Understand
[edit]Tourist information site
[edit]The local tourist association has a partly multilingual guide site.
Get in
[edit]Kameyama is on the JR Kansai Line, roughly half way between Kamo Station in Kyoto Prefecture and Nagoya. The Kamo-Kameyama section of the Kansai Line consists of one track and is not electrified, and is thus served by one- or two-car diesel trains, running once per hour, and taking 90 minutes to cover about 60 km of track. The Kameyama-Nagoya section is electrified, and thus served by regular electric trains that you see everywhere else in Japan.
Get around
[edit]See
[edit]- 1 Kameyama Castle (亀山城), ☏ +81 595-82-1111.
- 2 Seki-juku (関宿). The 47th stop of the Tokaido, an old road that connected Tokyo to Kyoto. The Seki-juku is located along a fairly long road of well-preserved historic districts; One of the best stations of the entire Tokaido Route.
Do
[edit]Buy
[edit]Eat
[edit]- Cantinho da roca (カンチニョダロサ) - Brazilian restaurant, which appears to be a hang out spot of the local members of the Brazilian diaspora. A friendly proprietor who speaks Portuguese, but not much English or Japanese, runs this self-service place with a couple rice cookers containing Brazilian home cooking, including rice and feijoada that are absolutely delicious. The patrons will help you translate your requests from Japanese into Portuguese, but it's good to be able to at least say "thank you" for the meal — "obrigado" in Portuguese. A large plate of rice and feijoada, some other meat side dish, salad, and a bottle of water run only ¥830. Head north-east from the station, down under the bridge, and walk for a couple hundred meters. Cross the wide road that runs east-west, and you'll find the small building that has a "Restaurante" sign outside.
Drink
[edit]Sleep
[edit]Connect
[edit]Go next
[edit]
Routes through Kameyama |
Nara ← Iga ← | W E | → Yokkaichi → Nagoya |
END ← | N S | → Tsu → Wakayama |
END ← | W E | → Yokkaichi → Nagoya |
END ← | N S | → Tsu → Ise |
Kyoto ← Koka ← | W E | → END |