Good to see you were able to start your exploration at Miyazu Station! The name is reminiscient of the eponymous feudal domain under the Tokugawa shogunate of Edo period Japan. It had its base at Miyazu castle, which was ruled over by several fudai daimyō clans through its history. On a side note, I'm wondering whether there is a memorial sight for Matsudaira Munetake, final daimyō of Miyazu, just as there is one for the last samurai of Japan, Saigo Takamori. Furthermore, the Ine village - visited later on in this clip - is famous for its roughly 230 wooden boathouses (funaya), lined up for five kilometers along Ine Bay. Some of them are up to 300 years old and are a designated Group of Historic Buildings, a category under Japan’s Historic Preservation Act. It is also interesting to see the glass plaque at 8:10 commemorating the creation of the short-lived NHK drama "Eenyobo" (ええにょぼ), starring Toda Naho as a fresh Kobe medical school graduate. The series depicts her growth as a doctor, despite the differences between a long-distance couple (her husband played by Sakakibara Toshihiko) and the threat of divorce due to daughter-in-law and mother-in-law problems. Certainly, the decision to shoot in the Tango province was, and probably still is deemed unusual.
Thanks sharing your trip🙏👍🚶♂️🥰♥️🇯🇵
Super nice weather for a super clean train.....fun ride !!!!!! I like ONE CAR train.
7:40 que bela imagem! o vídeo todo está incrível! meus parabéns pelo roteiro 👍
Good to see you were able to start your exploration at Miyazu Station! The name is reminiscient of the eponymous feudal domain under the Tokugawa shogunate of Edo period Japan. It had its base at Miyazu castle, which was ruled over by several fudai daimyō clans through its history. On a side note, I'm wondering whether there is a memorial sight for Matsudaira Munetake, final daimyō of Miyazu, just as there is one for the last samurai of Japan, Saigo Takamori.
Furthermore, the Ine village - visited later on in this clip - is famous for its roughly 230 wooden boathouses (funaya), lined up for five kilometers along Ine Bay. Some of them are up to 300 years old and are a designated Group of Historic Buildings, a category under Japan’s Historic Preservation Act.
It is also interesting to see the glass plaque at 8:10 commemorating the creation of the short-lived NHK drama "Eenyobo" (ええにょぼ), starring Toda Naho as a fresh Kobe medical school graduate. The series depicts her growth as a doctor, despite the differences between a long-distance couple (her husband played by Sakakibara Toshihiko) and the threat of divorce due to daughter-in-law and mother-in-law problems. Certainly, the decision to shoot in the Tango province was, and probably still is deemed unusual.
どうもありがとうございます, Kappa-san! :-)
Bela imagem
nice