Precious Wood Spots in Kagoshima Area

  • Kigensugi Cedar
    Travel / Tourism
    Kagoshima Kumage-gun Yakushimacho
  • The Largest Banyan Tree in Japan
    Travel / Tourism
    Kagoshima Oshima-gun Wadomaricho Kunigami 2904
    This huge banyan tree is a five-minute drive from Okinoerabu Airport. The tree was planted in 1898 by the first graduates of Kunigami Elementary School; in more modern times, the tree was selected for inclusion in a new list of Japan's 100 most famous trees. Banyan trees are a tree in the mulberry family which are distributed in subtropical regions; as they grow, their multiple, divergent trunks complexly intertwine with each other. This particular tree has been designated a Natural Monument by the city and is eight meters tall, its trunk is six meters circumference, and its branches cover a 22 meter span in total. Although the tree grows on the grounds of Kunigami Elementary School, it is open to the general public, and tourists may take photos of the tree.
  • Kawanabe no Okusu
    Travel / Tourism
    Kagoshima Minamikyushu-shi Kawanabecho Miya 4778 Iigura Jinja Shikiji
    This large camphor tree standing next to the torii gate of Iikura Shrine is said to be some 1,200 years old. 13 meters tall and 25 meters in circumference at the base, the tree is the third largest camphor tree in the prefecture after the Kamo no Okusu and the Shibushi no Okusu. A large hollow equal in size to a six tatami mat room (roughly 11 square meters) has formed in the trunk. In spite of this, the tree's branches grow thick with leaves and the tree itself is beautifully formed, and it has been designated a Natural Monument by the prefecture.
  • Gamo no Okusu
    Travel / Tourism
    Kagoshima Aira-shi Kamocho Kamigyutoku
  • Nakama Gajumaru
    Travel / Tourism
    Kagoshima Kumage-gun Yakushimacho Nakama
  • Kunigami Elementary School no Gajumaru
    Travel / Tourism
    Kagoshima Oshima-gun Wadomaricho Kunigami
  • Oga Tama no Ki
    Travel / Tourism
    Kagoshima Satsumasendai-shi Nagatoshicho

Kagoshima Areas

around-area-map

Over 100 active volcanoes across Kagoshima make it one of the Japan's most exciting prefectures. The prefectural capital, Kagoshima city, looks out to one of the prefecture’s most spectacular volcanoes, Sakurajima, an island of its own that can be visited and seen close up or admired from afar, with the promise of breathtaking sunsets complete with frequent puffs of smoke and ash. Down the Satsuma Peninsula, the most southerly part of mainland Japan, waterfalls, sand onsen, and fascinating history await, while Kagoshima's abundance of satsuma imo (sweet potato) provide a wholesome snack as well as one of Japan's favourite drinks - shochu.

Kagoshima Photo Album

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