Kyoto Day 3
Today was our final day in Kyoto, and we decided to visit two of it’s most famous sites: Fushimi Inari Shrine and Nijo Castle. I had been raving about my last visit to the shrine for years, and was very excited to share the experience with Lindsay. The shrine is immensely popular with the Japanese: It draws almost 3 million visitors over Japanese New Year’s, and has spawned over 30,000 ‘imitation’ shrines. It also inspired the ‘Gates’ exhibit by Christo and Jeanne-Claude in Central Park in 2005. The shrine is the head shrine of Inari, the patron of business, closely associated with rice, and pilgrims visit the site to pray for wealth. We arrived at the shrine early on Thursday morning, and were struck by the number of elderly Japanese visitors, climbing the 4km path on their own.


Gorgeous bamboo forests

Bamboo out of focus

Linds at the foot of the gates

The fox, or Kitsune in Japanese, are closely associated with Inari

Layers upon layers of gates
We took the train to Kyoto station, which is actually worth some photos in and of itself. It was designed by the Japanese architect Hara HIroshi, and completed in 1997.


We walked to the Higashi-Honganji temple, an enormous complex in the middle of Kyoto – the highlight (for us anyway), was some of the beautiful woodwork:



We headed to our final destination before departing Kyoto. Along the way, we passed this totally baffling and somewhat frightening public service poster. This country continues to fascinate us!

Nijo Castle was built in 1601 as the Imperial residence of the Tokugawa Shoguns (though various buildings have burnt down and been replaced in subsequent years). Nanomaro Palace, on the grounds, is built almost entirely of Hinoki Cypress, and is decorated with wall paintings by artists from the Hano School. The palace contained a series of rooms, with the innermost reserved for the most important guests (the lowly guests were relegated to the outermost rooms). Here are some highlights of the grounds (photographs weren’t allowed in the castle:





And with this final visit, we departed on the Shinkansen to Tokyo – off to Hong Kong!


































