UNESCO World Heritage Kumano Kodo pilgrimage routes date back to the beginning of written history in Japan. We spent three days exploring the heart of this sacred site and stayed two nights in the Yunomine onsen town. Our trip was from 25th to 27th of September 2019.
If you have seen my previous vlogs from Koyasan and Yoshino, then you should have heard already me talking about UNESCO World Heritage site called Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range. In this vlog from Kumano Kodo we will go even deeper into mountains and continue exploring further the same heritage site. The place is extremely large, so even during our three days trip we will be able to cover only one more small part of it. Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range is a collective nomination and consists of over 200 separate elements of different types scattered around Kii Peninsula. It is a very old pilgrimage route network with over 1200 years of documented history. For centuries pilgrims of different social classes from around Kansai area and even further away used those routes to visit three Grand Shrines: Kumano Hongu Taisha, Kumano Nachi Taisha and Kumano Hayatama Taisha, which all together are called Kumano Sanzan. The area is full of beautiful natural scenery and just hiking in those sacred mountains is itself a spiritual experience.
On this trip we will be travelling into the main part of Kumano Kodo, namely the area around Kumano Hongu Taisha. We will leave early in the morning, and it will take us five hours to get there from Kyoto. On our first day you will see us visiting Kumano Hongu Heritage Center, exploring Kumano Hongu Taisha and the biggest in the world torii gate located at Oyunohara sandbank and then hiking Dainichi-goe to Yunomine onsen, where we are going to stay the night. It is very famous onsen town, because it has the oldest onsen in Japan, Tsubo-yu Bath House. You can use the following timestamps to jump directly to the part you are interested in:
0:00 Introduction
2:17 From Kyoto to Osaka
4:21 From Osaka to Kii-Tanabe
7:10 From Kii-Tanabe to Kumano Hongu Area
10:39 We have arrived at Kumano
13:29 Kumano Hongu Heritage Center
19:17 Kumano Hongu Taisha
23:45 Getting the first stamp
26:41 Buying an amulet
28:43 Oyunohara Big Torii Gate
30:55 Getting the second stamp
32:40 Hiking Dainichi-goe
43:36 Getting the stamp at Yunomine-Oji
45:17 Yunomine onsen
46:18 At our hotel
When shooting and editing those vlogs my intention is to show the whole trip from the start to the end without skipping anything so that the viewers could feel like they are together with us on the trip. My idea is that instead of cutting the part where nothing seems to happen, like for example transfers between locations in public transport, I should better try to find a way to make them more entertaining and informative, for example by adding something new. I think that such approach helps to protect the unity of the storyline and makes it easier to empathize with the story. We hope that by watching our travel vlogs you will be able to get some taste of the exceptional beauty of Japan!
Thank you very much for watching!
You can find me also on:
Website:
Instagram:
Twitter:
Music by Epidemic Sound, My personal referral link:
Gear used:
Canon EOS 5D Mark IV
Canon EF 16-35 f/4L IS USM
Sigma 35mm F1.4 DG Art
Zhiyun Crane 2 gimbal
Sirui W-2204 tripod with Sirui K-30X ball head
Canon TC-80N3 Timer Remote Controller
Joby GorillaPod 5K
RØDE Stereo VideoMic X
RØDE VideoMic Pro+
ZOOM H1 Handy Recorder
Hoya ProND8 neutral-density filter
DJI Mavic 2 Pro
Polarpro ND filters
Lowepro Whistler BP 450 AW backpack
Samsung Galaxy Note 8
For the most part the video is shot in Full HD with C-Log. Only some clips from the main camera were shot in 4K for the ability to zoom in. Drone footage was shot in 4K with D-Log. There are also some clips which were shot with a phone. For editing I have used the following Adobe software: Premiere Pro, After Effects, Illustrator, Photoshop, Lightroom and Audition. The timelapses were made in LRTimelapse 5.
AloJapan.com