• Skip Kinkakuji — Kurama Mountain trail is what Kyoto is actually about

    Don't just go to Kinkakuji — the Kurama Mountain trail is what Kyoto is actually about!! Do the research!!

    The trail from Kurama Station through to Kibune Shrine passes through old growth forest and the inner precinct of Kurama-dera. The seasonal colours in spring and autumn are something the famous spots simply don't offer. And the crowd level is night and day.

    I've been to Kinkakuji. Beautiful. But the queue and the wall of cameras means you can't be present there. The quieter places are where the memory actually forms. Ohara Sanzen-in, Fushimi Inari at 6am — all better experiences. The map is not the territory.

  • Don't just go to Kinkakuji — the Kurama Mountain trail is what Kyoto is actually about!! Do the research!!

    The trail from Kurama Station through to Kibune Shrine passes through old growth forest and the inner precinct of Kurama-dera. The seasonal colours in spring and autumn are something the famous spots simply don't offer. And the crowd level is night and day.

    I've been to Kinkakuji. Beautiful. But the queue and the wall of cameras means you can't be present there. The quieter places are where the memory actually forms. Ohara Sanzen-in, Fushimi Inari at 6am — all better experiences. The map is not the territory.

  • Skipping famous sites in favor of adjacent experiences is a travel philosophy I've adopted fully. The adjacent experience is almost always more memorable because you're present instead of performing the tourist act.

  • The performing-the-tourist-act framing is exactly right. The famous site visit has become a content-generation ritual for many travelers. The experience is secondary to the documentation.