Our Shirahama travel essentials guide includes all the essential information you’ll need to make your vacation in this Japanese city one to remember fondly for years to come. First, we will examine the best times to visit, including rainfall, climate and the hottest months of the year. Then we’ll examine the basics of things like electrical outlets, emergency calls and currency. After that, we will look at transportation, and how to get to and around the city.
Finally, we’ll detail a few of the most important festivals and most popular points of interest to be sure you visit while you’re here. In the end, you’ll have everything you need for a fantastic Shirahama vacation.
Shirahama is easy to reach from many other major destinations in Japan. Most visitors travel here from Osaka or Tokyo. The most popular ways to come into Shirahama include flying and catching the train.
Shirahama has its own airport, Nanki Shirahama Airport, which offers direct flights to and from Tokyo’s Haneda Airport. The vast majority of flights that come into this city are connecting flights from Tokyo, so it’s likely you will catch a plane to Tokyo, and then catch a direct flight here from there. After landing, buses run to the city centre; the trip takes only about 15 minutes.
Shirahama Station is a major station along the JR Kisei Line. It’s connected to Osaka, and limited express trains run every hour. The station is a 10-minute bus ride outside of the city centre, and several buses run per hour straight to central Shirahama’s beach, as well as directly to several points of interest.
Ports are not a common way to get to Shirahama. The closest are Hidaka Port and Shingu Port, and cruise ships come and go from both of these ports on a regular basis. Hidaka Port is about 45 minutes north of the city, while Shingu port is about an hour and 45 minutes east of the city centre.
Shirahama has a well-developed public transportation system. You can easily get from place to place in this town without any trouble. While you’re here, it’s a good idea to pick up a day pass for unlimited bus rides, or the Kansai Thru Pass, which is good for railroad, underground and bus trips throughout the entire Kansai Region. Transportation in the region is safe and reliable. You shouldn’t have any problems whatsoever getting around to wherever you wish to go, be it in the city centre or further afield.
Taxi cabs and rideshares do operate in Shirahama. The most common taxi cab service is Sirahama Daiichi Taxi cab, which provides normal taxi cabs and jumbo taxi cabs if you’re traveling with the family or larger groups. Taxi cabs can be called to schedule a pickup just like anywhere. In addition, Uber, Lyft and other rideshares run in the town and can make for a convenient way to get anywhere you want to go, directly. They work the same as they do in the west; just fire up the app and schedule a pickup.
The bus network in Shirahama is robust. Several bus companies serve the Wakayama prefecture and range from transportation to and from airports to regional bus lines, as well as lines designed to provide express transportation to certain points of interest. These buses offer a budget alternate to get around town once you learn which buses go where, and how often they run. Your day pass or Thru Pass will get you all over town and even to other neighborhoods like Shingu, Osaka, Tokyo, Nara and beyond.
If you really want the freedom to go where you want to go, when you want to go there, a car rental is the ticket. Car rental agencies are available as well in Shirahama, with most of the big name companies available, including Europcar, Nissan Rent-a-Car, ORIX, Sunnycars and many others. The best place to arrange a car rental in Shirahama is at the Nanki-Shirahama Airport. You’ll find the best variety and service here when you land. Your hotel may also be able to point you to some local car rental services.
Riding a bicycle can be a wonderful way to reconnect with nature, get in some exercise and go green while getting around wherever you like to go. Some of the attractions in the region may be a bit far to travel to using a bicycle hire, but many parks and neighborhoods also have bicycle trails to explore and a cycle hire can allow you to cycle around without having your personal bicycle in Japan. Bicycles can be rented at the Shirasuna tourist information center near Shirahama Beach, including regular and electric cycles.
Kumano Sansho Shrine is at the base of Gongenzaki Cape, an area famed for its white sand beaches. The shrine honors several Shinto gods and is set against the dramatic background of a towering sacred cliff, a walking path along the coast and a nationally designated Natural Monument in the Shirahama Mudstone Dike.
This secret pirate cave is hidden just next to a famous and iconic Wakayama Prefecture beach. Historically, it served as a lookout for fishermen on the search for the pirates that ravaged this stretch of coast. The clifftop view is stunning, but the real attraction is the secret pirate cave network 36 meters below.
The Minakata Kumagusu Museum is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and offers visitors a vast collection of artifacts, documents, photographs, education and ephemera honoring and related to the achievements of the great natural scholar of natural history and folkloric studies, Kumagusu Minakata, who also spearheaded the nation’s nature conservation movement.
Engetsu Island is a space that shows the artistry of nature in all its forms, with untamed wilderness and breath-taking ocean views. At sunset, the sun can be seen through a moon-shaped circle at the center of the island, which was eroded by the sea, forming an iconic photo opportunity.
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