Explore near Wada-shuku Honjin: Where to Stay, Eat, and Visit
Wada-shuku Honjin Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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You can taste the good old roads.
Original Text
It is so full-fledged that it can be said to be the largest post town on Nakasendo. Some people can come here on foot. I wonder if there were many guests staying because I had to cross the steep mountains to the next shukuba town, and there is a appearance that it was prosperous.
This is used as a government office or agricultural cooperative, and it feels like it is restored and exhibits are placed, so the atmosphere of the former 々 building is thin. It feels like you can think of the previous appearance through the exhibits and photos at that time. It's the main camp, but it doesn't keep the appearance at that time, so it feels like an atmosphere. There are more Hatago traces to see, such as Kawachi and Daikokuya, than the main camp. Wada-juku has few existing buildings, but there is a Hatago architecture that remains in good condition, so I recommend it.
There are many existing equipment, and the tour with explanations was especially good. It was interesting that there was a 々 mechanism, and everything had meaning, and I realized that history is a reality that is continuous with the present.
It is an atmosphere like a time slip in the Edo period. There are old-fashioned houses around, and it is recommended to take a leisurely stroll. The soba shop opposite Wada juku Honjin is delicious ☆
Wada-juku was a large post town ahead of the difficult place Wada Pass. The main camp of the stone-roofed roof that remains today conveys its remnants well. It was destroyed by fire in 1861, and it was in an explanation version that was hurriedly rebuilt and explained in order to marry Kazumiya in the fall of the same year. It must have been a fuss at that time. You can enter the nearby 4 museums with a common ticket of 400 yen. Now I took a leisurely stroll around Wada Inn in the mountain village.
You can taste the good old roads.
It is so full-fledged that it can be said to be the largest post town on Nakasendo. Some people can come here on foot. I wonder if there were many guests staying because I had to cross the steep mountains to the next shukuba town, and there is a appearance that it was prosperous.
it's just an atmosphere.
This is used as a government office or agricultural cooperative, and it feels like it is restored and exhibits are placed, so the atmosphere of the former 々 building is thin. It feels like you can think of the previous appearance through the exhibits and photos at that time. It's the main camp, but it doesn't keep the appearance at that time, so it feels like an atmosphere. There are more Hatago traces to see, such as Kawachi and Daikokuya, than the main camp. Wada-juku has few existing buildings, but there is a Hatago architecture that remains in good condition, so I recommend it.
I feel like I've looked into history.
There are many existing equipment, and the tour with explanations was especially good. It was interesting that there was a 々 mechanism, and everything had meaning, and I realized that history is a reality that is continuous with the present.
I'm calm.
It is an atmosphere like a time slip in the Edo period. There are old-fashioned houses around, and it is recommended to take a leisurely stroll. The soba shop opposite Wada juku Honjin is delicious ☆
Base across Wada toge pass
Wada-juku was a large post town ahead of the difficult place Wada Pass. The main camp of the stone-roofed roof that remains today conveys its remnants well. It was destroyed by fire in 1861, and it was in an explanation version that was hurriedly rebuilt and explained in order to marry Kazumiya in the fall of the same year. It must have been a fuss at that time. You can enter the nearby 4 museums with a common ticket of 400 yen. Now I took a leisurely stroll around Wada Inn in the mountain village.