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11-Nights Japan Cherry Blossom Odyssey

Japan
11-Nights Japan Cherry Blossom Odyssey
Japan
Goway Travel
Vacation Offer ID 1620482
Reference this number when contacting our travel specialist.
Overview

Goway Travel

Japan's cherry blossom season is one of Asia's hottest travel tickets, with accommodation and tours usually booked months in advance. 2025 offers the rare chance to take this only-in-Japan experience on a 12-day first-class small-group tour. Spaces are limited, so take your chance to see the blossoms in full bloom while enjoying the best of Japan.

Arrive in Kyoto to see Japan's most famous temples and shrines framed with dazzling spring colour. Take a day trip to Hiroshima and Miyajima Island, where you'll visit the Itsukushima Shrine, renowned for its 'floating' torii gate. The rebirth of the blossoms takes on a particular poignancy at Peace Park and the Atomic Bomb Dome in the centre of Hiroshima.

Your stay in Kyoto also includes visits to Kinkaku-ji, the Golden Pavilion, Arashiyama, best known for its evocative bamboo grove, and Fushimi Inari Shrine, where thousands of orange torii gates form a circuit on the mountainside.

It would only be a trip to Japan with an onsen soak. Stay a night at Kaga Onsen, where you can bathe, relax, and reflect on your discoveries. Have another long bath in the morning before a late departure takes you to Kanazawa, one of Japan's prettiest towns. You'll explore Kanazawa Castle and the Higashi Chawa area, which is famous for its tea houses and geisha culture. Finally, visit Japan's megacity, Tokyo, for sightseeing and cultural discovery. Begin with a full day exploring the stunning Senso-ji Temple and its iconic five-story pagoda, the bustling Shibuya Crossing and viewing the beauty of cherry blossoms in Shinjuku Gyoen Park.

The following day, head out of town to Hakone, a hot spring resort with stunning views of Lake Ashi and Mount Fuji. Another day in Tokyo invites you to explore at leisure. Enjoy a farewell dinner in neon-lit Shinjuku before you depart. 

Vacation Inclusions

  • English-speaking Tour Guide for full duration of trip
  • Meet and Greet on arrival at Osaka Airport
  • Airport bus arrival and departure transfers (unguided)
  • 4 nights first-class accommodations in Kyoto
  • 1 night first-class ryokan accommodations in Kaga Onsen
  • 2 nights first-class accommodations in Kanazawa
  • 4 nights first-class accommodations in Tokyo
  • Small group touring and experiences including:
    • Guided sightseeing in Kyoto including Kinkaku-ji (Golden Pavilion) and Tenryu-ji Zen temple
    • Guided sightseeing in Hiroshimai & Miyajima Island including Peace Memorial Park & Museum and tsukushima Shrine
    • Guided sightseeing in Kyoto including Fushimi Inari shrine and Gion area
    • Guided sightseeing in Kanazawa including Higashi Chaya district
    • Guided sightseeing in Kanazawa including Kenrokuen Garden and Nagamachi Samurai District
    • Guided sightseeing in Tokyo including Senso-ji temple, Shibuya crossing and Shinjuku
    • Guided sightseeing in Hakone including boat ride across Lake Ashinoko and gondola ride
  • Welcome Dinner in Kyoto
  • Traditional Japanese tea ceremony in Kanazawa
  • Temarizushi making experience in Kanazawa
  • Japanese kaiseki style dinner in Kaga Onsen
  • Farewell Dinner in Tokyo
  • All entrance fees for sightseeing visited
  • Transportation by Motorcoach, Bullet train, Limited express train and Tokyo public transportation Luggage transfers on Day 5
  • Breakfast daily (excluding day 1), 8 Lunches, 3 Dinners

Featured Destinations

Kaga
Kyoto

Kyoto

If you can visit only one city in Japan, Kyoto is the one. This ancient city, 30 mi/50 km northeast of Osaka, was the capital of Japan for more than 1,000 years and still is considered the country's spiritual capital. Thousands of shrines and temples dot the city, including more than a dozen on the UNESCO World Heritage list. That list is far from all-inclusive, and many excellent places that might be the star attractions of other cities crowd the streets of Kyoto. It is a center of Japanese Zen and has several huge monastery complexes where serious students still sit in meditation.

Kyoto is also the nation's capital of traditional arts. Whether your interest be in pottery, textiles, dance, the tea ceremony or any of the other innumerable arts, Kyoto has excellent galleries, museums, shops and tea houses. Japanese people from the countryside and foreign students flock there to learn under the great masters. Much of what is considered Japanese haute cuisine was developed there too, as an offshoot of the tea ceremony.

Kyoto is Japan's heartland of history. With 1,300 years of tumultuous existence, the city's past intrudes upon the present day as in few other Japanese cities. In Gion, you can spot a geisha (or geiko, as they are called in Kyoto), one of the last hundred or so in Japan, slipping down a side-street to entertain rich guests with witty conversation, dance or music. A shopping arcade may suddenly fill with discordant clanging music as a shrine festival passes among the shoppers, or you may hear the long chant as Zen monks pass through the neighborhood, calling for alms.

Kyoto is an understated city that might disappoint visitors at first (at first glance, it is a large city with modern buildings that might not align with one's original perception); its charm lies in small details, pocket gardens, tiny traditional restaurants and refined artwork.

Destination Guide
Tokyo

Tokyo

Tokyo, Japan, presents a different view at every turn. It's one of the world's main economic centers and its most populous agglomeration. The business of Tokyo is business, but you can still find harmony and small-scale gardens on back streets. Around the corner from neon and concrete, you may find the bonsai-lined courtyard of a traditional inn.

Tokyo was nearly destroyed by bombs and fires during World War II, and by earthquakes at other times, but it has always rebuilt itself. As a result, there is little left of Old Japan in the city, but there's plenty of New Japan to take its place.

The streets are a confusing maze, so a map is essential. The transit system is excellent, however, and there are kobans (police boxes) throughout the metropolis, as well as a populace generally willing to answer questions.

Visitors to Tokyo represent both business and leisure travelers. And despite its past reputation, Tokyo is no longer fearsomely expensive. It's relatively easy to visit Tokyo on a budget.

Destination Guide
Kanazawa

Kanazawa

Kanazawa's importance grew in the 15th century, when the powerful and militant Ikko sect established its new headquarters there after being chased out of Kyoto by the monks of Mt.Hiei. During the Edo Period, Kanazawa was the seat of the Maeda clan, the second most powerful clan after the Tokugawa in terms of rice production and fief size. Accordingly, Kanazawa grew to become a town of great cultural achievements, rivaling Kyoto and Edo (Tokyo). In World War Two, Kanazawa was Japan's second largest city (after Kyoto) to escape destruction by air raids. Consequently, parts of the old castle town, such as samurai, temple and pleasure districts, have survived in pretty good condition. Kanazawa is capital of Ishikawa Prefecture, a prefecture along the Sea of Japan.
Destination Guide

View Full Itinerary

Valid Date Ranges

March 2025
03/25/2025 12/31/2025 $8,650 per person
Standard Terms & Conditions apply when purchasing this trip. Special savings cannot be combined with any other offer and the amount is subject to currency exchange rates at the time of booking. Airfares rates may increase or decrease please ask your Goway Destination Specialist at the time of booking. All prices are per person and quoted in U.S. dollars. Single supplements may apply. Blackout dates/seasonal supplements may apply. Accommodations, inclusions and itineraries are subject to change based on specific departure dates. From pricing is based on the lowest seasonal pricing for this tour, and rates may vary by date of departure. Please inquire about details of your preferred travel dates. Please inquire for a list of included and excluded exclusions.

All fares are quoted in US Dollars.