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[Held in May 2024] A special event in honor of Children's Day! "Spring Festival" - 5/2 to 5/6
Chiba Prefectural Boso-no-Mura, an experiential museum, will be holding various events related to Children's Day for five days under the concept of "enjoying the long weekend in traditional scenery." The event will be fun for the whole family, from children to adults, all day long.
What is the Boso Village "Spring Festival"?
Chiba Prefectural Boso no Mura (Sakaemachi, Inba District, Chiba Prefecture) is a hands-on museum where you can learn about the history of the Boso region by experiencing its traditional lifestyle and techniques firsthand.
We will be holding an event where you can watch carp streamers gracefully swimming through the old townscape and rural mountain scenery while experiencing and experiencing the Tango Festival.
Event details
・Dates: May 2nd (Thursday) to 6th (Monday, substitute holiday), 2024
・Time: 9:00-16:30
Location: Chiba Prefectural Boso Village (1028 Ryukakuji, Sakaemachi, Inba-gun, Chiba Prefecture)
Special events: Carp streamer display, folk art performance of "Sasagawa no Kagura", street performances, etc.
・Experiences: making pinwheels, painting mini carp streamers, making newspaper helmets, trying on armor, etc.
Access: Take the bus bound for Ryukakujidai Shako from the west exit of JR Narita Station for 20 minutes, then get off at Ryukakujidai 2-chome and walk for 10 minutes
From the Narita IC on the Higashi-Kanto Expressway, go straight for about 3km towards Narita city, then go straight for 7km towards Sakae at the Tsuchiya intersection.
Approximately 30 minutes by taxi from Narita Airport
Admission fee: 300 yen for adults, 150 yen for high school and university students
Free for junior high school students and younger, people aged 65 and older, and people with a disability certificate and one caregiver
*Additional fees may apply for various experiences.
・Official website: https://www.chiba-muse.or.jp/MURA/
Boso-no-Mura is a museum whose purpose is to directly experience Boso's traditional lifestyle and techniques, as well as learn about its history through exhibits of archaeological artifacts excavated from various parts of the prefecture, as well as merchant houses, samurai residences, and farmhouses. The "Craft-making Area" recreates merchant houses, samurai residences, farms, etc. in Boso from the late Edo period to the early Meiji period, including the landscape and environment of those days. In addition to exhibits, visitors can learn about traditional techniques and the lifestyle of the time through direct experience. In the "Fudoki-no-Oka Area" where you can learn about history and nature, you will find rich woodlands and Ryukakuji burial mounds, one of the largest in the prefecture, spread throughout the area. You can see the Fudoki-no-Oka Museum, which exhibits archaeological materials excavated from primitive and ancient ruins, as well as relocated cultural property buildings.
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