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Tourist Center


Please kindly contact the following for enquiries in foreign languages on sightseeing
in Kagoshima.

Kagoshima Prefectural Visitors Bureau

Kagoshima-Chuo Station

Kagoshima Airport


1st floor Kagoshimaken Sangyo Kaikan, 9-1
Meizan-cho, Kagoshima City,
Tel: 81-99-223-5771 Fax: 81-99-225-7484
Open: 8:30-17:15 (Mon.-Fri.)
Closed on Sat., Sun.and national holidays & Dec.29-Jan.3
 




JR Kagoshima-chuo Station, 1-1,
Chuo-cho, Kagoshima City,
Tel: 81-99-253-2500
Open: 8:30-19:00





822, Fumoto, Mizobe-cho, Kirishima City
Tel: 81-995-58-2114 Fax: 81-995-58-3172
Open: 7:00-21:15

Reference links in various foreign languages

Sightseeing guides in foreign languages are available at the following websites.
Please select your language by Clicking on the icons acoordingly

Kagoshima Prefecture     
Kagoshima City
Kagoshima City Tourism & Convention Bureau       
Kyushu Tourism Promotion Organization
Japan National Tourist Organization

Kagoshima City


kagoshima

KAGOSHIMA CITY AND SAKURAJIMA
The spirit of the people nurtured by the beauty of nature

Kagoshima City nourished as the castle town of the Shimadzu feudal
domain and is also known as the city where,towards the end of the Edo Period, western civilization was first introduced to Japan. It is now the largest city in southern Kyushu with a population of 600,000.
An abundance of hot springs can be found within the city, which also affords a magnificent view of a volcano, Mt.Sakurajima as it towers over Kinko Bay and billows smoke high into the sky. The world-renowned Mt. Sakurajima is a symbol of Kagoshima. The fact it stands only four kilometers away from the city is indeed a rare example of coexistence between a metropolitan area and a volcano.
Volcano Sakurajima can be reached from Kagoshima City by ferry in 15minutes that runs around the clock.
Kagoshima City view, an antique-style sightseeing bus of a retrospective design, takes you around to 15 major tourist spots in the city at 600 yen for an unlimited one-day ride.

------------Mr.Hyatt's comment------------

Kagoshima
Kagoshima's mountainous landscape and rich volcanic soil, unsuitable for significant rice production, is famed for a variety of other commodities. The best known include: giant white radishes, baby oranges, black pork, and most of all sweet potatoes.

Sweet Potatoes
Sweet potatoes were originally brought to Japan by Englishman William Adams, returning from a trade mission in China, in the early 17th century. Its proliferation has lead to a great variety of colors, flavors, and textures of which the light-orange and purple varieties appear to be the most popular.

Traditionally eaten roasted (Yaki-Imo) they are consumed in a staggering number of other ways from cakes, ice creams, and dozens of snacks to the nationally popular sweet potato liquor (Imo-Jochu).
Currently, Japan is experiencing a boom in the number of people drinking Imo-Jochu. Displacing the internationally famous rice wine (Nihon-shu), as the “IT” drink domestically, most foreigners have yet to enjoy this equally subtle liquor. Imo-Jochu is usually drank mixed with hot water to enhance the soothing warmth and soft aroma, but many people also enjoy it on-the-rocks or mixed with soda or juice.

Sweet potatoes have become so synonymous with Kagoshima that the standard Japanese word for sweet potato is “Satsuma potato”
(Satsuma-imo); Satsuma being the old provincial name of Kagoshima prefecture. In Kagoshima however, it is often called “Chinese potato”
(Kara-imo) referring to its being brought in through trade with Chinese port cities.

Giant Radishes and Baby Oranges
In the middle of Kinko Bay (Kinko-wan) sits the relatively quiet volcano named Cherry Blossom Island (Sakura-jima). Thanks to its peaceful nature, a thriving community of fisherman and farmers have called Sakura-jima home for many generations. Everyday, Sakura-jima benevolently distributes its mineral rich ash onto the farms. This fertile soil produces two of Kagoshima's most unique commodities,
giant white radishes (Sakura-jima daikon) and baby oranges
(Sakura-jima ko-mikan).
The giant white radish is truly something to behold. Shaped like a turnip but many times larger, these monster radishes eclipse their cousins the common white radish (daikon) which is itself quite large by western standards. The largest of these giants weighed over 40kg and measured over 50cm in diameter. However, the average weight is between 6-10kg with a diameter roughly that of a basketball. As with all white radishes, the Sakura-jima daikon is eaten in innumerable ways but they are most often sliced, pickled and eaten with rice.
At the opposite end of the size spectrum is the baby orange. These mini-citruses should not be confused with the well known Satsuma orange; though anyone who has seen a ko-mikan could never make this mistake. Through careful cultivation these minis have become the world's smallest oranges at full growth. The average size is roughly that of a golf ball (5cm), weighing between 40-50 grams. Despite their size they pack more of a juicy and sweet flavor than most other oranges. They are so favored that for centuries a special annual gift of oranges was sent to the ruling houses as far away as Kyoto and Edo (Tokyo).

Black Pork
Almost every prefecture in Japan can claim an especially great meat product. Probably the best one known outside Japan is Kobe beef, which interestingly doesn't seem to have the same fan base domestically.
However, the undisputed king of pork is Kagoshima's highly prized black pork. Originating from an Asian breed of the Black Berkshire pig, bred from a group gifted to Japan by the English monarch CharlesII, Kuro-buta has become renowned as “the world's finest pork”. This tender, juicy, flavorful pork gets its name from the color of the pigs which are black with some white. The most desired pigs are the six-spotted black pigs (Roppaku kuro-buta). These kings of kings have white patches only on their noses, tails, and feet. They are said to have the finest meat of all the varieties. In international wholesale markets, servings of black pork can reach the unbelievable $10 (U.S.A. dollars) per chop or more. Yet in Kagoshima prefecture one can enjoy this precious pork for approximately 80% less per serving. The most popular way of eating black pork is in the form of breaded, deep-fried pork cutlets (Tonkatsu). It is also often substituted for beef in many recipes or finds its way into the best meat curry breads in Japan.


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