Tottori is famous for its sand dunes, vast natural parks and pear omiyage – not for urban exploration. Located in the Chugoku region at the Sea of Japan (a.k.a. Korea East Sea and Japanese Sea) and therefore at the northern coast of Japan, Tottori is a little bit off the beaten tracks – most tourists travelling south of Tokyo continue via Kyoto, Osaka and Kobe to Himeji, Hiroshima and Kyushu along the Seto Inland Sea. Only a handful of Western tourists switch to one of the express trains from Kansai to Tottori (city), the capital of Tottori (prefecture) – there is no Shinkansen service as a northern line connecting Osaka and Shimonoseki via Tottori and Matsue was proposed in 1973 and then shelved indefinitely. The least populous of Japan’s prefectures (3.5 million inhabitants, less than the city Yokohama) is generally rather rural and agriculture is the most important economical factor – pears, scallions, yams and watermelons from Tottori are famous in all of Japan.
One thing Tottori is not famous for is urban exploration. Nevertheless I had plans to go to Tottori for almost a year, but for some reason I never followed through. The places I wanted to visit there were not that spectacular, the weather wasn’t consistent for a whole weekend, the season wasn’t right or I simply had other plans. In spring of 2012 everything came together finally, so I hopped on the first of eight special direct trains to Tottori and enjoyed the 2.5 hour long ride through the stunning Chugoku Mountains. After finding and checking into a hotel I did some haikyo hiking to another location and finally arrived at the gorgeous Tottori Sand Dunes in the late afternoon – running out of time, as so often.
The Sand Dune Palace turned out to be quite a rundown building secured by rusty barbed wire, only worth taking pictures of thanks to its relative fame and the round viewing platform which gave this old rest house (built in 1965) a little bit of an edge by making it more round… The salty sea air was gnawing through anything metal, especially lamp posts and handrails. All the bells and whistles, like door handles and lamps looked so 60s that it almost hurt the eyes. Really nothing special, so I headed over to the dunes to find my way to the beach in order to take some sunset photos. On the way back, late into dusk, I made another quick stop to take a couple of night shots, but then I had to leave to catch the last bus back to the city – it was an exhausting day and sadly not everything lived up to my expectations; for example the Sand Dune Palace – the pear sweets on the other hand were divine and if you ever go to Tottori, make sure to try the “nashi usagi” (literally “pear rabbits”, mochi filled with pear jam).
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Love those shots through the trees at the beginning of your video – makes the place look very mysterious… Did you take any still shots like that? And the door handles! 🙂
Hey Sue,
Sadly I didn’t take any photos from up there. Time was really tight when I visited the Sand Dune Palace… 😦
I’m not surprised time was tight, you always seem to travel long distances to see these places! But what amazing places you have been to…. Here’s hoping you get to see some interesting stuff in 2014!
Hey Sue,
By now it usually takes me 1.5 to 5 hours to get to the places I’d like to explore – and most of the time it’s tough to plan how long it will take to have a look around. Last year in Germany I went to 7 or 8 places in one day… and only one of them was decent, the rest was torn down, inaccessible or otherwise of no use.
I already have a list of places I’d like to visit this year – and some of them are very, very promising! 🙂
Looking forward to your posts!
Hallo Florian,
die "door – handles" sind ja der Hammer!
Liebe Grüße
Catherine
Hey Catherine,
ja, die Dinger sind irgendwie hypnotisch! 🙂