Mount Yoshino

Mountain range · Yoshino

Mount Yoshino

Mountain range · Yoshino

1

Yoshinoyama, Yoshino, Yoshino District, Nara 639-3115, Japan

Photos

Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null
Mount Yoshino by null

Highlights

UNESCO World Heritage site with thousands of cherry trees, ancient temples and pilgrimage routes.  

Featured in Eater
Placeholder

Yoshinoyama, Yoshino, Yoshino District, Nara 639-3115, Japan Get directions

Information

Static Map

Yoshinoyama, Yoshino, Yoshino District, Nara 639-3115, Japan Get directions

+81 746 32 1007

Features

Last updated

Mar 4, 2025

Powered By

You might also like

Terms of Use • Privacy Policy • Cookie Policy
 © 2025 Postcard Technologies, Inc.
@eater

How an Expert Rice Miller Perfects Japanese Rice for NYC Restaurants - Eater

"Yoshino is renowned both in Japan and America, they were looking for a blend with a particular stickiness. So we came up with the perfect blend for the sushi at Yoshino." - Avery Dalal

https://www.eater.com/23103482/expert-rice-miller-japanese-nyc-restaurants
View Postcard for Mount Yoshino

Tong Yi Tsui

Google
The most stunning view of the cherry blossom season. Take two buses from the Yoshino Station all the way to the top, and then hike down the nearly straight path.

Veerada T

Google
Must be so extremely beautiful with the cherry blossoms next month. I didn’t regret visiting Mount Yoshino on 21.03.2024 despite no cherry blossoms yet.. Highly recommend “blue symphony train”on the way back.. totally worth the experience.

Rohit Khatiwada

Google
The cherry blossom views are worth the struggle through the crowd. A decent 2 hours uphill hike to the highest observatory was worth.

Lily

Google
Less than what I expected. It must be good in cherry blossoms. Recommend to take roll-way and bus up, then walk down. Bus runs hourly. No bus at noon for two hours. Rec: Get to the bus stop before 11:30 am.

selly zhen

Google
Must visit place during cherry blossom season. Its a 2 hour leisure walk, and you can hike to the top to see senbonzakura. The road is full with small traditional stores, it felt like being transported to Ghibli world. Not much tourist, so you can enjoy the scenery to the fullest. It is recommended to come here after you visit Nara Park

Alexandra Ross

Google
So I went today, April 9, 2024. The trees are in full bloom and absolutely stunning! My pics are from two spots: the Hanayagura observation deck and the Yoshimizu shrine. To get to the first, you walk uphill, but it’s quieter. Easy to take as many epic shots as you want. The latter is easy to access (downhill from the shuttle station), but much more crowded. Amazing pics, though! Try to get there early— maybe 9:30 am.

Jan Vuu

Google
Apr 10 still blooming! Used 1 day Kintetsu railway pass. The train was packed around 9AM and I stood the entire journey there (from Kyoto Station). Got to Yoshino station around 11AM. Right when you get off the staff will direct you to the hiking path/bus line/ropeway to get to the viewpoint. I took the ¥450 bus (they came one after another) then another 30min uphill walk for the viewpoint. Saw long lines for bathrooms along the way, some food stands, people having picnics. Most people are resting and eating at the viewpoint (and of course enjoying the view). The way down I walked through the main town (more restaurants) to the ¥450 ropeway. It took about 45min downhill walk to get there but it was much shorter a ride than the bus (3min vs 15min?). I suggest you take the bus up and walk the ramp side to the viewpoint then walk the stair side down to get both views

Meegan & Benji Valdez

Google
Literally SO beautiful to see cherry blossoms in full bloom!! 10/10 one of the best cherry blossom viewing experiences in Japan!!
google avatar

Christina N.

Yelp
A little hard to get to, but great view (if you come at the right season). Expect a hike since this is a national park, but the trail is beautiful. You can also catch the shuttle bus if you're lucky and got your timing right. We stayed here overnight at a small ryokan and started out early morning. There's a ropeway you can take but it doesnt take you very far so I probably wouldnt do that.
google avatar

Jeffery A.

Yelp
Japan: you are a tightness in my throat; a quiver in my lips; a wink of my eye; a freezing of my heart. Starting with the opening of Japan by the Convention of Kanagawa, Admiral Matthew Perry set Japan on a road to modernism, militarism, war, destruction, rebirth, industrialism, and monetarism...in short capitalism. In 2004, Unesco designated Yoshinoyama (Mount Yoshino, yama means mountain, useful? Class dismissed!) a world Heritage site, along with Koyasan, and Kumana, for their religious treasures and pilgrimage trails. Unesco (never doubt it!) is the modern version of Admiral Perry. Along with a Unesco seal of approval comes capitalism, it's just a more direct path. Any place Unesco touches instantly becomes a tourist attraction. Visitors flock to these destinations in droves and along with them comes the destruction of that sight which Unesco hoped to preserve. Gone are my days of wondering the majestic towering cedar and cypress trees of Koyasan. Where the mist of the morning dew lingers in the air like a Maiko's face, the rising sun her plump red lips. A time of quite contemplation under the maples, with their fiery autumn foliage in Miyajima. Where the baboons still roam the tip of that Hershey Kiss shaped island, freely baring their razor sharp teeth at frightened interlopers. The subtle beauty and craftsmanship of the Uji bridge, rebuilt every twenty years to coincide with the Shinto beliefs of death and renewal...the impermanence of all things. Yoshinoyama, the mountain of sakura, has been overrun. Still...I seek enlightenment. The rain came down. It washed the paved road a glistening onyx, and brought the moss covered stones to life. Hanami had started to pass on the lower Shimo-senbon. The sakura had thinned, and a gentle breeze was sending the snowflake shaped pink and white petals to the ground. Mount Yoshino is divided into four separate areas with 5-6 miles of steep uphill climb. The lower Shimo area and the upper Oku, with Naka and Kami-senbon (senbon means a "thousand" trees) in between. Yoshino is said to be planted with 30,000 sakura. According to elevation and time in April, one area will most likely be in full bloom. There are buses that can transport you from one area to the next, but if you are here, travel the way the pilgrims did, hike it. It will be worth the effort. Each senbon has it's on thriving arcade, where restaurants spot the area and souvenir shops hawk their wears. A place to grab a beer, meal, lite snack, or tour one of the ancient temples which mark each level. These areas are also the bus depots and are crawling. I am glad it was raining, for on a better day the crowds would have been thicker. Still, tourist (yes! I'm a tourist! But I have been coming to Japan for near twenty years!) are packed into the cable cars like cattle. If you are carrying your entire vacation in a backpack and not planning to stay the night, do yourself and others a favor and use the coin lockers available at Yoshino station. As I began my journey, I struck up a conversation with two obaasan, and was delighted to hear them tell how they had climbed this path each year for the last thirty years, and struck by their sadness that this year could very well be their last. Finality... Leaving them, I promised that if I happened upon them on my way down, and they were in need, I would carry them. We all laughed. They were 88 and 90, and this is no walk in the park. I never saw them again, but will always remember. Moving upward, Yoshino slowly came into full bloom, and it is easy to understand how the Japanese passion for these ephemeral blossoms is almost a spiritual thing. After Kami, the way grows dramatically steeper. As my back began to ache and my quads tightened, I thought of the obaasan. Could they have been pulling my leg? I pushed myself to the upper most shrine, Kinpu, the mountain landscape changed. Gone were the moss covered boulders, underbrush, and towering cypress. Charred tree stumps lines each side of the road way, and the expected beauty of the Sakura vanished. Early April there had been a fire, reportedly caused by a cigarette butt. I felt like the Lorax as a scaled an embankment and surveyed the desolation. At the final torii, just before Kinpu Shrine, the world turned green again, the shrine had been saved. I took out a C.C. Lemon, removed the cap, and took a swallow, added some Grey Goose, and looked back down the valley at the wreckage of mankind and to the beauty of Kami beyond. A hollow feeling basting my stomach. Japanese workers lined the firebreak areas, and they were planting new sakura...rebirth. "But now...now that you're here, the word of the Lorax seems perfectly clear. UNLESS someone like you cares a awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It's not." Aloha