From the blog
Osaka and Kyoto with kids: the 4-day plan that uses both
Osaka and Kyoto are 15 minutes apart by Shinkansen and solve different problems on a Japan trip. Here's the four-day plan that uses both properly.
Read more →Japan
Kyoto is patient with families: the crowds thin quickly once you step off the main paths, and the Philosopher's Path between temples is the kind of walk that works at any pace. Nishiki Market is edible chaos in the best sense, a narrow covered arcade where kids can graze on pickled vegetables, grilled skewers, and fresh mochi. A morning in Nara, with its free-roaming deer and Todaiji's enormous bronze Buddha, is one of the most vivid day trips in all of Japan. FamiVentura covers Kyoto with guides built around the city's depth of temples, local food culture, and day trips into the surrounding region.
From the blog
Osaka and Kyoto are 15 minutes apart by Shinkansen and solve different problems on a Japan trip. Here's the four-day plan that uses both properly.
Read more →From the blog
Tokyo and Kyoto solve different problems on a Japan family trip. Here's how to combine them, with three picks for each city that anchor a 10-day plan.
Read more →Off the Beaten Path
Gio-ji Temple is a small moss garden temple in the hills above Arashiyama, 20 minutes uphill from the famous bamboo grove but removed from crowds. Seventeen varieties of moss cover the ground under towering maples; the main structure is a modest thatched hut. The quiet makes it possible to absorb what you're looking at. Both ages respond to the sense of discovering something real rather than visiting a curated site.
Activities
Fushimi Inari Shrine is a mountain covered in thousands of vermillion torii gates stacked one after another. The experience transforms entirely with timing: before 7 AM the paths are empty and meditative; after 9 AM they're crowded with tour groups. Older kids can climb as far as energy allows; teens can attempt the full summit to forest above. The steep stone steps require comfortable shoes. Early arrival is the price of admission.
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Food
For a family with very different appetites and ages, guided structure removes the decision fatigue. The guide flags ingredients and allergy concerns, controls pace, and makes sure everyone eats something they enjoy. Shared meals are easier when someone else handles the logistics.