#Fukuyama

Travel Journal 2024: Fukuyama-Sightseeing

Before we continued our journey to Fukuoka on the Shinkansen bullet train, we enjoyed our stay in Fukuyama. Yesterday evening, we went for a photo walk around the castle.

This morning we had some time to kill and visited a few temples and shrines on the off-chance. We particularly liked the Hachimangu shrine, which was surprisingly large and magnificently decorated. Today, however, there was a festival taking place there, possibly an early Shichi-Go-San celebrating the health of little children. The boys and girls were gorgeously dressed up in colourful kimonos, accompanied by their proud parents and grandparents as well as photographers capturing the event. Of course, we didn’t take any photos here, even though we would have loved to.

At Hakata station, the first wave of Christmas washed over us. A huge, colourfully flickering Christmas tree and festive illuminations lit up the forecourt. There were stalls with loads of “typically German” Christmas items (like mulled wine, beer, candles or… erm… spice bundles). Live singers were belting out American Christmas carols on a stage. All this at a daytime temperature that felt like 25°C. And people say we get gingerbread in the supermarkets too early back home. 😉

Travel Journal 2024: Shinshōji

Today we visited Shinshōji, a Buddhist temple. It is located near Fukuyama and can be reached by a journey of just under thirty minutes on the bus through rural suburbs. The complex was built in 1965 and is therefore relatively new, which can easily be seen from the main hall made of exposed concrete.

It includes a rather large park where you can go for a walk, meditate, and find your inner balance again. If you wish, you can experience Zen for yourself there for a day. Guided by a monk, you start with breakfast, then move on to the meditative copying of sutras, followed by a tea ceremony. For us, the simple Zen we experienced while taking easily around two hundred photos in the park, surrounded by splashing water and chirping birds, was quite enough. 😁

Tomorrow we are off to our next stop: Fukuoka.

Travel Journal 2024: Rainy Day

The day started early for us. At 5 in the morning, a lonely siren wailed outside. It led to us and a few other worried hotel guests standing at the reception ten minutes later, asking what it meant. The night porter simply told us that we didn’t need to worry. Oh well… 🤔

Typhoon number 21 had weakened to a tropical depression, but still brought plenty of heavy rain across the whole country and really messed up the timetable for the Shinkansen bullet trains. In some cases, there were delays of over four hours!

We decided to spend the morning in the hotel room so we wouldn’t get soaked to the bone yet again. In the afternoon, a Shinkansen delayed by 70 minutes (so, on time by German standards) then took us to our next place to stay: Fukuyama. The sun even came out there, as if nothing had happened, and let us get a first impression of the city and especially its beautiful castle.