SPOT
Travel Highlights 2020
January 22, 2021
2020 has been a pretty crazy year, I'm sure it was for everyone of us. The pandemic caught everyone by surprise and many of us had to halt and scrap our travel plans, myself included. However, the year still flew by, and I will forever recall 2020 not by the seasons, but based on the various stages outlined by the government: state of emergency, please refrain from going out, domestic travel is okay again, and refrain from going out once again.
Almost all my travel this year was done before the state of emergency was announced and during the "domestic travel is okay again" period, and were done following the safety manners and requests outlined by the government.
Given how much travel was curtailed, I still managed to visit 24 out of 47 prefectures in 2020. My most visited prefecture was Nagano, which I went more than ten times. Additionally, I visited a few more cities, which I had never been before, and those made up the majority of my 2020 highlights. Read on to find out what my top five highlights for 2020 are, and hopefully that might give you some travel inspiration for your next trip!
Almost all my travel this year was done before the state of emergency was announced and during the "domestic travel is okay again" period, and were done following the safety manners and requests outlined by the government.
Given how much travel was curtailed, I still managed to visit 24 out of 47 prefectures in 2020. My most visited prefecture was Nagano, which I went more than ten times. Additionally, I visited a few more cities, which I had never been before, and those made up the majority of my 2020 highlights. Read on to find out what my top five highlights for 2020 are, and hopefully that might give you some travel inspiration for your next trip!
#5: Apple picking in Kuroishi, Aomori Prefecture
It was my first time picking apples in Japan, and no better place than in Aomori. The prefecture grows about 60 percent of the apples in Japan, and the Fuji apple, the most popular apple variety, was first cultivated in Aomori about 80 years ago. End October found me in Kuroishi, southwestern Aomori, and it was the middle of apple season. I had a grand time picking and eating apples, though I was a little too early to pick Fuji apples. I was really impressed by the locals who knew all their local apple varieties just be looking at the tree, and some just by looking at the fruit!
All-you-can-eat apple picking experience at the orchard