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Canadian World Traveller Spring 2024 Issue

Now in our 22nd year of publishing, World Traveler explores the culture and history of worldwide destinations, sharing the adventure of discovery with our readers and motivating them to make their travel dreams a reality. World Traveler helps sophisticated, independent travelers choose their next destination by offering a lively blend of intelligent, informative articles and tantalizing photographic images from the world’s best destinations, cruises, accommodations and activities to suit every traveler's taste.

Now in our 22nd year of publishing, World Traveler explores the culture and history of worldwide destinations, sharing the adventure of discovery with our readers and motivating them to make their travel dreams a reality. World Traveler helps sophisticated, independent travelers choose their next destination by offering a lively blend of intelligent, informative articles and tantalizing photographic images from the world’s best destinations, cruises, accommodations and activities to suit every traveler's taste.

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Article and photography by Steve Gillick<br />

The poster said it all. It was prominently<br />

displayed at the front of the<br />

local bus taking us from Shirahama<br />

to the Kumano Kodo Pilgrimage route in<br />

Japan's Wakayama Prefecture. Produced by<br />

GoTokyo, the poster read, "Discover Different<br />

<strong>World</strong>s: Tokyo – Urban and Energetic;<br />

Wakayama – Calm and Spiritual".<br />

Located on Honshu Island, Wakayama<br />

Prefecture borders the prefectures of Osaka,<br />

Mie, and Nara. We were drawn here by<br />

nature: hiking, interacting with forests, mar-<br />

veling at mountains, and exploring shrines.<br />

The prefecture's name does justice to this<br />

sense of yearning for something different.<br />

Waka is a Japanese poem, and Yama means<br />

'mountain', specifically the Kii Mountain<br />

Range. So, 'Wakayama' refers to the poetry of<br />

the mountains, literally and figuratively.<br />

We eased ourselves out of the energetic tourist<br />

scene in Tokyo in stages, first in Osaka, where<br />

culinary bliss is always on the menu, and then<br />

in Nara, to engage with the 8th-century temples<br />

and shrines.<br />

We finally arrived in Wakayama Prefecture<br />

with a return visit to Koyasan (https://worldtraveler.travel/japan-imbibing-the-spirit-ofjapan/).<br />

We wandered the pathways of the<br />

Okunoin Cemetery, passing time-worn mosscovered<br />

gravestones amidst giant cedars that<br />

symbolize eternal life and immortality. The<br />

paths lead to the mausoleum of Kobo Daishi,<br />

the founder of Shingon Buddhism, who is<br />

believed to be resting in eternal meditation.<br />

After spending the night at a Temple lodging,<br />

we continued south to Shirahama, which<br />

www.worldtraveler.travel - Already 22 Years!

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