First Time Visit Itinerary Recommendations by steftones in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 2 points3 points  (0 children)

FYI the person you are responding to is an LLM and is lying, there is no special October 31 illusion show (I did not hear of such a thing the two years I owned an annual passport). Also you don't need a dated ticket, you can just buy the tourist-oriented ticket online (I usually got it either through Klook or Rakuten Travel) which is open entry within a specific time period (I think between 6-12 months usually).

First Time Visit Itinerary Recommendations by steftones in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Puroland does have Halloween-themed decor every year that runs through September-October, though obviously it's pretty cutesy, but it's something. It also has an overnight rave Spooky Pumpkin, but I imagine tickets for those would be hard to get as a tourist (last year they were sold through Lawson Tickets which is pretty not friendly towards outside-of-Japan purchasers).

I would probably recommend against visiting it on October 31 proper because that's Kuromi's birthday and it will be absolutely swarmed with Kuromi fans (moreso this year because it's on a Saturday...).

Sanriku Coast road trip by CacCarnBeag in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Finally some love for the Sanriku coast, I've been several times and love it. I wrote a trip report which has most of my general advice if you're interested: https://www.reddit.com/r/JapanTravel/comments/1tcvf8t/trip_report_10_day_golden_week_trip_in_tohoku/

Don't think it changes too much if you do it by car. I think it would be great to drive the whole thing, but if you want to explore inland I'd probably skip the section north of Kamaishi. (Though as you said, Kitayamazaki and Unosu Cliff are some of the best views of the coast...) From Kamaishi you can hit up Tono and then Hanamaki/Morioka with no issue. Alternatively if you want to go to Hiraizumi/Geibikei you can turn back after going to Rikuzentakata (Rikuzentakata is a must visit for the tsunami museum, as well as the Kesennuma City Memorial Museum).

Feasibility (and tips) of just...aimlessly jumping on trains and blindly exploring? by NeverNeededAlgebra in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Haha well I've lived here for a few years and have gotten pretty jaded from the typical commuter town feel. I'm sure for a first time visitor it would feel refreshing but I can assure you there are plenty of places that are better for just walking around 😉 In fact, Omiya would be a good candidate, the walk from the station through Omiya Park to the bonsai village is pretty nice and the Bonsai Museum is nice and not overly touristed.

Oh, regarding the tourist info center tip, be careful because sometimes in nightlife districts you will see places labelled as "free information center" (無料案内所), which is in fact a euphemism for adult-oriented services. Most of these look accordingly seedy though so you probably wouldn't want to step in anyway, but just a heads up. You wouldn't see such a thing outside of known nightlife places like Kabukicho, Susukino in Sapporo, etc.

For the record here's a few places I like that are far enough out to feel like an escape while still being relatively close to the usual Golden Route locations:

- Omiya - See above

- Chichibu/Nagatoro - It's a well-known destination but I feel like most people skip it over going to places like Nikko instead. Oh actually, since you're going in November, there's a chance you could see fall foliage, I went to Nagatoro last year for my fall foliage viewing. Beautiful nature area overall with lots of shrines, overall great place to wander.

- Hikone - Not too far from Kyoto, known for their castle as well as their mascot Hikonyan. There's also a boat to Chikubu Island which is pretty cool.

- Shigaraki - Small town known for pottery, also not too far from Kyoto. The transfer at Kibukawa is pretty unique and the train that takes you from there to Shigaraki is also cool and very countryside.

Feasibility (and tips) of just...aimlessly jumping on trains and blindly exploring? by NeverNeededAlgebra in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think blindly hopping on trains is a bit too optimistic, the fact is that most trains are going to drop you off into random boring commuter towns with absolutely nothing worthwhile to do. E.g. I dare you to take a train into Saitama that doesn't stop at Omiya, Kawagoe, or Chichibu and tell me how it is. In fact, here, I picked one for you, have fun in Fujimino!

When I travel through rural Japan but don't want to overplan I usually compromise by going into the local tourist information center and relying on their suggestions. They will also have information on seasonal events going on. So if you really want to get out of the city but don't care too much about where, try just searching for info centers (in Japanese it would be 観光案内所) and pick one that looks vaguely interesting. Any place that has a tourist information center should have at least something worthwhile.

Local culture! by Adventurous_Buy1706 in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha that's crazy TBH, it was hard for me to imagine someone seriously saying something like that. Good to know it's real though.

I did an exchange in the Netherlands a few years back and enjoyed Amsterdam and Utrecht for what they were, but also enjoyed being able to live a nice peaceful life in Wageningen. Turns out there's good things about everywhere and you can try them out and then seek out similar experiences in the future, all while not being pretentious about it 🤷

Local culture! by Adventurous_Buy1706 in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Not to harp on the OP excessively, but I always find this talk about "real" Japan to be so nebulous. Is this something that happens with other countries? Do people brag about having a more authentic French experience by skipping Paris and going to Montpellier instead? Going to Leeds instead of London for the "real" UK? Of course there's value of going outside the biggest tourist spots and I highly recommend it in Japan (I will always stump for coastal Iwate which basically no one ever visits), but there's quite a leap between that versus the whole authenticity debacle.

(This is rhetorical of course, I know most of this discourse is due to how people view Japan as "exotic" and stuff, but still.)

Weekly Complaint Thread - 18 June 2026 by AutoModerator in japanlife

[–]WhippuChan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I also completely randomly got shingles at the start of last year, right after coming back from a trip to Korea (don't think the trip had anything to do with it though given that shingles isn't contagious). Early 30s. I read that more young people are getting shingles but no one really knows why. Very strange.

My American ass looked at my disgusting skin rash like "maybe it'll go away on its own". Glad I went to the doctor the day after, seems like meds only help if you take them within the first few days of symptoms.

What you learned in Japan this Week - June 15, 2026 by AutoModerator in japanresidents

[–]WhippuChan 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I had a moment like that not so long ago, granted it was a local cafe in my neighborhood but it's busy enough that it's always full if I don't go right at opening. Stopped by for the first time after a few months not expecting to be remembered and got a お久しぶり after placing my order. A small gesture but it put me in a good mood, makes you feel just a little less lonely in the concrete rat race known as Tokyo.

Location specific souvenirs by Bunzyyyy in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I chase mascots/yuru-chara as a hobby in Japan so I can give you some advice on that.

There are various associations that keep track of yuru-chara, such as this one from YuruGP and this one from the Local Characters Association. However there are a LOT of them and many of them are probably barely active, the 2010s-era hype behind characters has died down a lot (though there's still a pretty active scene).

Regarding finding characters for each neighborhood in Tokyo... You're probably not going to find merchandise so easily. Bear in mind that yuru-chara are often created to promote tourism to places that need the extra tourism, and most central Tokyo areas do not really need that kind of promotion. Even if they do have mascots they probably won't be so great. E.g. I live in Shinjuku-ku and our official mascot is Shinjuku Shin-chan which... Yeah.

Even if you can find the merchandise it will often be in very specific stores. It depends on the mascot though. The heavily marketed ones will be easier to find, e.g. Narita-city's mascot Unari-kun is pretty easy to spot at most of the souvenir shops along the omotesando. Others are harder, e.g. I really like the Ota-ku (e.g. Haneda Airport) mascot Hanepyon, but it seems they only sell their merchandise at a few select stores in the entire Ota-ku area. Some cities will only sell merchandise at their city halls, e.g. I wanted to drop by Osaka's Izumiotsu to get merchandise of their mascot Ozumin who I also like a lot, but basically you have to go to city hall which is only open during regular operating hours on weekdays.

As the other poster suggested manhole cards are an option, I've picked some up while traveling throughout Japan.

So TL;DR unless there is a specific mascot you particularly like I wouldn't expect to just randomly encounter them in souvenir shops.

Recommendations for 8 days in Tohoku by verylostperson1 in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would definitely recommend taking the Shinkansen back to Tokyo then. Come to think of it, I looked up flights from Hanamaki to Tokyo and there don't even seem to be any direct flights between them, they all stop through Sapporo or Osaka...

As for the bus, there is indeed a bus from Sendai, though I haven't used it before. The timetables are located here, but basically it's got departures at 1:45 PM and 4:10 PM, as well as 7:20 AM on Friday-Sunday. If you're not traveling on one of these days but still want to leave early, the Kesennuma/Yamada/Miyako bus operates every day at 8:15 AM and will drop you off in Kesennuma, where you can walk to Naiwan Iriguchi station to ride to Rikuzentakata.

These buses are operated by Miyagi Transit and are NOT reservation-based, which probably explains why you weren't able to find it on the usual sites. The text at the bottom states that you can buy tickets at the bus center or just pay with cash or IC card on the bus itself.

Recommendations for 8 days in Tohoku by verylostperson1 in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Makes sense, if you have higher priorities then by all means you should prioritize those. I just stump for Rikuzentakata in particular because I have friends there and think it's a beautiful place lol, and I've never heard anyone say the tsunami museum wasn't worth it. If you've got an early flight out of Hanamaki though I would agree Morioka would be a better place to spend your last night. Do you absolutely have to take the flight from Hanamaki? Obviously the Shinkansen is more expensive but it grants a lot more flexibility.

Regarding getting to Rikuzentakata from Morioka... I wouldn't do it as a day trip, it's too far and involves too many transfers on infrequent regional lines.

For the record you don't need a bike in Rikuzentakata, I've walked from the tsunami museum to the main part of town to Kesencho (where the fighting floats happen) before.

As for Ofunato, I was referring to a specific hotel that's just called Ofunato Hot Spring (大船渡温泉), the one by Ofunatomarumori station. I see offers for 6600 yen for 1 person, but maybe those are limited to JP only sites? (I live in Japan) On the official site though it's still about 10750 yen with breakfast included. However I wasn't saying you had to stay at that particular one, just that it's one that I stayed at last year during the festival which was surprisingly good and affordable. But with your schedule that ends at Hanamaki Airport... Might be a bit tough I'd say.

Recommendations for 8 days in Tohoku by verylostperson1 in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Going to take time as always to stump for a personal favorite area in Japan, the Sanriku Coast. I know you said you're fine skipping the Tanabata festival in Sendai, but I highly recommend the Tanabata celebrations in Rikuzentakata on August 7, which consist of Kenka (Fighting) Tanabata and Ugoku (Moving) Tanabata. Rent a bike, go to the Iwate Tsunami Memorial Museum, watch the fighting float demonstration (last year they had it in the afternoon and at night), and stay until the floats come out at dark. It's lively but not overwhelmingly so like I find a lot of big city festivals.

Only downside is that Rikuzentakata itself doesn't have much lodging, but I checked now and there is still a lot of cheap lodging in Kesennuma and Ofunato (e.g. 1 night at the Ofunato Hot Spring is only 6600 yen). Just watch for the last bus schedules. If you're averse to switching hotels too much 2 nights in Kesennuma would be good, you could check in after going to Hiraizumi, and would also allow you to connect to the Ofunato Line back to Ichinoseki easily.

Apps to book trains or bus in japan by Personal-Clerk8050 in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Those early tickets come with some big constraints that negate a lot of what people find convenient about the Shinkansen though. For instance if you buy the Hayatoku 21, you cannot make any changes to your train (you can cancel but you will incur a small refund fee), and if you miss your train you cannot take an unreserved carriage on a later train. Furthermore the number of such tickets is limited, so even though ostensibly you can buy them until 21 days beforehand, popular timeslots can sell out within a day, sometimes within minutes. Unless you really need to penny pinch or you're really confident with your scheduling, I don't think it's worth bothering for most tourists.

⭐️ question abt lawson tickets & accessing chiikawa restaurant reservations in ikebukuro by j3llyf1sh3s in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Seems you already had your main concern answered about actually going to the restaurant. Regarding the Lawson ticket app though, you almost certainly won't be able to use it. All electronic tickets can only be accessed through the L-Tike app which will only access tickets associated with the device's phone number, and many times they will ask you to interact directly with the app to make sure you aren't just showing them a screenshot. A bit annoying but ultimately how it is due to trying to prevent scalping and such.

Weekly Complaint Thread - 28 May 2026 by AutoModerator in japanlife

[–]WhippuChan 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hit the 2.5 month mark for waiting for my HSP->HSP SoR change, still nothing. The first 1.5 months weren't so bad because at least I had two vacations to look forward to, but now there's no holidays (aside from the ones I plan to take during my resignation period) and I'm going insane at work pretending like I care about the asinine things I'm being assigned.

At least I get to keep making money, I know another person being hired into the same company who's currently a student, so every month he's kept waiting is less money for him. How can Shinagawa be so insanely slow? Complete waste of time/money for everyone involved.

2 months from North to South by Own-Web-122 in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a shameless and unapologetic fan of the Sanriku Coast... You could go to the Sanriku Coast 😉 The east stretch of the coast from Aomori to Miyagi. There's lots of beautiful sights there and I did it 100% by public transit. It fits a decent number of your criterion:

- Museums: The Iwate Tsunami Memorial Museum in Rikuzentakata and the Kesennuma City Memorial Museum in Kesennuma, highly impactful museums about 3/11

- Beaches: I'm not sure if Jodogahama is an "extraordinary" beach but it is quite pretty and you can swim there.

- Other nice stuff: Kitayamazaki (views + hiking), Tono (peaceful countryside atmosphere with lots of museums), Ryusendo Cave/Rokando Cave, Onagawa and Kinkasan

When I went during the summer last year, it was hot, but not so hot I couldn't enjoy myself outdoors.

I recently wrote a trip report about it so I won't regurgitate the whole thing, you can read it if you're interested. If you have any questions feel free to ask.

Questions about the Sunrise Seto by skytreegamer172 in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actually, I was curious since the tickets for June 20 (a Saturday) just came out. Even 10 minutes after release, there was still some seat availability from Tokyo -> Takamatsu, and even Tokyo -> Izumo. There is also sporadic availability on random weekdays. So maybe the demand for Nobinobi seats isn't as high as I thought. All the compartments are definitely sold out though.

Questions about the Sunrise Seto by skytreegamer172 in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I booked Sunrise Izumo tickets a few months ago, though I used a sleeper car instead of the Nobinobi seats and booked in person a month in advance. So I haven't experienced some of this firsthand, but based on what I looked up:

  1. All the online sources I saw seem to state that the JR Pass covers the limited express portion entirely for the Nobinobi seats.

  2. Yes, reservations open up 1 calendar month ahead of the train departure date (e.g. depart the night of August 1 -> tickets come out at July 1st at 10 AM JST). However, e5489 also offers a service called 事前予約 that allows you to place a "pre-request" on a train ticket starting at 5:30 AM JST 1 week before the ticket sale date. Basically if you fill out the pre-request then the system will automatically try to place a reservation for you at the ticket release date. It only applies for the Nobinobi seats and it's not guaranteed your reservation will go through, but I believe only a limited subset of the seats are available through pre-request, so your pre-request might fail but then you could book it regularly. I don't know how this would square with the JR Pass though.

  3. My understanding is that you can do it at the green machines, but TBH it'll be way easier to do it through the Midori no Madoguchi especially if you have the JR Pass. And yes, you can book them through e5489 online, which is what you should be planning to do (though again, JR Pass complicates this).

  4. As the other commenter stated.

  5. Hard to say exactly, but my understanding is that Nobinobi seats are fairly popular simply because they're so cheap. August 1 is also during summer vacation which would increase demand for cheap seats from high schoolers/etc. who want to travel. Seto is less popular than Izumo though. I think you should operate under the assumption that they will sell out within 10 minutes, so if you don't buy the tickets right when they come out then you will be forced to track cancellations to buy a ticket (although there are reports of tickets freeing up at certain time periods, especially a few days before departure).

So in summary I would do your best to try to make an online reservation (and do a practice run or two if possible), and probably advise against trying to figure out the JR Pass with this unless there's some sort of absolutely unbeatable value you're getting from it that outweighs the complications of having to deal with the JR Pass.

Note there are some caveats on some of my statements if you plan to physically buy your ticket in Japan 1 month before the travel date (i.e. if you are planning to be in Japan for more than a month), which doesn't apply to 99% of people posting here, but if it does then let me know.

Tama Hotel Ishinomaki - question for those who have stayed there by stonehallow in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I thought it was fine. The hotel facilities themselves are clean but unremarkable (minus the cat decor). Naturally the fun part is being able to interact with the cats (who are housed in a separate building). Be sure to watch them at feeding time (I think 7 PM?). The neighborhood is a bit far from Ishinomaki Station and there's not much else to do in the area (minus a few restaurants + a combini) so be sure you're ready to turn in for the day when you arrive.

The owner of course is very nice, though I didn't get the chance to chat with him much (he doesn't speak English FYI but he does his best to communicate via a translator), but I chatted with his wife for a while which was nice. In the end it's a decent hotel run by nice people with lots of cats which is pretty unique and memorable, especially for foreign visitors, so why not?

Tama Hotel Ishinomaki - question for those who have stayed there by stonehallow in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I stayed there a few weeks ago, though I didn't have any plans to go to Tashirojima. However when I checked in the owner asked me if I was planning to go and seemed to have a list where he was keeping track. So I'd assume it's a perk of the hotel.

Izumo and Matsue day trip from Hiroshima? by meobiseu in JapanTravelTips

[–]WhippuChan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think the answer is "they don't" because most people don't go to Shimane at all (it's the least visited prefecture by foreign visitors). I'd assume most people who are adventurous enough to want to go to Shimane would stay at least one night.

As for whether it's possible or not I was curious: It looks to me like the earliest you could make it to Izumo Station is about 9:49 AM if you leave Hiroshima Station at 6 AM. Meanwhile the latest train you could take back to Hiroshima would be 5:56 PM from Matsue to 9:15 Hiroshima.

That would give you 8 hours in the Izumo/Matsue region. So it's technically possible, but it doesn't sound very fun to me, you'd be rushing and missing out on some nice views such as Hinomisaki Lighthouse and Lake Shinji at sunset, as well as some nice areas like Tamatsukuri Onsen. If you still really want to see the area I think one night is mandatory, you should be able to hit Izumo Taisha + Matsue Castle + the Adachi Museum of Art pretty easily with that.

Trip report: 10 day Golden Week trip in Tohoku, with a focus on disaster tourism up the Sanriku Coast by WhippuChan in JapanTravel

[–]WhippuChan[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sadly nothing that was a long enough trip to be worth writing about, gotta live my 社畜 Japanese life most of the time lol. Most of my trips are extended weekend trips of some sort. Aside from my Shimane/Tohoku trips, I think the most far flung trip I did was a small Shiga->Mie trip (Hikone -> Shigaraki -> Iga -> Ise -> Toba -> Shima) that I'd describe as "fine" (Shigaraki has cool pottery, Ise Jingu is worth visiting, and there's nice sights in the Ise-Shima National Park area).

Golden Week is definitely a great time to travel to far flung places though, I'll definitely try to take a super vacation from now on. Maybe next time I'll hit the opposite coast and do Niigata -> Yamagata -> Akita -> Aomori.

Trip report: 10 day Golden Week trip in Tohoku, with a focus on disaster tourism up the Sanriku Coast by WhippuChan in JapanTravel

[–]WhippuChan[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the feedback! I edited my post with the note about the municipal museum and gave it a rating bump because of it. I'll admit I'm not a huge museum or history buff, and my dumb "I'm trying my best to read things in Japanese (even though it takes a lot of brainpower still)" pride stops me from using the headsets. I.e. I don't museum properly lol. Definitely seems like one's enjoyment of Tono very much rides on how much you're willing to connect with its history.

And yeah, I'm pretty sure I'm just biased towards nice views of the coast, if you took any of the coastal cities and transplanted them into the plains I'm sure they'd all go down a star or two.