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Xóm Gia Dụng Thông Minh
Xóm Gia Dụng Thông Minh
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Friday 08 May 2026 06:50:28 GMT
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Planning a winter trip to Japan? Make sure to read this 👇 Everyone runs to Hokkaido — but Japan’s most unexpectedly magical winter escape is somewhere else 👀 ✈️ How to get to Nagano Two easy ways to reach it: • Fly into Nagoya’s Chubu Centrair Airport and take a direct train north • Or hop on the Hokuriku Shinkansen from Tokyo — just 90 minutes That’s why it works so well as a 2–3 day winter stop between Tokyo, Nagoya, Kanazawa, or the Japanese Alps. ✨ Reasons to Visit This Winter 🐒 1. Snow monkeys bathing in hot springs This prefecture is home to Jigokudani Snow Monkey Park — the only place where wild macaques soak in natural onsen water.  🏯 2. Matsumoto — the perfect day trip Just a short train ride away, Matsumoto feels like a winter postcard: its black-and-white castle, cafés inside old merchant houses, and streets like Nawate and Nakamachi give it an almost storybook charm when it snows. ⛩️ 3. Temples and shrines in the snow You get two incredible contrasts in one trip: • Zenkō-ji, one of Japan’s most important Buddhist temples • Togakushi Shrine, hidden deeper in the mountains and reached via a path lined with ancient cedars In winter, both feel atmospheric — incense, silence, snowy roofs, and tall trees dusted white. 🍶 4. Food that hits differently in winter Nagano is known for warming regional dishes: 🍜 handmade soba 🍶 local sake 🍎 apples and apple desserts 🥟 oyaki dumplings Everything tastes even better after snowy days outside. 🎿 5. Ski resorts with fewer crowds Nagano hosted the 1998 Winter Olympics, so its ski areas — especially Hakuba Valley — are excellent, but usually less busy than Hokkaido. Mountains, onsens, snow… without rushed slopes. Save this for your trip ❄️ Follow for more travel itineraries and tips✨ • #nagano #japantravel #japantips #japantravelguide #wintertravel
Planning a winter trip to Japan? Make sure to read this 👇 Everyone runs to Hokkaido — but Japan’s most unexpectedly magical winter escape is somewhere else 👀 ✈️ How to get to Nagano Two easy ways to reach it: • Fly into Nagoya’s Chubu Centrair Airport and take a direct train north • Or hop on the Hokuriku Shinkansen from Tokyo — just 90 minutes That’s why it works so well as a 2–3 day winter stop between Tokyo, Nagoya, Kanazawa, or the Japanese Alps. ✨ Reasons to Visit This Winter 🐒 1. Snow monkeys bathing in hot springs This prefecture is home to Jigokudani Snow Monkey Park — the only place where wild macaques soak in natural onsen water. 🏯 2. Matsumoto — the perfect day trip Just a short train ride away, Matsumoto feels like a winter postcard: its black-and-white castle, cafés inside old merchant houses, and streets like Nawate and Nakamachi give it an almost storybook charm when it snows. ⛩️ 3. Temples and shrines in the snow You get two incredible contrasts in one trip: • Zenkō-ji, one of Japan’s most important Buddhist temples • Togakushi Shrine, hidden deeper in the mountains and reached via a path lined with ancient cedars In winter, both feel atmospheric — incense, silence, snowy roofs, and tall trees dusted white. 🍶 4. Food that hits differently in winter Nagano is known for warming regional dishes: 🍜 handmade soba 🍶 local sake 🍎 apples and apple desserts 🥟 oyaki dumplings Everything tastes even better after snowy days outside. 🎿 5. Ski resorts with fewer crowds Nagano hosted the 1998 Winter Olympics, so its ski areas — especially Hakuba Valley — are excellent, but usually less busy than Hokkaido. Mountains, onsens, snow… without rushed slopes. Save this for your trip ❄️ Follow for more travel itineraries and tips✨ • #nagano #japantravel #japantips #japantravelguide #wintertravel

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