7 of Japan’s best winter activities

 

This is a time when the mountains rest under vast blankets of snow, when the trees stand stark against rich blue skies, and when your breath condenses into a cloud right in front of your eyes. Life doesn’t just go on in Japan in winter, it thrives. It’s a time for festivals and celebrations, a time for eating, drinking, shopping, exercising, and so much more. If you happen to find yourself in Japan in the colder months, it’s worth making the most of these seasonal activities.

 

1. Skiing

This is the winter activity that first pops to mind for many people when they think about Japan, and for good reason. The local ski industry is booming thanks to affordable lift tickets, beautiful scenery, and snow, glorious snow. If you love powder days, Japan is the place for you: we’re talking up to 14m of the white stuff falling every year at popular resorts, such as Niseko on the northern island of Hokkaido and Hakuba on the main island of Honshu. While those two locales are the best known to Australians, there are plenty of other mountains to discover here, all which offer great skiing, a friendly atmosphere, a unique snow culture, and much more.

 

2. Eating

The Japanese are obsessed with food, particularly fresh, seasonally-appropriate food, and winter is as good a time as any to enjoy nature’s bounty. One of the most prized winter foods in Japan is crab, and you’ll see it appearing on menus in plenty of forms – crab sushi, steamed crab, or even crab soup – as the colder months descend. Winter is also a time for nabe, the Japanese hotpot, which often features plenty of hearty root vegetables, tofu and meat. Pair it with a little hot sake and you have yourself the perfect winter warmer.

 

 

3. Hiking

If you’re not keen on skiing, no problem. There are other ways to explore the Japanese wilderness in winter. Hiking is a popular activity year-round, and you can choose to do it either in a snowy winter wonderland trekking, say, the Nakasendō Way through the mountains around the ski resort of Nagano, or on the volcanic southern island of Kyushu. Or perhaps somewhere a little warmer, like all the way south in the Japanese island chain of Okinawa. There, the trek through beautiful tropical forest up Mt Yonaha is not to be missed.

 

4. Festivals

Japan’s busy festival calendar really ramps up during the colder months, with plenty of celebrations, many out in the open air, to get people through winter. Probably the most famous of those is the Sapporo Snow Festival, a hugely impressive display of ice sculptures and snow statues that’s visited by more than two million people every year. But there are other festivities happening throughout the country: the old capital of Nara hosts several winter celebrations, including Wakakusa Yamayaki, where grass on the hillside of Mount Wakakusa is set alight, and the Omizutori festival, which features a series of traditional rituals to welcome spring. Nearby in Kyoto, meanwhile, young archers test their skills at the traditional Omato Taikai Festival.

 

     

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