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On the walk to Narita-san Temple from Inuyama Castle you will pass the Urakuen Garden (Tel: 0568 61 6408) and the Jyoan (Jo-an) Tea Ceremony Room which are in the grounds of the Meitetsu Inuyama Hotel. The Jo-an teahouse was built in Kyoto in 1618 by a brother of Nobunaga and moved here in 1972 to sit in the Urakuen strolling garden.
Besides Inuyama Castle, the town's other main tourist attraction is the summer cormorant fishing (ukai) on the Kiso River near Inuyama-Yuen Station. Both after dark and also during the day from May 11 - October 15, excursion boats can be booked at the booking office (Tel: 0568 61 0057), to watch the traditional practice of catching Japanese sweetfish (ayu) using around eight or ten comorants tethered with ropes around their necks.
The caught fish are usually grilled over charcoal and eaten with Japanese beer and sake.
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Ukai cormorant fishing from river boats also takes place in Arashiyama in Kyoto, nearby Gifu on the Nagara River and other river towns around Japan.
The best view for spectators is from the Twin Bridge Inuyama-bashi. Inuyama Castle is clearly visible on the hill above. Prices for viewing the cormorant fishing are slightly less in June than July or August.
From March to November Inuyama also offers the chance to shoot the rapids on a 13km section of the Kiso River in flat-bottomed wooden boats. The journey lasts just over an hour (Tel: 0574 28 2727) and presently costs 3,400 yen. Bookings for both the ukai and shooting the rapids can be made at the green-roofed office near Inuyama-yuen Station.
Inuyama's other more modern attractions include Meiji Mura (Tel: 0568 67 0314) to the south of the city, accessible by a regular bus from the station. Opened in 1965 Meiji Mura is an open-air museum that preserves buildings in their original state from the Meiji Era of Japanese history (1868-1912). The pleasant grounds include 67 period buildings, among them the lobby of Frank Lloyd Wright's Imperial Hotel (built in Tokyo in 1923 and demolished in 1965), a summer house of Lafcadio Hearn and the amazing, wooden Maebashi Prison.
Riding the monorail from Inuyama-Yuen Station to Dobutsuen Station is the Japan Monkey Center (Tel: 0568 61 2327) which includes a primate zoo, a research center run by Kyoto University and an amusement park.
Little World (Tel: 0568 62 5611) due east of Inuyama is an open-air anthropological museum containingover 30homes and other buildingsfrom 22 countries from around the world. There are a variety of ethnic musical performances and lots of food and drink from around the world to enjoy.
Admission 1,600 yen.
9.30am-5pm daily. Summer evening openings.
There are a number of pleasant temples behind Inuyama-yuen Station including the impressive Zuisenji Temple. Heading north along the Kiso River is the quirky Momotaro Shrine about 1km on from Jakko-in Temple, famous for its maple leaves in autumn.
Inuyama Festivals
Not to be missed if you are in the area in March is the bizarre Tagata Honen Sai Festival when a huge, 3m-long, wooden phallus is paraded through the streets of a small village outside Inuyama. Watch a video of the Tagata Honen Sai Festival.
Inuyama Festival (see the video below) takes place on the first weekend in April.
Inuyama's other major festivals include the Nihon Rhine Summer Festival which is a huge fireworks display near the Twin Bridge on August 10 every year and a Momotaro Festival held at the quirky Momotaro Shrine (Tel: 0568 61 1586) on May 5.
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Getting to Inuyama
Rail
Inuyama is 25km north from Nagoya. By Tokaido Shinkansen, Nagoya is 52 minutes from Osaka and 1 hour 40 minutes from Tokyo.
From Nagoya Station, Inuyama is around 30 minutes by Meitetsu Inuyama Line and about the same time from Gifu Meitetsu Station.
Alternatively take the Meitetsu Komaki Line from Kami Iida in Nagoya. From Gifu JR Station there are trains to nearby Unuma Station, a short walk across the Kiso River to Inuyama. It is also possible to ride the Tsurumai Subway Line in Nagoya to the last stop at Kami Otai and change to a Meitetsu Inuyama Line train there.
Bus
There are long distance bus services from outside Inuyama Station to Tokyo (Shinjuku Station), Kyoto, Osaka, Nagoya (every 30 minutes), Gujo Hachiman (1 hour) and Kobe. Driving from Nagoya take National Highway 41 off the Komaki Interchange of the Tomei Expressway.
Getting Around Inuyama
Most of Inuyama's sites are within easy walking distance of the station or reached by shuttle buses from Inuyama Station. A taxi from Inuyama Station to Inuyama-yuen is 720 yen.
Inuyama Festival
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Situated 25km north of Nagoya









