14-day Circle Japan
Sun Oct 13th 2024
Onboard Noordam
Itinerary Summary
Tokyo/JAPAN, Aomori/JAPAN, Sapporo/JAPAN, Hakodate/JAPAN, Kagoshima/JAPAN, Kochi/JAPAN, Osaka/JAPAN, Shimizu/JAPAN, Tokyo/JAPAN
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Itinerary

Day 1 : Tokyo/JAPAN

-- - 4:00 pm

Day 2 : At Sea

Day 3 : Aomori/JAPAN

8:00 am - 5:00 pm

Day 4 : Sapporo/JAPAN

8:00 am - 5:00 pm

Day 5 : Hakodate/JAPAN

8:00 am - 7:00 pm

Day 6 : At Sea

Day 7 : At Sea

Day 8 : At Sea

Day 9 : At Sea

Day 10 : At Sea

Day 11 : At Sea

Day 11 : Kagoshima/JAPAN

9:00 am - 6:00 pm

This large city is an excursion base from which to explore the dramatic coastlines, national parks and volcanic mountains of Kyushu, Japan's third largest island. Mount Sakurajima, an active volcano, can be reached by ferry. To the north, Kirishima-Yaku National Park is a scenic area of smoking volcanoes, craters and lakes. South of the city, Ibusuki, the island's most popular seaside resort, welcomes kimono-clad bathers to its sandy beaches and warm, underwater springs.

Day 12 : Kochi/JAPAN

8:00 am - 6:00 pm

Day 13 : Osaka/JAPAN

8:00 am - 4:00 pm

This large, bustling port is the starting point for tours to the ancient cities of Kyoto and Nara, the cultural fountainheads of classical Japan. Kyoto's Old Imperial Palace and the shogunal Nijo Castle remain glorious symbols of the power the city held for over 1,000 years. Until 1868, Kyoto was the capital of Japan, filled with elegant timber buildings and, perhaps more than any other Japanese city, imbued with Kami, the divine spirit. You'll sense it everywhere, for there are hundreds of Shinto shrines and over a thousand Buddhist temples, as well as sacred treasure-houses of religious sculpture, painting and exquisite gardens. Nara, City of the Seven Great Temples, lies in an idyllic setting.

Day 14 : At Sea

Day 15 : Tokyo/JAPAN

8:00 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.