2010年02月12日

Getting Into Hot Water

The Japanese fondness for being naked in hot water with complete strangers can take some getting used to for people from other cultures. The custom is at least partly due to the existence of numerous hot springs in these mountainous volcanic islands. Japan has 108 known volcanoes and one of the highest number of hot springs in the world. It can take a lot of courage the first time to take a bath with strangers, but once you start, it is a very hard habit to break. It feels so good to sink into the mineral-rich water and soak away the fatigue and stress of daily life.


Many true hot springs are located in the countryside and they often have an outdoor bath for bathers to enjoy the sights, sounds and fragrances of nature. Most hot spring baths are now indoors and separated by gender but there are still a few outdoor baths that are not segregated. The curative properties of the water differ depending on the mineral composition, but I often find that my skin feels much softer for several days after.


Natural hot springs are attractive tourist destinations in Japan and are usually surrounded by hotels and inns. The closest natural hot spring area in Takamatsu is Shionoe at the southern end of Takamatsu. The mineral water is actually heated up for the baths rather than coming hot out of the ground. Shionoe is located about 20 minutes by car past the airport on Route 193. There are also buses about once an hour. The hotels will allow you to use the bath for a fee and you can also eat in the restaurant and stay overnight.


For those of you who want to try a hot spring bath in Shionoe, I’ve introduced 3 below:

1.Gyoki no Yu (bath only, not a hotel): 430 yen (adult) 220 yen (children)
Bring your own towel, shampoo and hair dryer. Soap is provided.
Open 10:00 22:00 (closed 1st and 3rd Mondays).
TEL: 878-893-1126

2.Sanuki Onsen: 500 yen (adult) 300 yen (children)
Bring your own towel. Soap and shampoo are provided.
Open 9:00 21:00. Open year-round. TEL: 087-893-0300
(Accommodation: 5,400 yen to 6, 400 yen/person with breakfast only.13,000 yen/person with breakfast and supper)

3.Kabakawa Kanko Hotel: 820 yen (adult) 510 yen (children).
Towel, soap, shampoo and hair dryer are provided.
Open 10:30 21:00. Open year-round. TEL: 087-893-1200
(Accommodation: 6,000 yen/person without meals. 12,000 to 14,000 yen/person with breakfast and supper).

If Shionoe seems too far, you could try a public bath near you. Although not mineral hot springs, public baths (sento) still offer a wonderfully hot soak and some add mineral salts or herbs to the water.
* For instructions on how to use a Japanese bath or hot spring, check out these websites:
http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2292_how.html
http://gojapan.about.com/cs/livinginjapan/ht/ht_bath.htm


Getting Into Hot Water
(Gyoki no Yu)



My Profile
Cathy Hirano キャシー ヒラノ
I've lived in Japan since 1978. After graduating from a Japanese university with a BA in cultural anthropology in 1983, I worked as a translator in a Japanese consulting engineering firm in Tokyo for several years. My Japanese husband and I moved to Takamatsu in 1987 to raise our two children in a slower-paced environment away from the big city pressures. We've never regretted it. I work as a freelance translator and interpreter and am involved in a lot of community work, including volunteering for Second Hand, a local NGO that supports educational and vocational training initiatives in Cambodia, and for the Takamatsu International Association. I love living in Takamatsu.
同じカテゴリー(Exciting&Beauty Places)の記事画像
Castle on the Sea
Getting Into Hot Water
Ritsurin Garden–Another World
Ritsurin Garden Highlights
Happy New Year!
Busshozan Fall Festival cont'd
同じカテゴリー(Exciting&Beauty Places)の記事
 Castle on the Sea (2012-05-31 00:37)
 Getting Into Hot Water (2012-02-25 10:00)
 Ritsurin Garden–Another World (2012-02-20 10:00)
 Ritsurin Garden Highlights (2012-02-10 10:00)
 Happy New Year! (2012-01-10 10:00)
 Busshozan Fall Festival cont'd (2011-10-31 13:40)

この記事へのコメント
hello,

I found randomly your website while searching some info for hot spring in takamatsu area where I am staying tomorrow and leaving the day after tomorrow.

I would like to try one of the hot springs mentioned in the tourist guide, but cannot find information in english on how to get there from takamatsu main station or takamatsu airport.

hope you do not mind explaining this on your website or by mail ?
sorry for this simple question !

All the best,
Thank you for making your website,
Laeti,
a tourist from Belgium
December 4, 2012
Posted by laeti at 2012年12月04日 18:45
Sorry to be late!! You may have already left but if not, here are directions. If you are in Takamatsu, I recommend going to Busshozan onsen because it is closest to the city and it really has the nicest hot spring water of all the onsen in Kagawa. I give information and very simple directions in this blog post here
http://cathy.ashita-sanuki.jp/d2012-03.html

If you can afford a taxi, the simplest way to get there would be to print out the map at the bottom of the onsen website http://busshozan.com/
and take a taxi. But I would estimate it would cost you at least JPY3,000 from the main Takamatsu station. If you can't afford that, take the Kotoden train bound for Kotohira from Chikko station. Chikko station is across the street from the main JR Takamatsu station and just south of the Tamamo Castle Park entrance. Take the Kotohira line to Busshozan station (about 18 minutes, JPY310 oneway, 3 trains/hour). Please tell the train conductor you want to go to Busshozan because some trains do not go there. Busshozan onsen is about 12 minutes walk from Busshozan station. From the map, it looks like you turn left when you come out of the station and just keep walking down that street. You will see the onsen on your right after about 12 minutes. It's a very modern, minimalist style of architecture of wood and glass. You can see photos of it on the website. You should take your own towel. Or you can buy small ones there.
Address: 114-5 Ko Busshozan-cho, Takamatsu, Kagawa
Website: http://busshozan.com/ Go to the bottom of this site for a map (Japanese only).
I hope this helps. Please feel free to ask more questions if you have them.
Posted by cathy at 2012年12月04日 19:19
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