Japan's oldest shrine, "Izumo-taisha" Video to improve your luck!

‪@japansolotravel2022‬
#japantravel #japantrip #japan #kyoto #tokyo #trip #izumo #vlog #visitjapan #solo #food traveljapan
January 2023
I visited Izumo Taisha Shrine in Izumo City, Shimane Prefecture, Japan.
It is the oldest shrine in Japan and famous for the largest shimenawa in Japan.
I also ate many delicious Izumo foods.
This video will do you some good!
00:00 opening
01:45 Izumo-taisha
14:00 Goen-street
15:12 100% buckwheat flour "Sunaya"
19:25 Japan Zenzai Society
22:45 ending
Izumo-taisha : izumooyashiro.or.jp/
Goen-yokocho : www.goenyokocho.com/
Sunaya : www.sunaya-izumosoba.com/
Izumo-Zenzai : www.1031-zenzai.com/
This is a travel vlog sent by a single woman.
It introduces famous places, historic sites, gardens, gourmet food, transportation, history, scenery, etc. in Japan.
city walking / food / hotel / train / bus / ferry / car / drive

Пікірлер: 27

  • @mikemashburn155
    @mikemashburn155 Жыл бұрын

    Lovely shrine and City, interesting food, and great videography. Love this follow-up to the sleeper train video.

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching & commenting! Your supportive comments make me very happy. The Izumo City in the video is a place where the legends of the Gods of Japan's founding are still very strong. It is very mysterious and historically interesting, and the atmosphere and scenery complement it. I hope you will come to Japan!

  • @KimetsuNoYaiba1911
    @KimetsuNoYaiba19119 ай бұрын

    thank you for sharing..view ,travelling experience with us . love from malaysia..i love japan

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    9 ай бұрын

    Hello! Thank you for watching and commenting. I'm happy to receive comments from Malaysians. Please come visit my channel again!

  • @Polar-xj1tv
    @Polar-xj1tv Жыл бұрын

    This was nice, thank you for sharing your travelingexperiense with us, Love from Norway.

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching & commenting! I am glad to receive your loving message from Norway. I think Norway is a wonderful country with great landscapes. I hope you'll come back to visit my channel again!

  • @waynewilliams3168
    @waynewilliams3168 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your beautiful video. It was very informative and the food looked very delicious. I hope you continue to make more videos and that your channel continues to grow and be more popular. I very much hope to return to Japan one day to visit again.

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad you watched this video too! Izumo Taisha is a wonderful spot with a mysterious charm. You can eat traditional food around the area. Try taking the sleeper express train from Tokyo to Izumo. It will be a wonderful experience. We look forward to welcoming you to Japan!

  • @amaneko001
    @amaneko001 Жыл бұрын

    出雲いつか行ってみたいです😄 ご飯もとても美味しそうでした😋✨

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    Жыл бұрын

    ご視聴&コメントを頂きありがとうございました😊 もし遠方からの移動になるようでしたら、是非寝台特急サンライズ出雲をご利用になってみてください。 一つ前の動画で紹介しております😀 楽しく胸が高まる旅が保証されると思います👌(私見ですが笑)

  • @themartysama
    @themartysama Жыл бұрын

    don't worry you are wish will get fulfill this year, i coming to japan this year 😜🤪🤣😂

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching & commenting! I appreciate your kind words.😊 I pray that your wish will come true too. So you are coming to Japan! I wish you a wonderful trip.👍

  • @alexnippon8301
    @alexnippon8301 Жыл бұрын

    MANY THANKS FOR THIS BEAUTIFUL VIDEO!!!! AND ALL YOURS VIDEOS!!!!! THEY ARE VERY USUFUL FOR ME ALEX WHO LIVE IN SYDNEY AUSTRALIA AND MY NEXT TRIP TO JAPAN WILL BE NUMBER 17th!!!!!!✌👺🚅

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    Жыл бұрын

    Alex! Thanks for watching & commenting! Your supportive comments make me very happy. Thanks for the loving words from Sydney. I will continue to introduce Japanese sights and rides, so please come back and visit my channel.

  • @ymi899
    @ymi899 Жыл бұрын

    英語は分かりませんが…🤣 なんとなく読みながら流れを見て頷いています♪😊 薬味を人差し指で落とすところ 大好きでーす✨😉💕

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    Жыл бұрын

    yuⓂさん!こんばんは(^_^)/ 早速観て頂いてありがとうございます! これの日本版を鋭意作成中です。 薬味の落とし方(^^♪ついつい育ちが出てしまってますよね爆 自分では気が付きませんでした(*‘∀‘) 出雲そば食べましたか? この割り子蕎麦の汁がとっても美味しくてハマりました。 きっと旅館で頂いたかな?

  • @ymi899

    @ymi899

    Жыл бұрын

    @@japansolotravel2022 こんばんは🌙 ウケる🤣気づいてなかったとは…笑笑 だって…薬味の器をポンポンって叩いてそのあと人差し指だから〜 私は1人で爆笑でした🤣 出雲そばは食べましたよ〜👍 八雲と言うお蕎麦屋さんに行きました 砂場さんはランチ時間並んでいたと思います♪ 日本語版を再度見たいと思います😆 あの場面をまた…❣️

  • @50vlog

    @50vlog

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ymi899 私、考えたらいつも薬味を指で落としてたかも爆 無意識なので許してくださーい(*´ω`*) もみじおろしは箸なのは指が汚れちゃうからですね! 自分でもその差がよくわからないですね、よくかんがえると笑 別バーションは明日アップしますので、また是非コメントしてください( ^ω^ ) 砂屋さんはかなりお勧めのお蕎麦屋さんでした♪

  • @hansu-nihon
    @hansu-nihon Жыл бұрын

    Jinja sugoi! 😃Arigatou gozaimashita!🙇‍♂

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching & commenting! I'm not a ninja, I'm a kunoichi 😆. I hope you'll come back and visit my channel!

  • @hansu-nihon

    @hansu-nihon

    Жыл бұрын

    @@japansolotravel2022 I mean Jinja = Shrine not Ninja😂😉 I learn Japanese language, but I can't write in Japanese writing very well yet. Gomen nasai!🙇‍♂ But I like you as kunoichi🤗

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    Жыл бұрын

    Ah! I'm so sorry! I misread that lol. It says "shrine", you are correct. This next video will show you the highest ranked shrine in Japan. Please come back and visit my channel!

  • @brianchar-bow3273
    @brianchar-bow32739 ай бұрын

    The country name word "NIPPON”(Japan) means "the land under the sun" , but another name is "YAMATO(WA)” , meaning “Peacefully Harmony among People and Nature”.  So Japan's name means “the Land under the Sun” and” the Land of "Great Harmony of People and Nature,” The history of Japan is very old, about 2,000 years since the Emperor's reign, but humans began to live in villages and communities in this island nation about 14,000 years ago, during “the JOMON pottery” culture. (That's 30,000 years ago, if you count the Neolithic period.) Surrounded by the sea on all four sides, geographically isolated from Eurasia continent in the Pacific Ocean this island nation has a warm and humid climate and is blessed with abundant clear water resources, a variety of plants, and fishery resources. Since ancient times, people have lived peacefully with nature. They have respected harmony, lived peacefully in groups, and overcome many severe natural disasters such as volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, and typhoons, with each other in groups based on their wisdom and have enjoyed the blessings of nature by cooperating. The name of the ancient Japanese nation of "YAMATO" or "WA" reflects the wishes and realities of the people to live and to survive in this natural environment of the island nation that differs from that of the Eurasia continent.

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    9 ай бұрын

    Hello! Thank you for watching & commenting. We appreciate your in-depth explanation of the origins and history of Japan.

  • @brianchar-bow3273

    @brianchar-bow3273

    9 ай бұрын

    @@japansolotravel2022 Thanks for your reply. The reason why the spirit of harmony has been inherited in the island nation of Japan since ancient times is because the living environment on the islands was a harsh natural environment for individuals to live freely. In an age without scientific knowledge and technology like today, it was impossible to recover from natural disasters and maintain a peaceful daily life without the cooperation of a group of people who had to suppress their individual selfishness in order to survive peacefully in this environment. In order to avoid death and maintain the tribe, they chose to live collectively. And to live collectively, we needed harmony with others. This interdependence required a spirit of give-and-take equality and discipline in order to maintain relationships. This was the starting point from which Japan's unique culture of "wa" harmony, in which people avoid conflict and respect each other, was born. Once this point is taken care of, the island nation of Japan was a heavenly environment blessed with mellow water and food suitable for human habitation, and it is this natural environment that has allowed people to settle on the island for 30,000 years. However, light and shadow, heaven and hell, coexisted in this mellow island nation. This is where the unique culture of Japan, an island nation different from the continental Asian culture based on aridity and stable plains, was born. Therefore, foreigners who come Japan to visit should always be aware that you are stepping into a dangerous island, and should realize that it is very dangerous to stay idle in Japan with your own sense of upbringing. They are not behaving maturely and politely by nature because they like to, because that is a necessary condition for survival in this island environment. There is a definite reason and cause for every human behavior.

  • @japansolotravel2022

    @japansolotravel2022

    9 ай бұрын

    Hello. Thank you very much for your reply. I was deeply convinced by your story as I read it. You have a deeper understanding of Japanese characteristics than the average Japanese. It is really as you said. As you explained, even I, as a Japanese, think that the characteristics of Japanese people are both extremes of light and shadow. I think it is alarming that the thinking from the period of isolation still remains at the DNA level, especially that the ethnicity is still strongly influenced even after 80 years since the end of the war. Unlike the meaning of the word itself, "wa" is an ostensible meaning, and its real meaning is a strong check against the surroundings. Harmony" means "I am doing this, so you should do the same. It would be nice if it meant, "Please share good things," but in many cases it is the opposite: sharing. It is only in the Japanese that the idea of "be pure and poor" is respected. Until 30 years ago, when Japanese companies were well known around the world, Japanese "wa" was a good thing, but now it is having a negative impact on the world. Especially with the disasters of the past three years, it is having an accelerating negative impact. However, many Japanese are unaware of this crisis. It is unfortunate.

  • @brianchar-bow3273

    @brianchar-bow3273

    9 ай бұрын

    @@japansolotravel2022 Thank you. Don't be so pessimistic. The light and shadow of Japan is simply that people have lived in a land where the natural environment of the island nation of Japan has a duality of light and shadow. It means that while the environment is suitable for humans, plants, and animals to thrive, on the other hand, people have lived in a land where severe natural disasters such as typhoons, volcanic activity and earthquakes, and wind and flood damage occur regularly due to its location. It is precisely because the environment is both heaven and hell that the Japanese people living there, even in an age without scientific knowledge, have been able to use their wisdom and ingenuity to create various disaster countermeasures, technologies, and organizations. This is the origin of Japanese culture, which is common to these days. And people from other countries who live in places where there is no need to do so environmentally have not learned to think this. I believe that the experience of being trained for 30,000 years in the harshness of the environment is the traditional treasure and property of the Japanese people. And I believe that Japanese have developed a way of building relationships and avoiding conflict that is different from the way people from other countries on the continent think. Japanese people dislike individual selfishness, respect harmony, and prioritize "mutual help" over individual selfishness. This is because the restoration of the current situation after a catastrophe caused by the fury of nature cannot be completed by an individual even if it takes a lifetime to repair the damage, but if all the residents work together, a quick recovery can be achieved in a few years. If you want to recover from a disaster as quickly as possible, it is better to suppress individual ego and work together for restoration first, because the sooner you can recover, the better it will be for everyone. This is a very rational, efficiency-oriented, and intelligent way of thinking about collective action. In addition, the abundance of nature in the past must have enriched the spirit of the people who lived there. Many old photos from the late Edo period show people smiling despite their poverty. Japanese totalitarianism is not the same as Western totalitarianism or continental Asian totalitarianism, nor is it the same as Western individualism, which is a collectivism based on mutual cooperation among individuals. What I find very interesting is that Japanese people act as a whole only in public places where many people gather, and in private places they celebrate individual freedom. In public, they do not bother others, they do not bother each other, they take the form of conforming to the will of the many, and they mutually avoid bothering others. However, once in their own homes or in their own sphere of work, they do not interfere with others and maintain their own free spheres of life. This relationship between people's views on human relations has not changed much since the Edo period . I believe this is why various cultures, arts, and technological developments blossomed in each period of Japan's past.  This is a hybrid way of life, which can be called Japanese-style "collectivism based on individualism," another way of thinking that is neither Western individualism nor totalitarianism. In the 21st century, the clash of individual and national egos around the world has not disappeared, but rather has escalated to the point of ruin. I believe that the Japanese hybridism, "rational and mutually beneficial collectivism to make the most of the individual," which has been inherited since ancient times and was born from the harsh natural environment of this island nation, is a hint of the way of thinking that is needed in today's world. I believe that this is a hint of the way of thinking necessary for the future of mankind. In this sense, I do not want Japan's ancient traditions and wisdom to be crushed as something from the ancient past, and I do not want them to be destroyed.

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