• Until 5/5 (Sun.)
• Free
• Tel.: 0942-47-1825
• Kurume Hyakunen Park, Kurume City
• http://www.kurume-hotomeki.jp/event/?mode=detail&id=400000000253#map
See Tulips from here at the dome.
How can that be?
See from here...lahUminonakamichi Flower Picnic – Free Entry Days
• 4/28 (Sun.), 5/4 (Sat.), 5 (Sun.) free entry
• Regular entry fees: Adult ï¿¥400, Child (Junior high/ES)ï¿¥80
• Uminonakamichi
• http://www.uminaka.go.jp/flowerpicnic/index.html
Following the recommendation, colorful tulips, muscari,
nemophila spread to one side and the many museums such as ★
Flower Picnic begins Narcissus 100 000 ball 40 species.
Please enjoy the harmony of soft pink cherry and white narcissus, yellow.
Sakura of about 2,000 is in full glory in cycling course along the park.
You can enjoy cycling in the beautiful cherry trees to be able to run on the bike cycling course.
Tulip colorful imaged on the surface of the water is one scene Featured Uminonakamichi.
Twice last year and 130 seed varieties as well!
It is a vast flower garden of 20,000 square meters 2 million. In addition to nemophila lazuline,
you can enjoy as well as California Dizzy from the end of April.
It is an annual plant of Hydrophyllaceae of North American origin.
Be able to see in the park in the kind of "in-Sig varnish Blue", it is called "Baby Blue Eyes" in English name from the lovely flower color, flower shape.
This is called "(grass from Ruri) Ruri arabesque" the Japanese name.
Make 50 million copies of spring flowers with a focus on nemophila, ground picture of flowers.
This time, I draw the parent and child of the whale. You can see the whole when you look from the Ferris wheel.
seen this before.
seen this before.
What about this unique Black?
Come to Japan.
Come to Japan.
This what we call Sea of Flowers.
FUKUOKA...see flower.
This is what we call sea of flower.
Not just coming into the dome and see that little flowers.
admission fee cut throat.
Take it easy in a natural park with flowers blooming throughout in all seasons
Take it easy in the great outdoors! At scenic Nokonoshima Island Park (a natural park at the northern tip of Nokonoshima Island, which seems to float in Hakata Bay), visitors can enjoy gorgeous flowers in bloom every season, from mustard and cherry blossoms, azaleas, and corn poppies in the spring to cosmea in the fall! In addition to the set menus at the park’s cafeteria, visitors can enjoy a “Hassle Free” outdoor barbeque or picnic on open expanses of grass.
*Main attractions: Flower garden, Hakata Memory Lane, mini-zoo, Nokonoko Ball (like croquet), cafeteria, gift shop, modern restrooms. Visitors can participate in a simple ceramic workshop (“Rakuyaki”) in which they can paint pictures on a plate or ash tray.
*Accessibility: Wheelchair ramp; wheelchair rental; wheelchair-accessible bathrooms; changing table; guide dogs permitted
Come see this...Sea of Flowers
from Japan.
A flower park surrounded by nature on all sides
This flower park lies surrounded by greenery at the foot of Mt. Fukuchi. Visitors will delight in seeing the flowers each season has to offer: cherry blossoms and poppies in the spring, hydrangea and lotus in the summer, and cosmos as well as the changing leaves in the fall! In addition, as the name of the area where the park is found (Yuribaru) would suggest, an abundant variety of lilies, or yuri, have been planted there, including several rare species like the bamboo lily (in bloom from late May to early June), which has been designated an endangered species. Besides flowers, there are open, grassy spaces and rest areas where visitors can take a blissful break while taking in the view! Every other week, events are held! Participate in a walking event! The perfect spot to relax and eat lunch on a weekend or holiday. For visitors with a green thumb, the gift shops in the park sell seedlings and potted plants, so pick one up on your way home and start a home garden!
Enjoy cycling amongst trees while breathing the sea air!
Visitors can enjoy a light bike ride in the breeze blowing through the green trees. In April, the cycling course is surrounded by beautiful cherry blossoms. There are a total of 1,100 adult, child, and tandem bicycles available for rent at the cycling centers at each entrance of the park. It takes about 30 minutes to round the course, which starts and finishes at each cycling center.
*Accessibility: Wheelchair-accessible bathrooms; wheelchair rental
*Discounts available for people with disabilities
Tours of the beer manufacturing plant is popular with foreign tourists!
The most charming part of this brewery surrounded by flowers throughout the year and seasons must be the tours of the manufacturing plant. Take a tour and get a close look at the raw materials for making beer and the vats that are used for fermenting. Staff will show and explain the entire beer manufacturing process in an easy to understand way. The tour provides many different attractions that don’t get old such as the exhibit of past popular posters and the environment corner where you can have fun learning about the natural environment. After the tour is over enjoy freshly brewed beer try other refreshing drinks. The location also has a restaurant and enough things to experience to fill a whole day.
Fukuoka is a treasure-trove of affordable seafood delights
Fresh seafood from the Sea of Genkai is so cheap and delicious! There are many izakayas (Japanese style pubs) across the city that offer tasty sashimi and sliced mackerel with sesame, sushi bars that offer fresh sushi which you may want to enjoy with shochu (distilled spirit) of Kyushu. Next to Fukuoka Central Fish Market is the Ichiba Kaikan where you can taste fresh sea-urchin rice bowl and seafood rice bowl at reasonable prices.
If you visit Fukuoka, be sure to try the yakitori!
Let’s enjoy great yakitori in Fukuoka!
If you visit Fukuoka, be sure to try the yakitori!
Among all those gourmet dishes you can find in Fukuoka, such as tonkotsu ramen, mizutaki and motsunabe, yakitori is an especially great recommendation.
Yakitori in Fukuoka comes in an amazing variety of ingredients. “Tori” originally means chicken, but pork, beef, vegetables and even seafood all make “yakitori.”
Pork back ribs are the most popular item. Tomato, cheese, quail egg, enoki mushroom and all kinds of other ingredients are enjoyed with bacon. There are also rarer items such as beef and pork tripe with green pepper, onion, ginkgo nut, corn and other vegetables, and seafood including shrimp, squid and scallop. Besides all these you can of course enjoy grilled chicken items such as torikawa (chicken skin), chicken breast fillet and tsukune (chicken mince ball).
Yakitori skewers are served one after another onto a plate full of fresh cabbage.
Yakitori goes really well with cabbage dipped in the original sauce of each restaurant.
Cabbage refill is free!*
* Not all restaurants
Many yakitori restaurants offer not only yakitori but also sashimi, and a variety of other a-la-cart dishes made from seasonal ingredients. Many restaurants also have a good collection of shochu and other alcohol drinks.
Let’s enjoy great yakitori in Fukuoka!
That why Old Cock Li wrong again his guessing,
Japan without migrants they still survived.
just one Golden week and the weak Yen.
See who is coming to Japan.
Video
The yen's sharp drop is transforming Japan's reputation as a prohibitively expensive place to visit, turbocharging the country's tourism industry long identified as a growth engine for the maturing economy.
The number of foreign visitors to Japan in March, the latest figure available, jumped 26.3% from a year earlier to 857,000, the highest for a March since 1964, when the Japan National Tourism Organization started taking statistics.
The weaker currency has helped Japan's tourism sector overcome a number of setbacks in the past two years. The 2011 nuclear accident scared away visitors worried about radiation. Heightened territorial tensions with Beijing have since last year led to a sharp drop in tourists from China, once the fastest-growing source of visitors to Japan. While Chinese travelers continue to shun Japan, visitors from the rest of Asia, Europe, and Russia have more than made up for the gap.