9 NIGHT Southeast Asia CRUISE
Sat Jul 27th 2024
Onboard Diamond Princess
Itinerary Summary
Tokyo/JAPAN, Nagoya/JAPAN, Kyongju/S. KOREA, Akita/JAPAN, Aomori/JAPAN, Tokyo/JAPAN
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IF
Inside
Starting at
$938 PP
OF
Oceanview
Starting at
$1158 PP
BF
Balcony
Starting at
$1498 PP
MD
Mini-suite
Starting at
--
S6
Suite
Starting at
$3998 PP

Itinerary

Day 1 : Tokyo/JAPAN

-- - 4:00 PM

Huge department stores brim with shoppers, neon flashes from dusk to dawn, and the entire world pays heed to the slightest fluctuation on the Nikkei Index. From the Imperial Palace and Meiji Shrine to the fabled Ginza district, 20th-century Tokyo is an intriguing composite of East and West. Yuppies sporting Walkmen bow formally in greeting. Women in kimonos and Dior suits stroll side-by-side. Geishas play samisens while disc jockeys play the Top Forty. Japanese houses of wood and paper stand in the shadow of towering steel and mortar. Not far away, one of the world's most impressive sights soars 12,388 feet to its snow-clad peak: Mount Fuji, the majestic symbol of Japan.

Day 2 : Nagoya/JAPAN

7:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Day 3 : At Sea

Day 4 : Kyongju/S. KOREA

11:00 AM - 8:00 PM

Korea''s "museum without walls" is akin only to China in its depth and cultural wonder. From Pusan, you can journey to the ancient Silla capital of Kyongju, a dynasty which reigned in Korea for almost a thousand years. Today this small provincial town is virtually a museum without walls, dotted with many splendid ruins. Nearby, the forested mountains and valleys shelter hundreds of beautiful Buddhist shrines including the renowned Sokkuram Grotto, and Tongdosa and Pulguksa Temples. Pusan is also a shopper''s mecca and Korea''s vital southern link to Japanese and American trade.

Day 5 : At Sea

Day 6 : Akita/JAPAN

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM

Day 7 : Aomori/JAPAN

8:00 AM - 11:00 PM

Day 8 : At Sea

Day 9 : At Sea

Day 10 : Tokyo/JAPAN

6:30 AM - --

Huge department stores brim with shoppers, neon flashes from dusk to dawn, and the entire world pays heed to the slightest fluctuation on the Nikkei Index. From the Imperial Palace and Meiji Shrine to the fabled Ginza district, 20th-century Tokyo is an intriguing composite of East and West. Yuppies sporting Walkmen bow formally in greeting. Women in kimonos and Dior suits stroll side-by-side. Geishas play samisens while disc jockeys play the Top Forty. Japanese houses of wood and paper stand in the shadow of towering steel and mortar. Not far away, one of the world's most impressive sights soars 12,388 feet to its snow-clad peak: Mount Fuji, the majestic symbol of Japan.