東京夜散歩 新宿酉の市前夜祭(新宿駅~花園神社~ゴールデン街~桂花~ベルグ)
I’m currently at Shinjuku Station. I’m heading to Hanazono Shrine’s Tori no Ichi. The average number of passengers getting on and off at Shinjuku Station is approximately 3.53 million people per day. When the station was built in 1885, it was surrounded by fields, so it’s amazing. It’s a sign of development.
This is the east exit station plaza, and if you go straight ahead you will find Kabukicho.This area seems to be getting more and more dazzling every year. This day, probably because it was the night before a holiday, there were a lot of people
At the entrance to Kabukicho. Don Quijote is a landmark on the right. But today we are heading to Hanazono Shrine instead of Kabukicho! I can see the food stalls. Will we be able to proceed because of so many people? “Hashimaki” is recently popular.
Most of the people who come here are young people.I the fruit candy store We arrived at the entrance, but it was too crowded… I had to walk a little further to another entrance. I went to the front entrance. I could hear a voice calling out. It was a Freakshow
Kappa (mythical water-dwelling creature) Palace I remember that there used to be a “snake woman”. If you want to see if it’s real, be sure to enter. You can hear the sound of three, seven, and seven beats. A number of lanterns have been dedicated.
This fine rake is said to cost 120,000 yen (≒$800). When visiting a shrine, the etiquette is to bow twice, clap twice, and bow once. Finally, it’s my turn. Watch the video. I hope you’ll see it a lot.It looks like the three-to-seven beats are about to start. It’s a really big rake.
When a business deal with a rake is concluded, we tighten the three rakes to pray for prosperous business. The rake is originally an agricultural tool used for cleaning, and it brings good luck and money. It has become a lucky charm.
It is said that if you buy a rake that is larger than the previous year, your business will prosper. There are various theories about the origin of the Tori no Ichi. One theory is that it began as a harvest festival in gratitude to the Washi Daimyojin shrine near Edo, and
The lucky rake appears at a market that sells agricultural tools and agricultural products. Nowadays, a wide variety of rakes are sold.The Tori no Ichi is held at a shrine related to birds and eagles.(Tori means bird.) Otori Shrine is also enshrined in Hanazono Shrine. The name tag is written on it.
I also bought one. It’s small, so it costs 2000 yen ($14) Now, I’m hungry. Where should we go? Golden Gai is right near Hanazono Shrine. I arrived in no time. There are about 300 bars in Golden Gai. It’s lively and lively. It’s a fun area
, but the bar I wanted to go to was full… There’s a love counseling office for middle-aged people. I decided to have ramen, but there was a line here too! give up on the line here and go to another ramen shop like Ramen Keika. Keika is a Kumamoto Province ramen shop
That has been in business for 50 years in Shinjuku, where competition is fierce. It features pork bone soup, “maa” oil, and thick noodles.Mar “maa” oil is said to be “magic oil.’ ‘This is “thick meat (taro).” ”. Braised pork. Thick noodles with braised pork and cabbage! The delicious
Ramen was delicious, but I was thirsty at BERG, a famous Snack store located in the basement of Shinjuku Station. Let’s have a quick beer and go home. Beer, sausage, and sauer Kraftberg’s sausage is a masterpiece that won an international competition, and the beer together costs less than 1,000 yen ($7).
Both the ramen and the sausage were delicious. Let’s go home. It’s past 10 p.m., but we’re in Shinjuku. It’s dangerous to walk on the platform drunk at the station, so be careful when Here comes the train home. I’m sorry to leave you behind, but that’s all for today.
東京・新宿花園神社の「酉の市」前夜祭へ行くついでに夜さんぽ。参拝後、ゴールデン街をうろちょろして、桂花で熊本ラーメンをいただき、ベルグでビールとソーセージ&ザワークラフトで〆。
A night stroll on the way to the eve of “Tori-no-ichi” (rooster market) at Shinjuku Hanazono Shrine, Tokyo. After visiting the shrine, I wandered around Golden Gai, had Kumamoto ramen(Pork bone salt ramen) at Keika, and finished with beer, sausage, and sauerkraut at Berg.
#Tokyo #Shinjuku #festival #ramen #goldenstreet #tonkotsu #nightwalk