[Top] [Ryokan Suggestions] [Tsubo-yu Onsen]
Yunomine (pronounced “you-nah-min-ayy”) is a delightful mountain village that Tiger and Bird immediately fell in love with. Surrounded by cozy Japanese inns and houses, a hot stream - fed by boiling, mineral-rich water rising naturally out of the ground - flows lazily down the hillside, creating plumes of steam in the frosty winter night air. Central to the town is a public onsen fed by the hot waters of the stream. The crown jewel of Yunomine is Tsubo-yu Onsen, a small wooden, partially open-air cabin built over the natural hot spring waters of the stream itself. Tsubo-yu is one of the oldest onsens in Japan (perhaps discovered more than 1,500 years ago according to our innkeeper) and holds the distinction of being a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Tiger and Bird strongly recommend that anyone who plans to hike the Kumano Kodo trail MUST book at least one night in this quaint and isolated mountain village.
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A tourist strolling through the small mountainside town of Yunomine in Wakayama Prefecture |
Yunomine (pronounced “you-nah-min-ayy”) is a delightful mountain village that Tiger and Bird immediately fell in love with. Surrounded by cozy Japanese inns and houses, a hot stream - fed by boiling, mineral-rich water rising naturally out of the ground - flows lazily down the hillside, creating plumes of steam in the frosty winter night air. Central to the town is a public onsen fed by the hot waters of the stream. The crown jewel of Yunomine is Tsubo-yu Onsen, a small wooden, partially open-air cabin built over the natural hot spring waters of the stream itself. Tsubo-yu is one of the oldest onsens in Japan (perhaps discovered more than 1,500 years ago according to our innkeeper) and holds the distinction of being a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Tiger and Bird strongly recommend that anyone who plans to hike the Kumano Kodo trail MUST book at least one night in this quaint and isolated mountain village.