يمكن للرضع والأطفال الصغار الركوب في عربة الأطفال أو عربة الأطفال
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تتوفر خيارات النقل العام في مكان قريب
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لا ينصح به للمسافرين الذين يعانون من إصابات في العمود الفقري
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لا ينصح به للمسافرات الحوامل
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لا ينصح به للمسافرين الذين يعانون من ضعف صحة القلب والأوعية الدموية
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مناسبة لجميع مستويات اللياقة البدنية
سياسة الإلغاء
للحصول على استرداد كامل للمبلغ، قم بإلغاء الحجز قبل ٢٤ ساعة على الأقل من موعد المغادرة المقرر.
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لاسترداد المبلغ بالكامل، يجب الإلغاء قبل 24 ساعة على الأقل من موعد بدء التجربة.
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يُعرض وقت انتهاء الحجوزات بالتوقيت المحلي.
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إذا قمت بالإلغاء قبل أقل من 24 ساعة من وقت بدء الجولة، فلن تتمكّن من استرداد المبلغ الذي دفعته.
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لإجراء هذه الجولة، يجب توافر حدّ أدنى من المسافرين. إذا تم إلغاؤها بسبب عدم استيفاء الحد الأدنى، فسوف يُعرض عليك إمكانية اختيار تاريخ/تجربة مختلفة أو استرداد المبلغ بالكامل.
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لن يتم قبول أي تغييرات تجريها قبل أقل من 24 ساعة من وقت بدء الجولة.
When the sun sets and the tourists head back to Osaka, Nara's oldest streets wake up. Not with noise, with silence. The kind that feels like it's listening to us.
Join us for a walk through the ancient capital after dark. Lantern in hand, we move through temple gates, stone paths, and forgotten corners of a city that has been accumulating stories for 1,300 years. Urban legends. Cursed places. Spirits that never left.
Your guide carries a chochin, a traditional Japanese lantern, and knows where the darkness gets thick.
We meet at the storefront of Starbucks Coffee, Sarusawaike when the last light fades.
Some of what you will hear is legend. Some of it is history. We'll let you decide whic...
ما تشمله الجولة
٢ ساعات
مُقدم في الإنكليزية & الإسبانية
إلغاء مجاني
بطاقة رقمية
٢ ساعات
مُقدم في الإنكليزية & الإسبانية
إلغاء مجاني
بطاقة رقمية
ما تشمله الجولة
English / Spanish / Japanese speaking guide
Meals
نقاط التلاقي
الانطلاق
We meet at 8:00 PM in front of Starbucks Coffee - Nara Sarusawa Pond.
Please arrive at the meeting point 10 minutes before the scheduled departure.
العودة
Nara Ghost Walk
نبذة
When the sun sets and the tourists head back to Osaka, Nara's oldest streets wake up. Not with noise, with silence. The kind that feels like it's listening to us.
Join us for a walk through the ancient capital after dark. Lantern in hand, we move through temple gates, stone paths, and forgotten corners of a city that has been accumulating stories for 1,300 years. Urban legends. Cursed places. Spirits that never left.
Your guide carries a chochin, a traditional Japanese lantern, and knows where the darkness gets thick.
We meet at the storefront of Starbucks Coffee, Sarusawaike when the last light fades.
Some of what you will hear is legend. Some of it is history. We'll let you decide whic...
ما تشمله الجولة
٢ ساعات
مُقدم في الإنكليزية & الإسبانية
إلغاء مجاني
بطاقة رقمية
٢ ساعات
مُقدم في الإنكليزية & الإسبانية
إلغاء مجاني
بطاقة رقمية
ما تشمله الجولة
English / Spanish / Japanese speaking guide
Meals
نقاط التلاقي
الانطلاق
We meet at 8:00 PM in front of Starbucks Coffee - Nara Sarusawa Pond.
Please arrive at the meeting point 10 minutes before the scheduled departure.
العودة
برنامج الجولة
1
Learn the tragic legend of the Uneme — a court lady from the Nara Period who served the emperor, fell desperately in love with him, and, when his affection faded, draped her robe over a willow tree by this bank before throwing herself into Sarusawa Pond. The willow itself no longer stands, but a stone monument marks where it once grew. Even the poet Kakinomoto no Hitomaro was moved to write a haunting verse about the image of her hair floating among the pond's weeds.
٠ دقيقة
2
Built by local people out of sympathy for the spirit of the drowned court lady, this small shrine has an unusual feature: its altar faces away from the pond. According to legend, the spirit of the Uneme found it too painful to face the water where she died, and turned the shrine around — overnight — on her own. Look closely and you'll see the back of the shrine is what faces the pond today. Note: the shrine gate is only open on Sundays and public holidays; on weeknights, it is best appreciated from outside.
٠ دقيقة
3
This small corner shrine is home to the Dōsojin — a border deity traditionally placed at crossroads and boundaries to ward off evil and disease. Over centuries, the deity's name evolved from Sai-no-kami to Sae-no-kami, and the character for "sae" was eventually read as "sai" — meaning dice — linking the deity to gambling. Today it's worshipped as a god of luck in contests and games. The punchline? A local legend says this very deity once played against the deity of the nearby Gorhyo Shrine — and lost almost all his followers, even pawning his mosquito net. The large sacred stone on the left of the gate is said to give luck to those who take a small chip home.
٠ دقيقة
4
Founded in 800 AD by imperial decree, this shrine is dedicated to the spirit of Princess Inoue (Ikami-naishinnō), consort of Emperor Kōnin and mother of Crown Prince Osabe — both of whom died in suspicious circumstances after being accused of cursing the emperor through court intrigue, widely believed to be a political fabrication. After their deaths, a series of droughts, plagues, and disasters were blamed on their vengeful spirits, giving rise to the tradition of goryo shinkō — the belief that wrongly persecuted souls become powerful deities when properly enshrined.
٠ دقيقة
5
The small red monkey figures dangling from eaves throughout Naramachi all trace back to this little hall. The belief behind them is unsettling: a creature called the Sanshi no Mushi lives inside every human body, and on specific nights it slips out while you sleep to report your misdeeds to the heavens — shortening your life in the process. The remedy was to stay awake all night, gather with neighbors, eat konnyaku, and drink sake until dawn. The monkey figures were hung outside as a ward against the creature. The hall is visible through the latticed doors at night, and the glow of a lantern makes the whole thing feel just close enough to believable.
٠ دقيقة
6
معبد غانغو-جي
Founded in the sixth century in Asuka and later relocated to Nara during the capital's establishment, this UNESCO World Heritage site carries one of the city's most vivid ghost stories. Late at night, a demon would appear in the belfry — until a boy of extraordinary strength wrestled it into the darkness. The demon fled, and the alley where it disappeared is still called "Fushin-ga-tsuji" to this day.