You will have a guided tour to the historical Japanese village of Shirakawa-go, which is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Its architecture is typical for the snowy regions of the country. Its three and four-storey houses are built in the gassho-zukuri style (‘hands in prayer’), featuring thatched roofs with a steep angle of inclination so that snow does not accumulate.
At the museum dedicated to the Doburoku Matsuri festival, you will learn about Doburoku, an unfiltered local sake. There is a tasting room for those who would like to try it. You will then climb one of the hills, surrounding the village, and admire all its splendid mountain landscape from above.
The nearby village of Gokayama, also a UNESCO site, has been secretly producing gunpowder in the Middle Ages. Other nearby villages, Ainokura and Shimonashi, still produce Japanese washi paper, famous throughout the country. At the Murakami-ke Museum in Kaminashi village, you will learn about the region’s culture and lifestyle.
Enjoy visiting the City of the Shining Sun, a UNESCO World Heritage site. You will see the Toshogu historical complex, the funeral site where the spirits of Japan's three most powerful Samurai rest in peace, and, finally, the famous Kagon waterfalls.
There’s a hidden world beneath Tokyo — not a subway or an ancient tunnel, but something out of a sci-fi epic. Fifty meters below the quiet streets of Saitama lies the Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel, known to locals as Shutoken Gaikaku Hosuiro. Built to protect Tokyo from floods, this colossal underground space has become one of Japan’s most intriguing offbeat attractions.