11 days in Japan - What not to miss ?

knagelli

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We will be visiting Japan in the month of April for 12D/11N ( 16 - 28) including the travel. Secured accommodation at Mercure Tokyo Hibiya and Mercure Kyoto Station.

Can the experts suggests what are some of the activities/attractions not to be missed. We want to catch the cherry blossom at Aomori , has someone did that in the past in April ? Also how bad is the queue at DisneySea as that is non-negotiable for my son who is 8. We also want to experience the tea ceremony , the samurai/sumo wresting events.

Have been reading a lot on forums and other avenues with loads of inputs which is making it difficult to decide.

Also is there value proposition is purchasing JR pass or are we good using the Suica card and topping it up as required.

Appreciate any inputs/suggestions/insights. Cheers/K
 
I was there for the very beginning of Cherry Blossom in 2023. I thought the Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden was mind blowing. There was a queue to get in, but it moved quickly. We went in the morning.

It's a vast garden blending Japanese, English, and French landscaping styles, with 1,000 cherry trees of various species. It’s a serene spot (aside from the thousands of people taking selfies next to Cherry Blossoms lol)
 
We just came back from 2-week family trip to Japan:

JR Pass: Unless you travel a lot of trips on Shinkansen, it is not worth it. Use SmartEx app to book Shinkansen on Tokaido route (Osaka-Kyoto-Nagoya-Tokyo line). Book the Nozomi trains for fastest travel. Also suggest that your luggage size overall dimension is 160cm or less. Any bigger then you need to reserve seats with luggage storage included.

Suica/Pasmo: It is good if you want convenience. We never used it though, we get all day pass for Tokyo Metro and Toei lines in Tokyo, or just pay for single trips if uneconomical, or I travel on JR line.

If you are a fan of Nintendo, Nintendo Museum just opened a few months ago at Kyoto. You need to book tickets early, and I think it is a draw as well. In fact, the draw for April entry tickets is on now.

Disneysea: We just went there on New Years Day. Needless to say, there were LOTS of people. It took us 1 hour to line up and get in (lined up from 8:30am - and got in at 9:30am). We downloaded the app earlier, linked the tickets to it, and ended up buying Disney Premier Access (DPA) for Peter Pan and Toy Story to skip lines. The DPA for Peter Pan allow us to go into Fantasy Springs area, as you cannot use standard park ticket to get into that area. Standby Pass (SP) was not available for us to get All Day on that day. Also, you cannot get DPA or SP until your tickets are already scanned at the park entrance for entry.



Depending on the number of days you are in the park, you may want to line up nice and early in the morning to secure rides and also get SP and/or DPA etc.
 
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Unfortunately you are too late for the best viewing in Tokyo. Also in Kyoto the peak for cherry blossoms is April 4th. Likely to be some left but not the best of displays. The 2025 cherry blossom forecast has been released. two articles.


We have been in Japan at the times you are there and the best spots were Kanazawa where the KenRokuen gardens are fabulous. In fact we have been there twice in mid April.
Another place was Mt. Fuji. We stayed at Kawaguchiko but out of town because too many rowdy tourists.
The other place we have been to twice in late April is Hirosaki castle outside Aomori.
The first time we went there it was late April and peak viewing. just Fabulous. The second time was last year mid April and not as good. we were a bit early.

So our cruise last year in April leaving Yokohama on April 10th. There was a separate cruise before we got to Yokohama and this page is from when we arrive in Yokohama the first time so has Kanazawa, Hirosaki castle and Kawaguchiko.

Now the one from 2016 but we started in late March. This page starts with us arriving in Kyoto. Some of the pictures appear to be missing but refreshing the page usually gets most back. but you can see that we are there in Peak blooming just over 2 weeks before you arrive there.
 
The fish market. Ticket by lottery. Early start followed by sushi breakfast.

Sumo if it's on when you're there. The most 'Japanese' thing you can do.
 
For sumo, the closest (time-wise) Grand Tournaments are March in Osaka, and May in Tokyo.
The Association has a small museum, details on their site linked above.
They also run Provincial Tours, but haven't advise 2025 dates yet - also on their helpful site.

JTB has a run-down of "sumo tourism".
 
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Unfortunately you are too late for the best viewing in Tokyo. Also in Kyoto the peak for cherry blossoms is April 4th. Likely to be some left but not the best of displays. The 2025 cherry blossom forecast has been released. two articles.
Can the experts suggests what are some of the activities/attractions not to be missed. We want to catch the cherry blossom at Aomori , has someone did that in the past in April ?
I've stopped trusting predictions more than 1month out. For example everything was super late in 2024 so much so that you would've caught it in tokyo at tailend of full bloom if your dates were in 2024 and they were 2-3 weeks later than the "predictions". I would schedule in a couple of flexible days early in case you're still in good timing for Cherry Blossom as you land.

Also how bad is the queue at DisneySea as that is non-negotiable for my son who is 8.
Can be extremely busy. But as with all lining up in Japan. Its generally quite orderly and once it starts moving, isn't too bad. If you are ok paying for the premium passes they're generally worth it for their time saved.

We also want to experience the tea ceremony , the samurai/sumo wresting events.
I dont think there's any sumo tournaments on in the time you're there. Samurai stuff you're probably best to visit a few museums.

Tea ceremony is cool to do but just keep in mind that your son might get bored. Its a very slow and methodical process. Also the tea they make you is extremely bitter so kids generally won't like it. (Also i hear its best to avoid it in kyoto despite kyoto being one of the better places for it because of how ridiculously overcrowded it is atm).

Have been reading a lot on forums and other avenues with loads of inputs which is making it difficult to decide.
Is your son into Pokemon? There's at least 4 Pokemon centre in Tokyo alone all worth visiting. Nintendo has a store in Shibuya (conveniently next to the Shibuya Pokemon centre).

Arcades are also interesting to check out although I'd keep in mind that the touristy areas are set to extremely hard mode.

Keep your expectations of Kyoto in check. It's a beautiful city however it is absolutely bonkers hard to get around now with how many tourists are there. Plan extra time to get to venues as well as time at each venue. I'm almost starting to drop Kyoto off my Japan travel list because of how crowded it is.


You're also in Japan on the opening week of the world expo in osaka so keep that in mind as there's going to be even more tourists than normal especially in that area.

Also is there value proposition is purchasing JR pass or are we good using the Suica card and topping it up as required.
Its much harder to justify JR pass now. Suica (or other IC transport cards) are fine. They're just like your normal transport cards here and topping them up is useful since you can pay all sorts of things with them. Keep in mind though i have started seeing more and more GPay , visa, Mc readers attached to ticket gates. They're operational in all Osaka area (probably for the expo) although there might only be one gate at smaller stations installed.

I see the equipment in Tokyo but doesn't seem to be operational yet last week. I'll see if Tokyo turnes them on as well in late March.

Try to follow the scripts of how things are done in Japan. The Japanese are very efficient when things are done right but can be a right pain if you go just a little off script.
 

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