Pass 1 jour pour Noboribetsu Date Jidaimura





Description
Noboribetsu Date Jidaimura est un parc à thème à Noboribetsu qui reproduit les coutumes et la culture de l'Edo-Jidai (période Edo). Ici, vous pouvez admirer des résidences de samouraïs, des tours de ninjas et divers magasins qui représentent la période Edo. À la fin de la journée, vous pourriez vous appeler un résident du village.
Options de l'excursion
Itinéraire
Ce laissez-passer d'une journée vous permettra de découvrir la culture et les coutumes de la période Edo au Noboribetsu Date Jidaimura, également connu sous le nom de village historique de Noboribetsu. Ici, vous vous retrouverez dans le temps pour profiter des jeux traditionnels, des activités, du théâtre, des spectacles de rue, etc. Le Japon antique est omniprésent lorsque vous vous mêlez aux habitants de la ville, aux courtisanes de Ninja et d'Oiran, symboles de la période Edo. Vous pourrez voir les maisons des ninjas et des samouraïs ainsi que des magasins fréquentés par les villageois. Vous pourrez également assister à des représentations de villageois, tels que ninja, courtisane et citadins. Il y a aussi un musée où vous pouvez apprendre un peu plus en profondeur sur l'histoire japonaise et la signification de cette période. Si vous avez faim, il y a de nombreux restaurants dans le parc où vous pourrez déguster de bons repas (à vos frais) tels que des nouilles japonaises comme des ramen, des udon et des soba. Pour le dessert, vous pouvez vérifier certains des magasins de bonbons ou de thé dans la région car ils ont aussi des bonbons délicieux.
Points forts
Ce qui est inclus
Avis des voyageurs
Informations importantes
- Accès pour les personnes à mobilité réduite
- Convient à toutes les conditions physiques
- Vos billets seront conservés au guichet pour une arrivée sur le parc à thème. Veuillez apporter votre coupon le jour de l'utilisation.
- Veuillez noter que le 5 mars au 8 mars 2018 est fermé pour cause de maintenance
Avis(12)
Fun for adults and kids. A good introduction to the Edo period. The shows are corny but still informative. Easy to walk around and see what you want. Well-maintained.
Surprisingly interesting and fun. I thought it would be touristy and cheesy but it was actually interesting and fun. Staff and friendly and show a lot of pride in what they do. Highly recommended.
Nice incursion on the way to the bear farm, if you have time on the way from Sapporo to Noboreibetsu it’s worth the stop, it’s basically a reconstruction of shops and houses from Edi period with shows to be performed every hour.
A good lunch followed by a walk thru the villages and a ninja show. Very nice landscape during our visit in winter with good amount of snow
A must go when you are in this area. Though its more of a touristy theme park, you do feel like you are transported back in time to historical japan. The staff there are all dressed in period clothings and lots of eductional spots around the park on different aspects of historical japan. There is a place to rent clothes for appox 20min duration at 35,000 to 47,000 yen depending on package. Quite a good place for photoshoots amid the garden and villiage styled background. There are 3 types of shows in winter (samurai, oiran, ninja) and one extra outdoor show in the other seasons. Overall oiran and ninja shows must not be missed. There are some food outlets in the park as well, selling ramen, udon, soba and dango. Reasonably priced too.
For Hokkaido theme park, the theme of the Danube era, the staff dressed in antique costumes. Introduction to a visit to the ninja-themed exhibition hall. As for the Ninja Show, visitors who do not speak Japanese may feel bored because it is conducted in Japanese.
My nine-year-old son rated this theme park as the best part of our trip to Hokkaido. He super loved the two ninja shows (one indoors and one outdoors). Both were fun and action-packed. They gave out laminated sheets in English summarising the story for the indoor show, but we couldn't understand the dialogue. It didn't matter though, the action on its own was entertaining. However, skip the culture show if you don't understand Japanese because it consisted of live interaction between a host and a selected member of the audience. We couldn't understand a thing and left halfway. Another super fun part of the park is the ninja maze, which is a house containing a series of trick doors, traps, and slanted floors designed to make you confused. It was so good, we went through it many rounds. The ninja resource centre, which contained information about ninjas, was also really informative and worth a look. There was also a horror house, which combined moving, animatronic ghouls and demons with special effects and lighting (quite fun), and a cat house, which contained the same, but in the form of cats. There are several eateries in the park and to my surprise, the prices of food weren't exorbitant and the food was actually quite tasty. my son also enjoyed being able to rent a ninja outfit and roaming the park with it. (ninja sandals at extra cost. Swords sold separately.) Overall, this theme park is really quite fun for those with kids. And even for those without kids but who are interested in ninjas.
A man and a woman in their 40s visited for the first time on weekdays. While driving around, I saw a sign that said "From Here to the Edo Period" and made a quick stop, perhaps because of the light rainy weather, there were few people around, so I was able to walk freely and enjoy the performance. A ninja experience cabin? - Yeah. I have good memories of my experience with Yumiya and Shuriken in , and I was lucky enough to win a target and get 500 ryo. The staff dressed as samurai and ninja in the village, and I thought that if I had children I would have enjoyed it very much. This time, we gave it a four-star rating because it was raining and we couldn't see any outdoor ninja attractions. The weather is so helpless that I will save five stars as an expectation for the next time I come back.
Went there for a day trip after visiting Noboribetsu's hot springs. Well constructed village that let you experience the culture during Japan's Edo period! Big praise to their theatre shows. Definitely worth a visit if you're near the area!
We visited this park with taxi from our hotel. You will have to ask the front office to call a taxi going home. However there is bus stop regularly coming to this park. Should check the schedule ahead. The park with comedy, theatrical open space ninja shows are good to go. The conversation are all in japanese, abit hard to follow for foreigners without japanese skills We tried the maze. Amazing. A bit light headed at the shaking room. A must try maze experience. If you are not brave, tried it with groups of friends.



