JAPAN ROUND-UP
I was in Japan for almost three months, visiting all the major islands except Shikoku.
Recapping my trip: the general plan was to begin in the far north in Hokkaido for winter and work my way southwards through the islands to the very bottom at Iriomote. I started in the middle at Izumi (on Kyushu) because I wanted to see the wintering cranes while they were still there and
then headed north, with a brief stop-over in Tokyo (on Honshu, for just one day), before taking a ferry from Oarai to Tomakomai on Hokkaido. Most of my time in Hokkaido was based in Kushiro in the east, from which I made day-trips by train to the surrounding bird sites. I also stayed in the towns of Rausu and Wakkanai which are both in the north of the island.
After finishing with Hokkaido I flew down to Honshu again and headed to Nagano for the "Snow Monkeys" (Japanese Macaques) in their hot pools, and then to Karuizawa in the Japanese Alps. Karuizawa was probably my least favourite place in Japan unfortunately (I expected it to be my most favourite!).
I intended to then go to the Ogasawara Islands but I had to wait almost three weeks for a hotel to become available there, so I spent this time in Tokyo and Osaka visiting zoos and looking for birds. Included in here was a day-trip to Oshima Island, one of the Izu Islands south of Tokyo.
The Ogasawaras took a week, and was a great side-trip, especially because I successfully found and photographed the Bonin White-eye which was one of the most "important" birds for me in all of Japan.
I then returned to Izumi for a few days to look for Copper Pheasants, then went down to Kagoshima at the south end of Kyushu, made a trip out to Yakushima Island for the endemic sika and macaque subspecies, and then headed to the Ryukyu Islands - Amami, then Okinawa, then Ishigaki and Iriomote.
Then I returned to Okinawa and flew out to Taiwan.
In rough amounts, I was in Hokkaido, Honshu, and Kyushu / Ryukyu Islands for about a month each.
Overall the trip through Japan was a big success. Although the number of bird species I saw was quite low (187 species) there isn't much I actually missed. Looking through the lists of endemics I didn't see the Izu Thrush, Ijima's Leaf Warbler or Owston's Tit (all from the Izu Islands), the Bonin Greenfinch (which is basically restricted to offshore islets now), and down in the Ryukyu Islands there was the Amami Thrush, Ryukyu Robin and Ryukyu Flycatcher.
For non-endemics, I would have liked to have seen Black Woodpecker on Hokkaido, the Painted Snipe and Woodcock on Ishigaki, and I was always keeping an eye out for Hawfinch and Bullfinch. Ptarmigan would have been nice but they aren't really accessible in winter.
For mammals, I expected to see Mountain Hare on Hokkaido and Japanese Hare on the other islands, but didn't. Same for Northern Fur Seal on Hokkaido. The season was wrong for pikas and bears, so I wasn't expecting them at all. Otherwise species I missed were Japanese Marten, Japanese Weasel, Japanese Flying Squirrel (the little one - I saw the Giant one) and down in the Ryukyus the Giant Long-tailed Rat. All of these are nocturnal, and I didn't go out spotlighting in Hokkaido because it was too cold and it was difficult enough walking around during the day when I could see where the ice was on the ground. I thought the giant rat would have been very likely though, because so many reports say how commonly it is seen at night while looking for the Amami Rabbit and Woodcock.
I doubt I'll be back to Japan. I really enjoyed it, but I think I covered it all well enough. If I
was to return it would be for pikas and bears in Hokkaido, and the Giant Long-tailed Rat on Amami. I would not be averse to returning to Iriomote either, and giving myself a good amount of time to look for the Iriomote Cat.
There were a couple of places in my original plan which I dropped. One was Miyakejima in the Izu Islands. This island is home to several birds of note - the resident Izu Thrush and Owston's Tit, and the breeding-migrants Ijima's Leaf Warbler and Japanese Robin. I did intend to go there but I kept putting it off and eventually just didn't go. I had found out that the thrush and warbler are also found on other islands (although I ended up not seeing them on those), and I thought I'd likely be too early for the return of the warbler and robin anyway. I did see the robin later. If I did come back to Japan I'd probably make the effort to get out to Miyakejima.
The other place I didn't go was Tsushima Island, north of Kyushu, which is home to the Tsushima Leopard Cat and to endemic subspecies of marten and sika deer. The discarding of this destination was partly a time-issue, but also I just thought it really unlikely I'd see the cat or marten. Unlike the Iriomote Cat which is the island's symbol and the islanders are proud of it, on Tsushima the local cat is regarded as a pest and persecuted.
There was an addition to the plan, though. When I was at Inokashira Park Zoo, just after I arrived in Japan, I saw the Yakushima Sika Deer which is a dwarf island form, and instantly put Yakushima on my list. No regrets about doing that!
My favourite place in all Japan was Izumi - the town itself, the cranes, and the badgers at Kogawa Dam. My least favourite place was Karuizawa, but I think that was just randomly bad for me and if I went back it might be better received.
Particular highlights of the trip (apart for Izumi) were the Steller's Sea Eagles at Rausu, Sea Otters and Harlequin Ducks in Hokkaido, the "snow monkeys" in their hot pools at Nagano, The Bonin White-eye and Bonin Flying Fox, the Amami Rabbit, and the Okinawa Woodpecker.
.........................................................
BIRDS and MAMMALS:
I saw 187 species of birds in Japan, of which 65 were lifers.
Broken down by island (or island group), the number of species seen at each were, going north to south: 54 species on Hokkaido; 108 species on Honshu (including the Izu and Ogasawara Islands); 86 species on Kyushu (basically just Izumi and Yakushima); and 73 species in the Ryukyu Islands (Amami, Okinawa, Ishigaki, and Iriomote).
I saw 23 species of mammals in Japan, of which 15 were lifers.
I will list all these in the next post.
.........................................................
ZOOS AND AQUARIUMS:
I visited twenty Zoos and Aquariums while in Japan, listed below in the order of visitation. I have reviews and / or species lists for all the Zoos and one of the Aquariums. I might review the remaining Aquariums at a later date if I can find time (there are brief summaries for each within this thread already). I took photos of all the signage at a couple of the Aquariums as well, so I might even be able to make full species lists - in general, those Aquariums which had good signage had
complete and accurate signage (and then some of the Aquariums had almost no signage!).
1) Inokashira Park Zoo (Tokyo, Honshu)
Inokashira Park Zoo species list, January 2025 [Inokashira Park Zoo]
2) Sumida Aquarium (Tokyo, Honshu)
3) Aqua World Ibaraki Oarai (Oarai)
Aqua World Ibaraki Oarai, visit January 2025 [Aqua World Ibaraki Oarai Aquarium]
4) Kushiro Zoo (Kushiro, Hokkaido)
Kushiro Zoo (Hokkaido) visit and species list: February 2025
5) Wakkanai Aquarium (Noshappu [Wakkanai], Hokkaido)
6) Joyama Zoo (Nagano, Honshu)
Joyama Zoo (Nagano, Japan), species list February 2025
7) Tokyo Sea Life Park (Tokyo, Honshu)
8) Ueno Zoo (Tokyo, Honshu)
Ueno Zoo - visit and species list: February 2025 [Ueno Zoo]
9) Tennoji Zoo (Osaka, Honshu)
Tennoji Zoo (Osaka), review and species list: March 2025 [Tennōji Zoo]
10) Osaka Aquarium Kaiyukan (Osaka, Honshu)
11) Kobe Animal Kingdom (Kobe, Honshu)
Kobe Animal Kingdom, review and species list: 3 March 2025 [Kobe Animal Kingdom]
12) Minoh Park Insect Museum (Osaka, Honshu)
Minoh Park Insect Museum (Osaka)
13) Tama Zoo (Tokyo, Honshu)
Tama Zoo visit and species list, March 2025 [Tama Zoo]
14) Oshima Park Zoo (Izu Islands, Honshu)
Oshima Park Zoo (Izu Islands), March 2025
15) Sunshine Aquarium (Tokyo, Honshu)
16) Saitama Childrens Zoo (Tokyo, Honshu)
Saitama Childrens Zoo review and species list, March 2025
17) Kagoshima City Aquarium (Kagoshima, Kyushu)
18) Hirakawa Zoo (Kagoshima, Kyushu)
Hirakawa Zoo (Kagoshima): visit and species list, March 2025
19) Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium (Okinawa)
20) Okinawa Zoo and Museum (Okinawa)
Okinawa Zoo and Museum: review and species list, 17 April 2025
.........................................................
COSTS:
I keep track in a notebook of all my expenditures during a trip, so that I know what and where I'm spending money and can later work out average costs for a country, just because I like to know that sort of stuff. Usually this is pretty straightforward because I typically pay for almost everything in cash and I usually don't book many hotels online (I mostly just turn up in a place and look for something in person). However on this trip I have been booking almost everything ahead of time (albeit usually just a few days ahead), because Japan in particular is expensive and the cities aren't as conducive to just "turning up" as the cities in somewhere like Malaysia or Thailand are. This means that my usual "just add up the costs from my notebook" doesn't really work because of the way booking online adds on fees and varying currency conversion rates and stuff like that.
So what I have done for Japan's costs is go through my bank withdrawals and add all those up, because that covers all the hotel bookings, flights, ATM withdrawals, and whatever else, and gives a "real" total of what I spent. It isn't properly reflective of the actual costs of things there because of the extra fees on the online bookings, but it is a full total of how much money came out of my bank while there.
Total spent and average per day (currency conversions were using XE and I've rounded up or down, usually to the nearest dollar):
NZ$ 14,236 total = UK£ 6375 ; Euro 7495.50 ; US$ 8469
Over 80 days that’s a rough average per day of: NZ$ 178 ; UK£ 79 ; Euro 94 ; US$ 106
This is including all internal flights, as well as the boats, trains and buses; but not the initial flights in and out of Japan (both bought before the trip).
Internal Flights:
Total NZ$ 674.14 (UK£ 301.80 ; Euro 355 ; US$ 401)
For five flights, that equals an average cost per flight of NZ$ 134.83 ; UK£ 60.40 ; Euro 71 ; US$ 80
Individual flight costs (these are all in NZ$ because I bought them online):
NZ$127.60 - Jetstar, from Kagoshima (Kyushu) to Narita (Tokyo)
NZ$212.78 - Air Do, from Sapporo (Hokkaido) to Haneda (Tokyo)
NZ$109.47 - Skymark, from Kagoshima (Kyushu) to Amami island
NZ$224.29 - Solaseed Air, return flight Okinawa island to Ishigaki island
Ferries:
Total 115,750 Yen, which is roughly NZ$ 1343 ; UK£ 602 ; Euro 707.50 ; US$ 799
For twelve ferries, that equals an average cost per ferry of NZ$ 112 ; UK£ 50 ; Euro 59 ; US$ 66.60
Individual ferry costs (these are all in Yen because I bought tickets with cash directly at the ferry terminals):
*10,000 Yen (one way) - MOL Sunflower, from Oarai (Honshu) to Tomakomai (Hokkaido)
*7900 Yen (return) - Heartland Ferries, from Wakkanai to Rebun Island (Hokkaido)
*19,060 Yen (return) - Tokai Kisen, from Tokyo to Oshima (Izu Islands)
*56,500 Yen (return) - OgasawaraKaiun, from Tokyo to the Ogasawara Islands
*9920 Yen (return) - Izu Shoto Kaihatsu Company, from Chichijima to Hahajima (Ogasawara Islands)
*6600 Yen (one way) - Marix Line, from Amami to Okinawa (Ryukyu Islands)
*5770 Yen (return) - YKF, from Ishigaki to Iriomote (Ryukyu Islands)
Trains and buses:
I was going to list all of these but I didn't actually take many trains between cities. I did a number of day-trips out of Kushiro (on Hokkaido) on trains which cost between 1000 and 3000 Yen each, and Tokyo to Oarai was a combination of metro trains and "regular" trains which cost 2400 Yen, but otherwise the only city-to-city train rides I had were (in order of price) 3260 Yen for Izumi to Kagoshima, 9440 Yen for Tomakomai to Kushiro, and 30,080 Yen for Tokyo to Izumi - this last one was obviously the most expensive by a long shot and was a seven hour bullet train.
1000 Yen is roughly NZ$ 11.60 ; UK£ 5.20 ; Euro 6.10 ; US$ 6.90
9440 Yen is roughly NZ$ 110 ; UK£ 49 ; Euro 58 ; US$ 65
30,080 Yen is roughly NZ$ 349 ; UK£ 156 ; Euro 184 ; US$ 208
The most expensive city-to-city buses I took were the overnight buses between Tokyo and Osaka which were 7300 Yen in one direction and 7000 Yen in the other.
7300 Yen is roughly NZ$ 85 ; UK£ 38 ; Euro 44.60 ; US$ 50.40
HOTELS:
*Izumi was through booking .com before leaving New Zealand. The first Tokyo hotel was also through booking .com. The hotels in Rausu and in the Ogasawara Islands were in cash. The rest were booked through Trip so the prices are only rough exchanges into Yen because they were paid for in Chinese Yuan (because I use WePay for Trip and it only works if the currency is in Chinese Yuan), and then the conversion to NZ Dollars during the bank payment adds on more to the price, sometimes significantly so.
The range of room prices I had were (all in Yen): 7050 (Izumi); 3960 (Tokyo); c.10,150 (Tomakomai; but it did include free breakfast); c.6000 (Kushiro [6800 for the final night which I paid in cash]); 4700 Rausu; c.4000 Kushiro (different hotel than previous stay in Kushiro; also includes breakfast [and 4861 for the final night which I paid in cash]); c.7400 (Wakkanai); c.7300 (Sapporo); c.7250 (Nagano, including breakfast); c.6210 (Karuizawa); c.8000 (Tokyo, including breakfast); 1700 (Osaka); 30,000 (Ogasawara Islands); c.5600 (Izumi again); c.3500 or 3800 (Kagoshima [different prices for different bookings]); c.7000 (Yakushima, including breakfast); c.4000 (Amami); c.6300 (Nago, Okinawa); c.5600 (Ishigaki, including breakfast); c.8500 (Iriomote, including breakfast); c.7000 (Ishigaki again); c.4500 (Naha, Okinawa).
All those numbers added together makes 171,181 Yen (c. NZ$ 2130 ; UK£ 890 ; Euro 1046 ; US$ 1182), which gives an average room price of 6847 Yen (c.NZ$ 85.20 ; UK£ 35.60 ; Euro 41.85 ; US$ 47.30).
Working out the average per night that I spent it is, interestingly enough, almost the same at 6674 Yen (c.NZ$ 83 ; UK£ 34.70 ; Euro 40.80 ; US$ 46) - the full total for hotel bills (using the prices above, so not totally accurate!) was 493,871 Yen (c.NZ$ 6145 ; UK£ 2567 ; Euro 3019 ; US$ 3410) over 74 days.
However, the 30,000 Yen per night (for three nights) which I had to pay for the Ogasawara Islands was a real outlier - if that 90,000 Yen is removed then the average room price drops dramatically to about NZ$ 68.30 (UK£ 30.60 ; Euro 36 ; US$ 40.60), and the average I spent per night over the whole of Japan becomes about NZ$ 63.40 (UK£ 28.40 ; Euro 33.40 ; US$ 37.70).
I was actually in Japan for 80 days, but three nights were spent on ferries and two on overnight buses, so they aren't included in the totals above. The 80th day was the final day when I flew to Taiwan in the afternoon.
In Japan I was staying almost always in what I guess you'd call mid-range hotels. You can stay cheaper by using dorms but I just didn't want to. I was thinking about why I don't want to stay in dorms any more, and I think the reason - apart for me just being much more old and cantankerous now - is that on my earlier trips I used internet cafes to write blogs and that sort of thing, so I would spend all day out doing stuff, go to an internet cafe for a few hours in the evening, then just go back to the dorm and go to sleep. Since I have been taking a laptop with me on my trips I want to have my own private space to sit down, spread all my stuff around me, and do my "work". I don't know if internet cafes even exist any more. Even back then I'd often end up in a gaming place rather than a proper internet cafe.
Anyway, the point is I mostly stayed in "average-priced" hotels because on the booking site I used there was a bit of a gap between those and dorms - dorms will be under 1000 Yen, then there would be a jump to the 5000+ Yen hotels. In the middle are the "business hotels" which are basic rooms (e.g. like the one I had in Osaka for 1700 Yen per night), but they were almost never on the booking site. I'm not sure if this is because they simply sold out well before, or if they don't use booking sites. It could also be that they utilise the Japanese hotel booking site and not foreign ones.
Needless to say, that average hotel price of NZ$ 83 is far higher than on any other trip I've made in Asia!