Explore near Kusabira Shrine: Where to Stay, Eat, and Visit
Kusabira Shrine Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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4 Reviews
Rei M
a mushroom shrine that is rare in the whole country.
Original Text
Write it as a fungus and read it as a kusabira. It is a shrine that cannot be avoided for those who are fascinated by mushrooms. I knew that there was such a rare shrine. It was a nice shrine. It's in a residential area, but the former 々 was a little more relaxed in the approach and its vicinity. A small pine tree was planted on the approach that stretched straight from the small torii gate, and it was a nice road. The precincts are also calm and calm. Cultivate shiitake mushrooms behind the scenes ...
It is a shrine dedicated to mushrooms. It is managed by Isasa Shrine in Kusatsu City. On weekdays, there were few visitors and I was able to take a quiet walk.
Until the Meiji era, it was called Kusahirasha, but it is said that when Takeda Ori-no-Mikoto planted a wet nurse's rice field around 637, mushrooms grew overnight.
a mushroom shrine that is rare in the whole country.
Write it as a fungus and read it as a kusabira. It is a shrine that cannot be avoided for those who are fascinated by mushrooms. I knew that there was such a rare shrine. It was a nice shrine. It's in a residential area, but the former 々 was a little more relaxed in the approach and its vicinity. A small pine tree was planted on the approach that stretched straight from the small torii gate, and it was a nice road. The precincts are also calm and calm. Cultivate shiitake mushrooms behind the scenes ...
A moist and calm shrine
It is a shrine dedicated to mushrooms. It is managed by Isasa Shrine in Kusatsu City. On weekdays, there were few visitors and I was able to take a quiet walk.
A shrine dedicated to mushrooms
It is a rare shrine nationwide that enshrines mushrooms, about 15 minutes walk from Ritto Station. Jaco no Nare sushi is served every May.
It is read as wedge shrine.
Until the Meiji era, it was called Kusahirasha, but it is said that when Takeda Ori-no-Mikoto planted a wet nurse's rice field around 637, mushrooms grew overnight.