126 wanderlust.co.uk September 2019
Lessthantwohoursnorthof
Himejionthetrain,Iwasinthe
greenvalleyofToyooka:home
totherareOrientalwhitestork,
orkounotori,whichstandsa
metrehighwithatwo-metre
wingspan.Thisistheonlyplace
inJapanwheresuchbirds
reside,reintroducedintothe
wildbyToyookacityafterfacing
nearextinction.
Toyookaismadeupofseveral
smallertowns,includingthehot
springtownofKinosaki,which
Ilaterstrolledinabrightpink
yukata(Japaneserobe),dipping
intothesevenhotspring
bathhouses.Beforeheading
therethough,Ivisitedtheold
castletownofIzushi,where
atunnelofnearly 40 rubyred
toriigatesascendtowardsthe
castleruins.Theylookidentical
toKyoto’sfamed‘Fushimiinari’
redgates,butheretherewasn’t
asingleotherpersonwalking
throughthem.
TOYOOKA
NOODLES IN
THE FOREST
Izushi actually describes itself
as ‘little Kyoto’ – easy to see why
when you stroll its quiet streets
of wooden houses. It’s even
home to one of Japan’s oldest
theatre buildings, Eirakukan
- built in 1901 – as well as over
50 soba (buckwheat noodle)
restaurants, where a traditional
local lunch consists of five small
plates of cold soba. The town
holds an annual soba festival
at their Morosugi Jinja shrine - this year, someone set a
record for eating 132 plates
of soba in ten minutes.
Ocean to mountain
(clockwise from this)
Mt. Kuruhi's sea of
clouds in Toyooka;
Kyoto's singing Kotohiki
beach; taking a boat
ride in the town of Ine,
wearing yukatas
around Kinosaki
Alamy, Shutterstock, Olivia Lee