Japan to get out into nature: in major hubs like  Kyoto, just a short trip from the city will get you into forested mountains.  
Standing at the far-eastern end of the Silk Road and  drawing influences from the entire continent, Japan has spent millennia taking  in and refining the cultural bounties of 
Asia to produce something distinctly  Japanese. From the splendour of a Kyoto geisha dance to the spare beauty of a  Zen rock garden, Japan has the power to enthral even the most jaded traveller.  Traditional culture is only half the story: an evolving contemporary-art scene,  dynamic design, and a veracious appetite for pop-culture trends all help shape  the fascinating old-meets-new cultural landscape.

Travellers to Japan have always found themselves entranced  by a culture that is by turns beautiful, unfathomable and downright odd. Staying  in a ryokan (traditional Japanese inn) is utterly different from staying in a  hotel. Sitting in a robe on tatami (woven floor matting) eating raw fish and  mountain vegetables is probably not how you dine back home. Getting naked with a  bunch of strangers to soak in an onsen (hot spring) might seem strange at first,  but try it and you'll find it's relaxing. And with helpful locals, spotless  facilities and excellent public transport, you can experience this exoticism  with ease.
 
Комментариев нет:
Отправить комментарий