In the Yamashiro area, visitors can experience agriculture, forestry, and fishing in the guest rooms of farmers’ homes. In addition to experiencing agriculture, forestry, and fishing, each guest house has its own special features, such as enjoying delicious homemade tea, original guest house cuisine, pottery making, green tea art, and tea incense dressing. These hands-on accommodations allow visitors to learn about the lives of the people of this region amidst beautiful nature and scenery.
There are both public and private courses in and around Uji City where you can experience a variety of tea-related activities, from tea picking to tasting, grinding stone mills, and making matcha and sencha green tea. Whether you want to learn about tea production methods, tea making, or the spirit and culture of tea, enjoy a tea experience unique to Uji City, the city of tea.
The Yamashiro region of Kyoto Prefecture, which boasts approximately 40% of the prefecture’s tea production, is famous for producing Uji tea, a premium brand of Japanese tea, and the valleys and hills in this region are covered with vast “tea fields.” The “tea fields of Ishidera” have been designated as Kyoto Prefecture’s scenic asset No. 1, and have also been recognized as a Japan Heritage site, and can be said to be the “original landscape of tea fields” that always appears in various tea discussions.
Because many families keep chickens in miyama, kashiwa no sukiyaki has been eaten at festivals, or any opportunity where people have congregated, since long ago. It is stewed with seasonal vegetables grown in Kyoto, like bamboo shoots and udo in spring, and matsutake mushrooms, kujo leeks and mizuna in autumn, as well as plenty of kashiwa chicken. Because most families in Kyoto keep chickens nowadays, it is a popular “hospitality” dish for welcoming guests.
Woodland Kyoto area is also famous for its autumn leaves and Kyoto vegetables. Among these, Fukuchiyama City is also famous for chestnut sweets. They are best eaten as autumn turns into winter. Chestnut sweets fills the shelves in the many Japanese and western sweet shops in the city. As well as Japanese sweets like chestnut yokan and baked chestnut kinton that fill the shelves of long-established Japanese confectionery shops, famous Parisian stores have opened stores in search of Kyoto’s chestnuts, making Kyoto a true treasure trove of chestnut sweets. Would some chestnut sweets go well with your autumn leaves stroll?
In recent years, “gibier cuisine” has continued to take hold in Japan. Gibier cuisine means eating meat from wild board, deer, and bird game. In Kyoto Prefecture, from long ago there was a custom of eating wild boar, and the botan nabe from the Miyami region, known as “Kabayuki no Sato,” is a famous winter tradition. Wild boar meat is characterized by its fattiness, being rich in collagen, and its beautiful appearance, all of which makes botan nabe a dish you will want to try.
The trolley car is a sightseeing train which runs the 7.3km from Trolley Saga Station to Kameoka Station in approximately 25 minutes. The course uses the old Sanin Line, passing through eight tunnels, allowing you to fully enjoy the majestic nature alongside the Hozu River valley. You can enjoy the changing scenery of the four seasons, and we in particular recommend the mountain cherry blossoms in the spring and the autumn leaves for nature sightseeing.
Said to have begun when the British royal family used it in Meiji 14 (1881,) you can enjoy the Hozu River cruise and have fun learning about the history and culture of those who lived alongside the river, while listening to the boat’s captain’s funny stories.
Miyama-cho is renowned for its surviving thatched-roof houses built between 220 (Edo period) and 150 (Meiji period) years ago. The town was selected as the ‘Best Tourism Village’ at the 24th UNWTO (United Nations World Tourism Organisation) General Assembly. The peaceful rural landscape and thatched roofs match each other to create a soothing scene.
At Mt. Oe, where the legends of Shuten Doji remain, you can see beautiful seas of clouds as autumn turns into winter. At the foot of Mt. Oe, due to the big temperature difference between night and day Yura river basin, it is said that fog readily forms, and the fog that builds up between the mountains looks like a sea of clouds, and so it is called the “sea of clouds.” You can see the sea of clouds in early morning from November to December. Situated at the eighth station on Mt. Oe, Onitake Inari Shrine is a famous spot for viewing the spectacular sea of clouds.