Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Where do people like to spend their holidays?

Where do people like to spend their holidays?

Residents of the second world also need a rest, but then again, do they all use the same guidebook when they go on vacation, or do they copy guidebooks from each other? When they go out to travel, it seems that they are just those places, and sometimes even their activities are surprisingly consistent. So let's see where residents of the second world like to spend their holidays during rare holidays.

1.? Caojin Hot Spring is located in Caojin Town, Gunma Prefecture, Japan.

I think everyone is familiar with the story of soaking in hot springs. Many animations have this kind of welfare killing, but since most of the protagonists in the animation live in Tokyo, soaking in hot springs is of course the first choice! The natural gushing amount of hot springs in Cao Jin is about 40,000 liters per minute, ranking first among Japanese hot springs. In addition, the scenery here is beautiful and the hot springs are highly effective, attracting countless tourists every year. Many friends will also take Cao Jin Hot Springs as a stop when they visit Japan.

2.? Rehai, located in Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan

Rehai, like Cao Jin, is also a holy place for hot spring tourism. It is located in Izu Peninsula, Honshu Island, Japan, with more than 300 hot spring eyes. It seems that there is a fireworks show every summer, which is also worth looking forward to. Because it is adjacent to Sagami Bay, you can also taste seafood dishes made of fresh aquatic products.

3.? Guam is located at the southern tip of Mariana Islands in the western Pacific Ocean and is an overseas territory of the United States.

If the residents in the animation want to travel abroad, many of them go to Guam, and the "South Island" they mentioned often refers to Guam. There is no industrial pollution, no fishery damage, and natural coral reefs block the waves in the open sea, forming a calm shoal of hundreds of meters. Although I have never been to Guam in person, it is said that due to too many Japanese tourists, many locals can speak some Japanese to some extent, and even become the common language of Guam.