(Source: pixta)
Though one can reach the 329.5 m high summit of Mt. Nokogiri by car or on foot, you can also take a ropeway. The ropeway is 680 m long and takes about 4 minutes from the Sanroku Station to the top. On the ride, you can see great panoramic views stretching far into the distance.
(Source: pixta)
At 329.5 m, it isn’t the tallest mountain there is, but Mt. Nokogiri offers some spectacular views from the top. From the “Jusshu-ichirandai” observation deck, you can even see Oshima Island and Mt. Fuji, as well as Chichibu in Saitama.
(Source: pixta)
Engraved in the old stone quarry is a mysterious carving of a Kannon Buddhist statue. Cut into the bare rock is this Kannon statue that stands at about 30.3 m tall. The statue was finished in 1966 after 6 years of carving. The carving stands vertically in the stone and looking up at it from up close leaves quite an overwhelming impression.
(Source: pixta)
Located beside the mountain paths are small Buddha statues, none of which look the same. In total there are 1,553. Starting in 1779 during the Edo period it took about 20 years for the master sculptor, Ono Jingoro and his 27 disciples to complete all of the statues. It is said that no two of these little Buddha share the same expression.
(Source: pixta)
On the mountain is also enshrined one of the largest statues of Buddha in Japan passing even those in Nara and Kamakura, located in the 31 m wide area of the main plaza of the oldest Imperial temple in the Kanto area, Nihon-ji opened around 1,300 years ago. This is one of the largest Daibutsu in Japan and leaves quite an image carved straight from the natural stone. (Entrance fee to Nihon-ji Temple: 600 yen.)
(Source: pixta)
(Source: pixta)
Though one can reach the 329.5 m high summit of Mt. Nokogiri by car or on foot, you can also take a ropeway. The ropeway is 680 m long and takes about 4 minutes from the Sanroku Station to the top. On the ride, you can see great panoramic views stretching far into the distance.
(Source: pixta)
At 329.5 m, it isn’t the tallest mountain there is, but Mt. Nokogiri offers some spectacular views from the top. From the “Jusshu-ichirandai” observation deck, you can even see Oshima Island and Mt. Fuji, as well as Chichibu in Saitama.
(Source: pixta)
Engraved in the old stone quarry is a mysterious carving of a Kannon Buddhist statue. Cut into the bare rock is this Kannon statue that stands at about 30.3 m tall. The statue was finished in 1966 after 6 years of carving. The carving stands vertically in the stone and looking up at it from up close leaves quite an overwhelming impression.
(Source: pixta)
Located beside the mountain paths are small Buddha statues, none of which look the same. In total there are 1,553. Starting in 1779 during the Edo period it took about 20 years for the master sculptor, Ono Jingoro and his 27 disciples to complete all of the statues. It is said that no two of these little Buddha share the same expression.
(Source: pixta)
On the mountain is also enshrined one of the largest statues of Buddha in Japan passing even those in Nara and Kamakura, located in the 31 m wide area of the main plaza of the oldest Imperial temple in the Kanto area, Nihon-ji opened around 1,300 years ago. This is one of the largest Daibutsu in Japan and leaves quite an image carved straight from the natural stone. (Entrance fee to Nihon-ji Temple: 600 yen.)
(Source: pixta)