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Fireflies in downtown Tokyo – Beautiful hotel garden begins 'hotaru' season event

Fireflies in downtown Tokyo – Beautiful hotel garden begins 'hotaru' season event

Japan Today14-05-2025

By Casey Baseel, SoraNews24
Japan likes to mark the passing of the seasons by going out to see the beautiful sights of nature throughout the year. In April, of course, the sakura/cherry blossoms bloom, followed not too long after by the fuji/wisteria.
Next on the list of delicate but breathtaking seasonal beauty? Hotaru, which aren't flowers, but fireflies.
Usually, if you want to see fireflies in Japan you need to wait until early summer, and also head quite a ways outside of the big cities, since the luminous little creatures need sufficiently clean and calm water to set the mood for their mating-season meetups. However, the Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo is one of the very few places in the downtown Tokyo area where fireflies can be seen. The hotel's expansive garden is an attractive habitat for fireflies, who tend to become active a little earlier than their counterparts in most other parts of Japan.
▼ Chinzanso's garden during firefly season
This year, the hotel's staff observed the first firefly larvae in the garden's soil on April 24. Since it takes a few weeks for them to mature and develop their wings, the fireflies are expected to begin taking flight in large numbers from mid-May, right about now.
To prevent overcrowding, from May 16 to June 30, there's a reservation system to visit the garden between 6:30 and 11 p.m. Reservations can be made here, with a fee of 2,000 yen for adults or 1,000 yen for elementary school-age children (with younger children admitted free of charge with a parent). No reservation is required to enter the garden for guests staying at the hotel or attending functions being held in its ballrooms, or for diners or shoppers who spend above a certain amount at the property.
For those looking for an especially memorable experience, the hotel is also offering a Private Hotaru Night one-night stay package which allows access to the garden after it is ordinarily closed at 11 p.m. Only three such packages are available per day between May 23 and June 8, with both dinner and breakfast included for a price of 114,500 yen for two people (Chinzanso is a luxury hotel, after all).
While the hotel says that fireflies can be seen on the premises through early July, from late June they're displayed in a biotope, so if you want to see them floating freely in the garden, you'll want to plan your visit for before then.
Related: Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo
Source: PR Times, Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo
Insert images: PR Times, Hotel Chinzanso Tokyo
Read more stories from Japan Today.
-- One of Tokyo's most beautiful gardens gets its own moon for moon-viewing season
-- Artificial sea of clouds made by luxury hotel in Tokyo during summer
-- Japan's firefly season is here, and here are four great inns to take in the softly glowing beauty
External Link
https://soranews24.com/2025/05/14/fireflies-in-downtown-tokyo-beautiful-hotel-garden-begins-hotaru-season-event/
© SoraNews24

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Japan's best rose gardens to visit
Japan's best rose gardens to visit

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timea day ago

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Japan's best rose gardens to visit

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time2 days ago

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What to do if you forget your camera or other belongings on the shinkansen

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Tokyo's Hydrangea Mountain is a spot of beauty created by one son's love for his parents
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time3 days ago

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Tokyo's Hydrangea Mountain is a spot of beauty created by one son's love for his parents

By Casey Baseel, SoraNews24 As we flip the calendar over to June, we're getting close to the start of hydrangea season in Japan, or ajisai season, to use the flowers' Japanese name. Many of the best places to see hydrangeas in Japan are temples or gardens that once belonged to local lords whose descendants eventually opened up their lands to the public, but the origin of Minamisawa Ajisaiyama ('Hydrangea Mountain') in Akiruno, a district in western Tokyo, is different. This beautiful forested area is filled with hydrangeas because of a local resident named Chuichi Minamisawa, seen in the photo below. Minamisawa's roots in the area go back generations, and his parents' grave is nearby, along a path that winds up into the mountains. A little over 50 years ago, he got the idea to beautify the trail, and so he started planting hydrangeas along it. A self-taught cultivator, Minamisawa started with 20 seedlings. As his experience and expertise grew, he added more every year, eventually planting thousands and thousands by himself. Though he occasionally got some help from friends and relatives, for the most part Ajisaiyama was something Minamisawa tended to by himself, making him a community celebrity. A few years ago, he was approached by members of Do-mo, a local entrepreneurial organization that was hoping to produce a hydrangea tea and hoped Minamisawa could help them with sourcing some of the ingredients. 'Sure, I can let you use some of the hydrangeas,' Minamisawa told them. 'But I'm getting older, and I don't have that many years left, and once I'm gone, there's no one to take care of the flowers.' Seeing a way they could both help each other, Do-mo then agreed to take over as the hydrangeas' caretakers, with Minamisawa imparting his knowledge about how to differentiate the different varieties of hydrangeas that grow on the mountain, and when and how to prune and otherwise care for each of them. ▼ Minamisawa with members of Do-mo Sadly, Minamisawa passed away in July of 2023, shortly after the end of that year's hydrangea season, at the age of 93. The hydrangeas, now some 15,000 in number, still bloom every June, and this year's petals are about to unfold. This year's hydrangea season peak is expected to be from June 7 to July 6, during which the Minamisawa Ajisaiyama will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with no admission charged. The hydrangea mountain is 40-minutes on foot from Musashi-Itsukaichi Station on the Itsukaichi Line, but between June 13 and 30 there's also a shuttle bus that runs from the station to the mountain for 300 yen roughly twice and hour between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., with the full timetable available on the official website here. Location information Minamisawa Ajisaiyama / 南沢あじさい山 Address: Tokyo-to, Akiruno-shi, Fukasawa 368-362 東京都あきる野市深沢368−362 Website Source: PR Times, Minamisawa Ajisaiyama Insert images: PR Times Read more stories from SoraNews24. -- Starbucks Japan has a new limited-edition Frappuccino for summer, but does it taste any good? -- Studio Ghibli releases new Totoro neckties to brighten up your office wear -- Old soba restaurant on Japanese train station platform serves noodles with a side of nostalgia External Link © SoraNews24

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