You’ll taste volcanic eggs in Owakudani’s steaming valley, float across Lake Ashi past its iconic torii gate, ride above misty cliffs on the Hakone Ropeway, and catch rare views of Mt. Fuji from peaceful parks—all with local guidance and easy transport from Tokyo.
I didn’t expect the air at Owakudani to hit me like that—kind of sharp and eggy, almost metallic. Our guide, Yuki, just grinned and handed me a black egg (kuro-tamago). “Adds seven years to your life,” she said, but I was more focused on not dropping it because my hands were shaking from the wind. The ground hissed and steamed around us. It felt like standing on the edge of something ancient, or maybe just really hungry volcanoes. I still remember how the sulfur clung to my jacket hours later.
After that, we rode the Hakone Ropeway—honestly, I was nervous at first (I’m not great with heights), but when Mt. Fuji suddenly appeared through a break in the clouds, everyone went quiet for a second. Even Yuki stopped talking. There was this weird sense of calm up there, just drifting above all that jagged rock and mist. Then someone’s phone rang with a pop song and we all laughed—it broke the spell in a good way.
The Lake Ashi cruise was next, on this pirate-looking ship that made me feel like a kid again. The water looked almost glassy under the late sun, and we floated past that bright red torii gate—so much bigger than I thought it’d be. I tried to get a photo but my fingers were sticky from lunch (fried smelt fish at Moto-Hakone Port—salty and crisp, worth it). Locals waved from tiny boats; one old man even shouted something about Fuji-san being shy today because of clouds. Not sure if he was joking or not.
We stopped at this hillside park only locals seem to know about—Fuji Shibasari Peace Park? Anyway, it was quiet except for some crows and you could see Fuji perfectly framed by cherry blossoms (well, almost perfectly; my camera skills are questionable). The ride back to Shinjuku was sleepy—someone snored behind me—but I kept thinking about that moment on the ropeway when everything just paused for a breath.
Yes, round-trip bus transportation from Shinjuku in Tokyo is included.
You can try local specialties like fried smelt fish (wakazagi), Hakone soba noodles, or Japanese set meals at Moto-Hakone Port restaurants.
Yes, infants can join but must sit on an adult’s lap; prams or strollers are allowed.
The bus departs from Shinjuku; travel time varies but expect around 2-2.5 hours each way depending on traffic.
Yes, an English-speaking local guide accompanies the group throughout the day trip.
Owakudani is an active volcanic valley known for its sulfur vents and black eggs boiled in geothermal springs.
Yes, you’ll stop at Hakone Shrine with its famous floating torii gate by Lake Ashi.
The area offers various restaurants including those with vegetarian choices; your guide can help recommend suitable places.
Your day includes round-trip bus transport from Tokyo’s Shinjuku district with comfortable seats, an English-speaking local guide throughout the journey, entry for both the scenic Lake Ashi sightseeing cruise and Hakone Ropeway ride over Owakudani’s volcanic valley—all before returning to your original meeting point in the evening.
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