Blogs from Koyasan, Wakayama, Japan, Asia - page 2

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Asia » Japan » Wakayama » Koyasan September 26th 2015

I had tried to get a few hour shut eye on the bench near my check-in desk. However Incheon is a bloody noisy airport, so when they started setting up the barriers and I saw that the desks would open at 4:50, I headed to the bathroom to change and sort my face out. I was impressed with t'ways (the airline I was flying with), that they opened check-in three hours before departure, Jeju Air and the other budget carriers only open two hours before. There was only a small queue and I had checked my luggage and got my boarding pass pretty quickly. I always fly out early on Chuseok morning, but this time I was flying out earlier and it wasn't as busy as it gets later. I got through baggage inspection and immigration ... read more
Train Ticket
Tengachaya Station
Tengachaya Station

Asia » Japan » Wakayama » Koyasan March 19th 2015

Die letzte Nacht im Hostel war furchtbar, eine schrecklich laute und rücksichtslose Chinesin hat bis 03.00 Uhr rumgekramt und das Licht an gehabt und dann ab 06.30 Uhr schon wieder so einen Lärm gemacht, dass keiner mehr schlafen konnte. Da waren mir die höflichen wenn auch stummen Japanerinnen deutlich lieber. Meine kleine Rezeptionistin macht aber alles wieder gut, als sie mir zum Abschied einen handgeschriebenen Brief mit einem englischen, japanischen und deutschen Dankeschön überreicht. So süß! Dank der doofen Chinesin bin ich wenigstens schon gegen halb 10 am Bahnhof in Kyoto. Ich muss nun vier mal umsteigen, bis ich an meinem heutigen Tagesziel Koyasan ankomme und trotz der immer pünktlichen und sehr regelmäßig verkehrenden Zugverbindungen dauert der ganze Spaß 4 Stunden. Es sind alles local trains, also solche, die an jedem Baum halten, ständig muss ich ... read more
Blick aus dem Fenster
Okunoin Cemetery
Okunoin Cemetery

Asia » Japan » Wakayama » Koyasan April 16th 2014

As I parted ways with Kyoto, it was a pleasant farewell as I was looking forward to expanding my introduction to Japanese Buddhism. Koyasan was first settled in 819 by a monk named Kukai and is the birthplace of the Shingon sect of Japanese Budhism also known as Esotentric Buddhism. I hopped on the train which began to wind it's way through the mountains. It was nice to get above sea level and as the ceder trees began to line the tracks, it felt a little bit like home. It was cool to see some rural mountain Japanese homes dotted throughout the hills as well. The train reached the end of the line and it was time to ride the cable car up to Koyasan, which was an experience in itself. I managed to find the ... read more
My room
Dinner!
Strolling through Okinuin

Asia » Japan » Wakayama » Koyasan April 8th 2012

We only have a week and a half left in Japan, but we've done so much since my last blog! It's been non-stop. Everywhere is so different, and we have seen some really interesting places (although I'm still going to get mixed up between all the cities and the temples when I look at my photos!). Since the last blog, in Kamakura, we headed next to Nagoya, where we stayed only to go to Tsumago and Magome the following day, and do a walking trail through the forest (and snow!) and little old houses in the mountains. There were bells every few hundred metres to ring in order to scare off bears - we read a sign before we started saying that bears had been reported in the area in the news, but no one had ... read more
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Asia » Japan » Wakayama » Koyasan January 5th 2011

Just came back from Fukuoka, and headed straight to Koyasan the next day. Still on my New year holiday, and luckily kiddie daycare is already back and running. So we sent our kids to the daycare for the day, and finally made the journey to the famous Mt. Koya. The place is 860 meters above sea level and dotted with quite a number of World Heritage Sites pertaining to Esoteric practice of Shingo Buddhism, which has a large following all over Japan. I always thought of visiting this place, but always had a change of plans at the last minute. I was thinking that maybe I wouldn't experience its beauty at the same level as those who are practicing the faith. But, I was so wrong. The place is completely a world on its own. The ... read more
monk
burial ground entrance
CIMG5668

Asia » Japan » Wakayama » Koyasan October 30th 2009

Shukubo, or temple stay, experiences at Mount Koya, or Kōya-san (高野山), have been described in this forum more often, but I enjoyed my stay so much that I feel obliged to describe my own experience. The Okunoin Cemetery, Kongobuji Temple with the Banryutei rock garden and the area around the Konpon Daitō which make up the main sites in Mt Koya all are fabulous and have all well deserved entries in this forum and therefore I want to focus mainly on our temple lodging, or shukubo, experience. Note that there appears to be a misconception with tourists to Japan that Mt Koya is the only place to enjoy a temple stay in Japan, this is not the case and in fact my most enjoyable shukubo experience was at a temple in Saitama close to Tokyo (see ... read more

Asia » Japan » Wakayama » Koyasan July 9th 2009

We get the shinkansen at 8:15 from Hiroshima to Osaka, we buy some little pastries and ice coffee for the journey, very civilised. I love these trains. In Osaka we store our big bags in a locker and take the city loop train around to a station south of the city where we buy a combined train, cable car and bus ticket to get to Koyasan. It's very humid and we're glad not to be carrying our big bags, we have lunch at a brilliant, really cheap and tasty stand up noodle joint at the station - slurpy slurpy. We have to take 2 more trains to get to the cable car at the base of Koyasan, the urban areas thin out a bit on the way out and we see rural Japan for the first ... read more
a tourist
Japanese garden at our temple
The wobbly stuff

Asia » Japan » Wakayama » Koyasan March 7th 2009

We woke up early and got ready for our first move. Traveling in a large group can prove difficult if everyone doesn't stick to the plan. We had a great group though and I wasn't too worried. We met in the lobby to check out and make our way to the train station. I loved Axel, our group leader, for one reason...he was as addicted to coffee as I am, so every morning move included a coffee shop stop! My kind of guy!! We dragged our bags to the station and onto a train heading toward the Wakayama prefecture, where we were to catch a cable car up to Koyasan. Mount Koya (Koyasan) is the center of Shingon Buddhism, a Buddhist sect that was introduced to Japan in 805 by Kobo Daishi, one of the most ... read more
Japan
Japan
Japan

Asia » Japan » Wakayama » Koyasan December 17th 2008

Konichiwa! The second half of our trip was just as fun and exciting as the last. We headed off to Koyasan by train. Heading into this beautiful country was finally what I wanted. I realized that Tokyo and Osaka were nice, but very built up and urbanized. I was looking for more green, and places that have the traditional Japanese looking roof tops. Koyasan provided just that. It's located up in the mountains, and the population was a lot less. We were able to stay overnight at a temple! Our room had traditional floor type furniture, and to our delight, a space heater! After dropping off our bags, we went walking around town, and through a beautiful cemetery. The head stones and plots were very elaborate, and it was set in a gorgeous tall Forrest (I'll ... read more
my new Kyoto friend!
kitties!
Japanese high school girls

Asia » Japan » Wakayama » Koyasan October 3rd 2008

freitag, 03.10.08 am montag, bereits am morgen im bett, höre ich den regen draussen - sch....! denn genau an diesem montag fahre ich mit dem zug nach koya-san - gemäss schriftlichem und mündlichem reiseführer eine superschöne strecke im regen. na ja, so schlimm war es gar nicht - vor allem der letzte teil von hashimoto über gokurakubashi nach koya-san ist wirklich wundervoll, zuerst ein schmalspurbähnli und dann eine standseilbahn! die steilen mit einer art tannen und bambus bewachsenen hänge sind mystisch von nebelschwaden umgeben, dazu ein feiner nieselregen - eigentlich eine ganz schöne stimmung. und schliesslich bin ich im zug ja im trockenen und im fukuchi-in gibt es mehrere heisse bäder, die ich dann auch vor dem nachtessen noch intensiv nutze... der fukuchi-in ist ein shukubo, d.h. ein tempel, der übernachtungsmöglichkeiten für pilger und touristen anbietet, ... read more
rocks
sunset
tombs




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