Spotted while walking through Shosenkyo!
#dog #shiba #shibainu #japan #flowers #cute #dogsofinstgram #shosenkyo #shosenkyogorge #日本 #いぬ #いぬ🐶 #芝犬 #昇仙峡 #山梨 #花 #甲府 (at Shosenkyo Gorge)
japan.kyuudou.010206.fujiprovia100f.04 by ommphoto on Flickr.
おお、これはもしや「武者窓」というやつでは?初めて見た。
The fields at Sengokuhara we’re breathtaking! The way they shone with gold was even more beautiful than I was expecting. And hiding in the little side-paths was fun as well!
#sengokuhara #hakone #japan #mountains #fields #fieldsofgold #箱根 #日本 #仙石原 #すすき草原 #すすき #神奈川 #山 #草原
People of Japan, La gente de Japón, Povo do Japão, Orang Jepang, คนของประเทศญี่ปุ่น , Japonya İnsanlar, شعب اليابان , Japanilaisille, Les gens du Japon, Nhân dân Nhật Bản, Ludzie z Japonii, Jaapani rahvale, Folk i Japan, जापान के लोग , אנשים של יפן , Populus Iaponia, Oamenii din Japonia, Народу Японии, Japan Menschen, Yaponiya insanlar, Fólkið í Japan, daoine an tSeapáin, Mense van Japan, Njerëzit e Japonisë, Մարդիկ Ճապոնիայում, Gente del Giappone, מענטשן פון יאַפּאַן, Mae pobl o Japan, Народу Японії, جاپان کے لوگ, Homoj de Japanio, Mensen van Japan, La gent de Japó, Pobo do Xapón, ಜಪಾನಿನ ಜನರು, 訳文 Οι άνθρωποι της Ιαπωνίας, જાપાનના લોકો, ხალხი Japan, Moun ki nan Japon, Ljudi iz Japana, Wong Jepang, Människor i Japan, Ľudia v Japonsku, Ljudje Japonskem, Watu wa Japan, Ang mga tawo sa Japan, Народ Јапана, Mga tao ng Japan, ஜப்பான் மக்கள், Lidé v Japonsku, జపాన్ ప్రజలు, Folk i Japan, Japoniako jendea, Az emberek a japán, Хората на Япония, Народу Японіі, مردم ژاپن, জাপানের মানুষ , Ljudi Japana, Луѓе на Јапонија, जपानची लोक, Nies tal-Ġappun, Orang Jepun, Cov neeg ntawm Nyiv, ປະຊາຊົນຂອງປະເທດຍີ່ປຸ່ນ , Cilvēki Japānā, Žmonės Japonijoje, 일본의 사람들, brachachn nei bratesa chbon, 日本の人々
Eiji Ohashi aka 大橋英児 (Japanese, b. 1955, Wakkanai, Hokkaido, Japan) - For years Eiji Ohashi has been capturing Japan through its lonely Vending Machines at Night and during Snowstorms. Photography
Photographer: Alfonso Cáceres
A Macedonian potioneer wears the traditional protective mask of potions masters in order to harvest Carevi Pogreb mushrooms. Also known as King’s Funeral, the violently purple mushroom is highly toxic in all but the smallest quantities, and even a few inhaled spores can cause nightmarish hallucinations for hours on end–hence the protective filtration mask. However, the poisonous mushroom can fetch huge sums of galleons both from medical apothecaries as an ingredient in life-saving potions and from the black market as a difficult to detect poison, and its price is only driven upwards by its exclusive habitat in Macedonian forests.
(King’s funeral mushrooms belong to themonsterblogofmonsters!)
Sleeping Cat
Kaigyokusai (Masatsugu) (Japan, 1813-1892)
Japan, mid- to late 19th century
Costumes; Accessories
Ivory with sumi, red pigment
Soon it will be 通し矢 Tooshi-ya (also romanized as “toh-shiya” as evidenced by this sign and on the Japan National Tourism Organization’s website) which takes place at Sanjusangen-do, a large Buddhist temple in Kyoto, Japan.
Tooshi-ya literally translates to “a passing arrow” but contains a different kind of meaning as a well-known long range archery event. Every year, on the Sunday closest to January 15th (this year, Sunday is actually on the 15th) hundreds of archers of all different rankings and ages and from all over Japan gather at the western veranda of Sanjusangen-do to shoot at targets 60 meters away.