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00:38 Nemoto, Kimitsu City
15:42 Kururi, Kimitsu City
16:08 Chiba prefectural road route 32 (Otaki-Kimitsu line)
25:05 Tsukizaki, Ichihara City
39:18 Yamakogawa, Ichihara City
48:57 Chonan Town
55:25 Kamimobara, Mobara City
1:01:18 Koshiate, Mobara City

About Kimitsu City
Kimitsu (君津市, Kimitsu-shi) is a city located in Chiba Prefecture, Japan.

About Kururi Castle
Kururi Castle (久留里城, Kururi-jō) is a Japanese castle located in Kimitsu, southern Chiba Prefecture, Japan. At the end of the Edo period, Kururi Castle was home to a branch of the Kuroda clan, daimyō of Kururi Domain. The castle was also known as Rain Castle (雨城, U-jō), after a legend that it rained twenty-one times during its construction, or, on average, once every three days.

About Ichihara City
Ichihara (市原市, Ichihara-shi) is a city located in Chiba Prefecture, Japan.

As of December 2015, the city has an estimated population of 275,776, and a population density of 749 persons per km2. The total area is 368.20 square kilometres (142.16 sq mi). The city is home, together with the city of Chiba, to the JEF United football club.

Ichihara is located in the western part of the Bōsō Peninsula, and geographically is the largest of Chiba Prefecture’s cities and towns. The highly industrialized northern part of the city sits on Tokyo Bay, while the southern part of the city is primarily mountainous. Ichihara, dense in housing developments, serves as a satellite town of Tokyo and Chiba City.

The area of modern Ichihara is the center of ancient Kazusa province. The ruins of the Nara period Kazusa kokubun-ji have been found within the borders of Ichihara, although the exact location of the Nara-period provincial capital remains uncertain. During the Sengoku period, the area was contested between the Chiba clan to the north, and the Satomi clan to the south. During the Edo period, the area was divided between Goi Domain, Tsurumaki Domain and large areas of tenryō territory controlled directly by the Tokugawa shogunate and administered by various hatamoto.

About Chonan Town
Chōnan (長南町, Chōnan-machi) is a town located in Chiba Prefecture, Japan.

As of April 2012, the town had a population of 8,774, and a population density of 134 persons per km2. The total area is 65.38 square kilometres (25.24 sq mi).

Located in the mountainous terrains that divides the Bōsō Peninsula, Chōnan has relatively little flat land. Like other municipalities in the region, the town maintains agricultural reservoirs. Several golf courses dot the landscape.

Chōnan is rich in archeological sites from the Jōmon period, Yayoi period, and Kofun period periods. Under the ritsuryō reforms of the Nara period the area of present-day Chōnan became part of Kazusa Province. Two Tendai Buddhist temples were established in this period, Kasamori-ji and Chōfuku-ji. At the end of the Heian period the area came under the control of the military leader Taira no Tadatsune, and his descendants continued their control of the area in the Kamakura period. In the 1456 the Takeda clan built Chōnan Castle as an extension of the larger Mariyatsu Castle. After the establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate Chōnan became a major distribution center of goods, most notably salt, passing through the Bōsō Peninsula.

The principal agricultural output of Chōnan is rice, and shiitake mushrooms and lotus root are cultivated in the town. There are also some small-scale dairy farms.

About Mobara Park
Mobara Park is a verdant park located in the heart of Mobara City. The 160,000-square-meter grounds provide idyllic refuge from the surrounding city, featuring flowers blooming year-round, beautifully landscaped paths, and a large pond at the center.
Mobara Park is easily accessible by foot or public transport.

From JR Mobara Station, it is a 20-minute walk to the park. Alternatively, if you feel like resting your feet, you can also take a bus bound for Kami-Mobara and get off at the Sogen-ji bus stop.

The park is especially pretty during the cherry blossom season, when its many cherry trees come alive with pink and white blossoms. The park is home to nearly 3,000 cherry trees and is considered one of Japan’s 100 best places to see them.

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