Jinya Koji Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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Local chestnut diameter
Original Text
There is an entrance next to the restaurant Umbrella Floor, and if you go there, you will reach the back of the Takai Kozan Memorial Hall. It's about the promenade, but it's locally called chestnut diameter. The narrow road hardened with concrete is not particularly emotional. Where was the chestnut thinning wood? It's like that.
There is no sense of scale, but I think it's okay to incorporate it in the middle of walking around the town of small Obuse town. It's not easy with the naked eye, but if you think about the angle in the photo, it will create an atmosphere. It is convenient to get the "Obuse MAP" placed at the information center of the station, shops, museums, etc.
A path with attractive clay walls and stone shrines
Original Text
Alley along the site of Jinya (Daikansho) in the Edo period. The entrance is difficult to understand, but the alley next to the crepe shop is sandwiched between clay walls on both sides, and there is a stone shrine along the way. It is difficult to understand the alley across the parking lot of Takefudo on the way, but if you go deeper, you can see a wonderful chestnut field. I was deeply moved to think that this was the comfort of Shinshu's politics during the Edo period.
It is made of maps that you can get from Obuse. However, it is a little unpleasant to expect something like a small diameter of chestnuts. The walls along Jinya feel good, but the other is a green fence, so I can't help feeling sorry.
This seems to be after the old daikansho in Edo, but it had a taste. The road is narrow. There is a stone shrine and I think it is historically valuable.
Local chestnut diameter
There is an entrance next to the restaurant Umbrella Floor, and if you go there, you will reach the back of the Takai Kozan Memorial Hall. It's about the promenade, but it's locally called chestnut diameter. The narrow road hardened with concrete is not particularly emotional. Where was the chestnut thinning wood? It's like that.
A really small path.
There is no sense of scale, but I think it's okay to incorporate it in the middle of walking around the town of small Obuse town. It's not easy with the naked eye, but if you think about the angle in the photo, it will create an atmosphere. It is convenient to get the "Obuse MAP" placed at the information center of the station, shops, museums, etc.
A path with attractive clay walls and stone shrines
Alley along the site of Jinya (Daikansho) in the Edo period. The entrance is difficult to understand, but the alley next to the crepe shop is sandwiched between clay walls on both sides, and there is a stone shrine along the way. It is difficult to understand the alley across the parking lot of Takefudo on the way, but if you go deeper, you can see a wonderful chestnut field. I was deeply moved to think that this was the comfort of Shinshu's politics during the Edo period.
Just a small chestnut diameter.
It is made of maps that you can get from Obuse. However, it is a little unpleasant to expect something like a small diameter of chestnuts. The walls along Jinya feel good, but the other is a green fence, so I can't help feeling sorry.
It has a taste.
This seems to be after the old daikansho in Edo, but it had a taste. The road is narrow. There is a stone shrine and I think it is historically valuable.