About Kanukiyama

## Kanukiyama (香貫山), Numazu: Short Trails, a Peace Tower, and Big-Sky Fuji Sightlines Kanukiyama (香貫山) is a low mountain/hill in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture, known for walking/hiking routes, an overlook area that includes a memorial peace tower, and wide views over the city—with Mount Fuji visible on clear days. Tourism Your listing summary (“Trails, peace tower & Mount Fuji views”) matches how Numazu’s tourism and city resources describe the area: it’s a straightforward nature-and-viewpoint outing that doesn’t require committing to a full-day trek. Tourism --- ## What you’ll actually find on Kanukiyama ### A viewpoint area with a memorial peace tower (香陵台 / 慰霊平和塔) Mid-mountain, Kanukiyama has an area commonly referred to as Kōryōdai (香陵台), noted for a memorial peace tower (慰霊平和塔). Numazu’s tourism portal specifically frames the site in the context of remembrance (including references to August 15 in Japan as the anniversary of the end of WWII) and identifies the tower as a focal point of the area. The city’s park page also describes that you can reach the mid-slope by car, and that the area includes a tower for war dead, rest facilities, and play equipment (family-friendly infrastructure rather than “pure wilderness”). ### City-and-water panoramas (and Fuji when conditions cooperate) From the Kanukiyama overlook, you’re looking out across Numazu City and surrounding landmarks. A regional travel page describing the viewpoint explicitly mentions seeing the Kano River (狩野川) running through the city, Mount Fuji beyond Ashitaka (愛鷹山), and Suruga Bay (駿河湾). Because visibility depends on weather and haze, treat Fuji as a conditional payoff rather than a guarantee. (This isn’t marketing-speak—it’s just reality for long-distance views in coastal Shizuoka.) --- ## How to get there (public transit + hiking time you can plan around) Numazu’s official tourism listing provides the cleanest practical access detail: - From JR Numazu Station, it’s about 8 minutes by bus to the Kanuki trailhead area. - The page instructs riders to get off at “Reizanji.” - From there, it describes about a 50-minute hike to the top. Tourism If you’re driving, Numazu’s listing and park references note parking options including a Kōryōdai parking lot, and another lot (Nakase) with listed hours on the tourism page. Tourism Outdated-data flag: parking rules, hours, and bus routes can change. The safest move is to confirm the current transit/parking details right before you go, even if you’re using an official page as your starting point. Tourism --- ## Choosing a route: what “Kanukiyama trails” usually means in practice Kanukiyama is often approached as a walking/hiking network rather than a single “one true trail.” Trail platforms list multiple routes in the area (i.e., more than one way up/down and loop options). A practical way to think about planning: - Fast, viewpoint-focused outing: aim for the overlook/Kōryōdai area plus a short walk, especially if time is tight. - More of a leg-stretcher: start from a lower trail access point and climb through to the higher viewpoints. - Sunset/dusk emphasis: Numazu’s tourism page highlights Kanukiyama specifically for night/dusk scenery, so timing your visit for late-day light can be part of the point. Tourism --- ## When to go for the best experience (and fewer annoyances) ### For Fuji: prioritize clarity over season If your main goal is “Fuji in the frame,” pick a day when forecasts indicate low haze and good visibility. The mountain isn’t far in absolute terms, but atmospheric conditions matter. ### For photography: dusk is explicitly a “thing” here Kanukiyama is promoted as a dusk/night viewpoint area by Numazu tourism. If you’re comfortable navigating after dark, bring a small light and plan your descent thoughtfully. Tourism ### For cherry blossoms: plan like a local park, not a remote hike Independent travel pages highlight spring blossoms around the tower area, including photos that combine cherry blossoms + the pagoda-like tower form + Fuji. Outdated-data flag: bloom timing varies year to year; don’t anchor plans to a fixed week without checking current sakura reports. --- ## What to bring (based on the actual terrain + amenities) Even though Kanukiyama is not a major alpine ascent, it’s still an outdoor hill environment: - Shoes with grip: paths can be dusty, leaf-covered, or slick after rain. - Layers: coastal breezes and late-day temperature drops can be sharper than you expect. - Water/snacks: the area has rest facilities, but you shouldn’t assume vending/food access at the exact moment you want it. - A small flashlight/headlamp if you’re timing dusk/night views. Tourism --- ## Accessibility and inclusivity notes (so you can plan realistically) Kanukiyama works well for a wide range of visitors because you can reach mid-slope areas by car and there are rest facilities and play equipment noted by the city—signals that it functions partly like a city park in the hills. That said: - The hike component (trailhead → higher points) will still involve inclines and uneven surfaces, which may be challenging for some mobility needs. - If someone in your group benefits from minimizing elevation gain, targeting the mid-slope viewpoint zone is often the most practical compromise (scenic payoff without committing to the full climb). --- ## A simple, high-confidence half-day plan ### Option A: “Views first” (minimal complexity) 1. Start at JR Numazu Station. 2. Take the bus toward the Kanuki trailhead area and get off at Reizanji (as described by Numazu tourism). Tourism 3. Walk uphill toward the viewpoint zones; prioritize the Kōryōdai / peace tower area for broad city views. ### Option B: “Dusk skyline” 1. Arrive mid-to-late afternoon. 2. Spend daylight on the overlook and short trails. 3. Stay through dusk for the viewpoint emphasis Numazu tourism specifically calls out. Tourism --- ## About the exact height/elevation (why you’ll see conflicting numbers) You may see different stated elevations for Kanukiyama on various sites. For example, one peak database lists it at 198 m, while other pages sometimes cite different figures. App Because these numbers conflict across sources, I’m not going to assert a single exact elevation as “the” fact here. --- ## Internal links note (requirement check) You asked for two contextual internal links “if possible.” I can’t include verified RealJourneyTravels.com internal URLs because I don’t have confirmed slugs/paths for your Numazu or Shizuoka pages in this session. If you share two target URLs (or your standard destination URL pattern), I’ll weave them in cleanly and contextually without filler. --- ### Quick reference (from your dataset) - Place: Kanukiyama (香貫山), Numazu, Shizuoka, Japan Tourism - Coordinates: 35.0923089, 138.8773813 (as provided) - Known for: trails, a memorial peace tower area, city panoramas, Fuji views when clear Tourism

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Kanukiyama

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Updated April 15, 2024

## Kanukiyama (香貫山), Numazu: Short Trails, a Peace Tower, and Big-Sky Fuji Sightlines

Kanukiyama (香貫山) is a low mountain/hill in Numazu, Shizuoka Prefecture, known for walking/hiking routes, an overlook area that includes a memorial peace tower, and wide views over the city—with Mount Fuji visible on clear days. Tourism

Your listing summary (“Trails, peace tower & Mount Fuji views”) matches how Numazu’s tourism and city resources describe the area: it’s a straightforward nature-and-viewpoint outing that doesn’t require committing to a full-day trek. Tourism

## What you’ll actually find on Kanukiyama

### A viewpoint area with a memorial peace tower (香陵台 / 慰霊平和塔)
Mid-mountain, Kanukiyama has an area commonly referred to as Kōryōdai (香陵台), noted for a memorial peace tower (慰霊平和塔). Numazu’s tourism portal specifically frames the site in the context of remembrance (including references to August 15 in Japan as the anniversary of the end of WWII) and identifies the tower as a focal point of the area.

The city’s park page also describes that you can reach the mid-slope by car, and that the area includes a tower for war dead, rest facilities, and play equipment (family-friendly infrastructure rather than “pure wilderness”).

### City-and-water panoramas (and Fuji when conditions cooperate)
From the Kanukiyama overlook, you’re looking out across Numazu City and surrounding landmarks. A regional travel page describing the viewpoint explicitly mentions seeing the Kano River (狩野川) running through the city, Mount Fuji beyond Ashitaka (愛鷹山), and Suruga Bay (駿河湾).

Because visibility depends on weather and haze, treat Fuji as a conditional payoff rather than a guarantee. (This isn’t marketing-speak—it’s just reality for long-distance views in coastal Shizuoka.)

## How to get there (public transit + hiking time you can plan around)

Numazu’s official tourism listing provides the cleanest practical access detail:

– From JR Numazu Station, it’s about 8 minutes by bus to the Kanuki trailhead area.
– The page instructs riders to get off at “Reizanji.”
– From there, it describes about a 50-minute hike to the top. Tourism

If you’re driving, Numazu’s listing and park references note parking options including a Kōryōdai parking lot, and another lot (Nakase) with listed hours on the tourism page. Tourism

Outdated-data flag: parking rules, hours, and bus routes can change. The safest move is to confirm the current transit/parking details right before you go, even if you’re using an official page as your starting point. Tourism

## Choosing a route: what “Kanukiyama trails” usually means in practice

Kanukiyama is often approached as a walking/hiking network rather than a single “one true trail.” Trail platforms list multiple routes in the area (i.e., more than one way up/down and loop options).

A practical way to think about planning:

– Fast, viewpoint-focused outing: aim for the overlook/Kōryōdai area plus a short walk, especially if time is tight.
– More of a leg-stretcher: start from a lower trail access point and climb through to the higher viewpoints.
– Sunset/dusk emphasis: Numazu’s tourism page highlights Kanukiyama specifically for night/dusk scenery, so timing your visit for late-day light can be part of the point. Tourism

## When to go for the best experience (and fewer annoyances)

### For Fuji: prioritize clarity over season
If your main goal is “Fuji in the frame,” pick a day when forecasts indicate low haze and good visibility. The mountain isn’t far in absolute terms, but atmospheric conditions matter.

### For photography: dusk is explicitly a “thing” here
Kanukiyama is promoted as a dusk/night viewpoint area by Numazu tourism. If you’re comfortable navigating after dark, bring a small light and plan your descent thoughtfully. Tourism

### For cherry blossoms: plan like a local park, not a remote hike
Independent travel pages highlight spring blossoms around the tower area, including photos that combine cherry blossoms + the pagoda-like tower form + Fuji.
Outdated-data flag: bloom timing varies year to year; don’t anchor plans to a fixed week without checking current sakura reports.

## What to bring (based on the actual terrain + amenities)

Even though Kanukiyama is not a major alpine ascent, it’s still an outdoor hill environment:

– Shoes with grip: paths can be dusty, leaf-covered, or slick after rain.
– Layers: coastal breezes and late-day temperature drops can be sharper than you expect.
– Water/snacks: the area has rest facilities, but you shouldn’t assume vending/food access at the exact moment you want it.
– A small flashlight/headlamp if you’re timing dusk/night views. Tourism

## Accessibility and inclusivity notes (so you can plan realistically)

Kanukiyama works well for a wide range of visitors because you can reach mid-slope areas by car and there are rest facilities and play equipment noted by the city—signals that it functions partly like a city park in the hills.

That said:
– The hike component (trailhead → higher points) will still involve inclines and uneven surfaces, which may be challenging for some mobility needs.
– If someone in your group benefits from minimizing elevation gain, targeting the mid-slope viewpoint zone is often the most practical compromise (scenic payoff without committing to the full climb).

## A simple, high-confidence half-day plan

### Option A: “Views first” (minimal complexity)
1. Start at JR Numazu Station.
2. Take the bus toward the Kanuki trailhead area and get off at Reizanji (as described by Numazu tourism). Tourism
3. Walk uphill toward the viewpoint zones; prioritize the Kōryōdai / peace tower area for broad city views.

### Option B: “Dusk skyline”
1. Arrive mid-to-late afternoon.
2. Spend daylight on the overlook and short trails.
3. Stay through dusk for the viewpoint emphasis Numazu tourism specifically calls out. Tourism

## About the exact height/elevation (why you’ll see conflicting numbers)
You may see different stated elevations for Kanukiyama on various sites. For example, one peak database lists it at 198 m, while other pages sometimes cite different figures. App
Because these numbers conflict across sources, I’m not going to assert a single exact elevation as “the” fact here.

## Internal links note (requirement check)
You asked for two contextual internal links “if possible.” I can’t include verified RealJourneyTravels.com internal URLs because I don’t have confirmed slugs/paths for your Numazu or Shizuoka pages in this session. If you share two target URLs (or your standard destination URL pattern), I’ll weave them in cleanly and contextually without filler.

### Quick reference (from your dataset)
– Place: Kanukiyama (香貫山), Numazu, Shizuoka, Japan Tourism
– Coordinates: 35.0923089, 138.8773813 (as provided)
– Known for: trails, a memorial peace tower area, city panoramas, Fuji views when clear Tourism

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