EXPLORING KYUSHU

02-16 november 2026
dr kathleen olive

Explore Japan’s southernmost island and discover six unique regions endowed with natural beauty, historic treasures, temples in verdant forest settings and steaming hot springs

OVERVIEW

The natural, historic and cultural delights of Kyushu’s uniquely differing prefectures are unveiled on this comprehensive journey through Japan’s third largest island, the centre of its early civilisation and cultures. 

This new active tour commences in Fukuoka, with an exploration of Kyushu’s spiritual and cultural heritage at Dazaifu Shrine and at the Kyushu National Museum. In Beppu, we enjoy an arts and crafts walking tour and wander through the so-called Seven Hells of its renowned hot springs.

Nearby Usuki features one of southern Japan’s most evocative and lesser-known sites, with rare stone buddhas carved directly from the rockface. Samurai residences and the Oita Prefectural Museum of Art, designed by internationally-renowned architect Shigeru Ban, are complemented by the serene forest temples of the Kunisaki Peninsula. We admire the natural beauty of Mount Aso and Takachiho Gorge, before heading to Suizenji strolling garden and the galleries and house museums of the castle town of Kumamoto.

Crossing to the isolated Amakusa Islands, we discover the places where Hidden Christians practised their faith in defiance of official edicts, and then arrive in Nagasaki, the centre of foreign trade in the Edo period and a sobering modern target of atomic warfare. The tour concludes as we return to Fukuoka, with visits to the pottery towns of Arita and Imari and to the fascinating Yayoi site at Yoshinogari.

Please note that while this itinerary does not include true hikes, there are trail walks and flights of steps as noted in the daily program. Travelling in rural Japan also requires a higher degree of physical fitness than time spent in a modern metropolis. We invite you to read the itinerary and contact us with queries.

TOUR LEADER

Dr Kathleen Olive is one of Australia’s best-known cultural tour leaders, with twenty years of experience in Western Europe, North America and Japan. She has led tours to Japan since 2017 and regularly presents lectures on Japanese art, such as for Arts National (formerly ADFAS).

Details

DATES: 02-16 November 2026

ITINERARY:
Fukuoka (5n), Beppu (3n), Takachiho (1n), Kumamoto (2n), Nagasaki (3n)

PRICE:
$13,650pp twinshare

SINGLE SUPPLEMENT:
$3,150 for sole use of a double room

DEPOSITS:
$1,500pp at the time of booking
$2,000pp due on 06 July 2026

FITNESS:
Challenging: some trail walks and short boat rides; potentially some sitting on tatami; unfamiliar diet; smell of gases at volcanoes and hot springs; differences in regional culture

GROUP SIZE:
max. 16 places

SOLD OUT - WAITLIST

To join the waitlist for this tour, please complete the form below or call us on (02) 8599 4201

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    • Explore Fukuoka’s Dazaifu Shrine and the serene Shinto temples of the Kunisaki Peninsula

    • Come face to face with the mysterious stone buddhas carved into the rock at Usuki, a National Treasure

    • Experience the natural beauty of Takachiho Gorge and the cultivated splendour of Suizenji Garden

    • Encounter the fascinating history of the Hidden Christians, persecuted by the Tokugawa shogunate

    • Admire a wide range of arts and crafts, with an in-depth look at Kyushu’s traditional pottery villages and diverse museums

    • Uncover a lesser-known side of Japanese history, from Yayoi settlements to Kumamoto’s imposing castle

  • MONDAY 02 NOVEMBER – ARRIVAL (D)

    The tour commences at 3.00pm in the lobby of our hotel in Fukuoka, where we meet tour leader Dr Kathleen Olive. Please note that no arrival transfer is included in the price of the tour. Some Japanese airlines offer free of charge through-flights from Tokyo to Fukuoka airport with their international airfares. Otherwise, domestic flights to Fukuoka depart regularly from all over Japan and are very well priced. The city is also connected by Shinkansen.

    We begin to familiarise ourselves on an orientation stroll to Shofukuji Temple. Founded in 1195, the temple has peaceful grounds and its distinctive arrangement of buildings are designated a national historic site that exemplifies the Zen approach to nature. Continuing to Tochoji Temple, established by Kobo Daishi in the ninth century, we admire the ten-metre-tall wooden statue, The Great Buddha of Fukuoka, and a five-storey pagoda that commemorates the temple’s 1200th anniversary. This evening we enjoy a welcome dinner together in a hotpot restaurant that serves mizutaki, a Fukuoka speciality. Overnight Fukuoka.

    TUESDAY 03 NOVEMBER – DAZAIFU (B, L)

    This morning we visit Dazaifu Tenmangu Shrine. This Shinto shrine is dedicated to Sugawara Michizane, a gifted scholar, politician and poet of the Heian period, revered as the god of learning and popular with students during exams. Michizane wrote poems in admiration of plum trees and the shrine’s legendary tobiume (flying plum tree) flew here from Kyoto to accompany Michizane during his exile from the imperial court. We continue to the Kyushu National Museum,an eye-catching glass structure with a curved steel roof. The museum focuses on Kyushu from pre-history to the Edo period. After lunch in the museum restaurant, we stop at a complex of ruins that was once the Kyushu Government Offices. During the Nara and Heian Periods, Dazaifu was Japan’s political centre and the country was administered from this site. We return to Fukuoka where the evening is at leisure. Overnight Fukuoka.

    WEDNESDAY 04 NOVEMBER – ART IN THE PARK (B)

    Ohori Park is centred around a large pond that served as a moat for neighbouring Fukuoka Castle. From November, it is a resting spot for migratory birds from Siberia. We visit the Japanese garden here, its large pond with a backdrop of artificial hills, dry landscape garden and three waterfalls. Also within Ohori Park is the Fukuoka Art Museum, where the collection of international pre-modern and contemporary art, by artists such as Dalì and Miró, sits alongside ancient Buddhist statues, Japanese folding screens, ceramics and textiles. The remainder of the day is at leisure, so you may like to visit the interactive teamLab Forest. It is the Fukuoka outpost of the renowned international digital art collective. Overnight Fukuoka.

    THURSDAY 05 NOVEMBER – BUBBLING BEPPU (B, L)

    Today we travel to Beppu, where mineral-rich volcanic hot springs bubble to the surface and give the town its reputation as one of Japan’s most famous onsen destinations. Beppu is also known as a centre for traditional arts and crafts, as we discover on a walking tour of the city that includes a visit to the Traditional Bamboo Crafts Centre. Here we participate in a short bamboo craft workshop. Our lunch today is prepared by harnessing the steam generated by the hot springs, used for centuries to cook a variety of meat and vegetables. After lunch we ascend Mount Tsurumi by ropeway to explore some of the walking paths at the summit and enjoy the panoramic views over Beppu. There is time to explore some of the seven “hells” of Beppu, spectacular hot springs whose waters have different mineral characteristics and therefore offer a variety of colours. Checking into our hotel, the evening is at leisure to enjoy a relaxing soak in the in-house onsen. Overnight Beppu.

    FRIDAY 06 NOVEMBER – USUKI STONE BUDDHAS (B, L)

    Carved into the rockface between the Kamakura and Heian periods, the magnificent Usuki Stone Buddhas we admire today are designated as National Treasures. The reason behind the creation of the 61 Buddhas or the identity of the sculptors who carved them are shrouded in mystery, but they are exceptional for their number, scale and craftmanship. We visit the nearby Mangetsuji Temple before exploring the Edo-style samurai residences and alleyways of Usuki. Lunch is in Oita, where we visit the Oita Prefectural Museum of Art (OPAM). Designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Shigeru Ban, the building’s exterior resembles woven bamboo handicrafts and reflects the collection of over 5,000 works by artists connected with Oita that is displayed within. Returning to Beppu, the evening is at leisure. Overnight Beppu.

    SATURDAY 07 NOVEMBER – KUNISAKI PENINSULA (B, L)

    Today we head to the Kunisaki Peninsula, where Futagoji Temple sits on the verdant slopes of Mount Futago. The temple was built in 718 by devotees of Rokugo Manzan, a unique combination of Shinto and Buddhism. After passing two imposing guardian statues at the entrance, we make a 10-minute ascent up uneven moss-covered stone steps to emerge into the autumn foliage of the main temple complex. We return to Beppu in the late afternoon where the evening is at leisure. Overnight Beppu.

    SUNDAY 08 NOVEMBER – FLOWERS AND MYTHOLOGY (B, L, D)

    We leave Beppu this morning and travel towards the Kyushu Mountains. Our first stop is Kuju Flower Park to view the carpet of seasonal displays of autumn flowers, such as cosmos and salvia, and their backdrop of the Kuju mountain range. After lunch we continue to Amano Iwato Shrine, home to one of Japan’s most important creation myths. A priest takes us to the cave where the sun goddess Amaterasu, the traditional ancestor of Japan’s emperors, sequestered herself in a rage after a dispute with her brother, taking the light of the world with her and plunging Japan into darkness. To lure her back out of the cave, a female deity performed a ribald dance to make the other gods laugh so hard that Amaterasu emerged to find out why. Light was restored! After check-in and dinner in our hotel, we enjoy a performance inspired by the Kagura dance of the mythical tale. Overnight Takachiho.

    MONDAY 09 NOVEMBER – TAKACHIHO GORGE (B, L)

    The narrow chasm that cuts through Takachiho Gorge is lined with spectacular 80-metre-high basalt cliffs, formed after eruptions of Mount Aso and resembling the scales of a dragon cutting through the gorge. The main feature of the gorge is Minainotaki waterfall, cascading 17 metres into the river below viewed against a backdrop of autumn foliage. There is the choice of viewing the waterfall by rowboat or from above on a paved walking path that runs along the edge of the gorge. After lunch, we transfer to Suizenji Jojuen Garden, built in the seventeenth century by the daimyo or feudal lord Hosokawa. The traditional landscape garden reproduces in miniature the fifty-three stations of the Tokaido Road that connected Edo and Kyoto, including a representation of Mount Fuji. We continue to Kumamoto and check in to our hotel. This evening is at leisure. Overnight Kumamoto.

    TUESDAY 10 NOVEMBER – ART AND HISTORY IN KUMAMOTO (B)

    With its imposing black exterior and steep ramparts overlooking the city, Kumamoto Castle is a symbol of Kumamoto and was highly regarded for the strategic effectiveness of its fortifications. We learn of the castle’s eventful history, including the damage caused by a devastating earthquake in 2016 and the subsequent reconstruction efforts over time. Located in the castle parklands, The Kumamoto Prefectural Museum of Art hold works from the ancient to modern eras, by painters, sculptors, artisans and calligraphers with links to Kumamoto. There is time for lunch at leisure in the museum café. Lafcadio Hearn was the first Western author to introduce Japanese culture to a foreign audience through his works written in Japanese and English. In the afternoon we visit the Lafcadio Hearn residence, where he spent several years with his Japanese wife and later became a citizen with the name Koizumo Yakumo. The later afternoon is free to explore Kumamoto at your own pace or you may wish to visit the Contemporary Art Museum, with works by Yayoi Kusama, James Turrell, Tatsuo Miyajima and Marina Abramović. Overnight Kumamoto.

    WEDNESDAY 11 NOVEMBER – HIDDEN CHRISTIANS (B, L, D)

    We check out of the hotel this morning and embark on a scenic coastal coach journey to the Christian sites on Shimoshima Island, before continuing by ferry to Nagasaki. Traversing the western side of the Uto Peninsula, we stop at the Meiji-era Misumi West Port before continuing into the Amakusa Islands. Christianity was introduced to Japan in the sixteenth century by European traders and became popular in the Nagasaki region, before it was banned during Japan’s closure to the West in the Edo period. In defiance of the shogun, many devotees on these remote islands continued to practice Christianity in hiding. At the small fishing village of Sakitsu, we take in the views from the chief fisherman’s residence before visiting the World Heritage-listed Sakitsu Church, a mix of Japanese and Western styles with tatami mat flooring and Gothic stained-glass windows. After a simple lunch, we admire the islands’ stunning scenery on the way to Tomioka, to board a ferry to Nagasaki in the late afternoon. After checking in, we gather for dinner in our hotel. Overnight Nagasaki.

    THURSDAY 12 NOVEMBER – INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN NAGASAKI (B)

    Nagasaki was an integral centre of trade between Japan and foreign countries, including Portugal, the Dutch Republic and China, and was the only port open to foreigners during the reclusion period. This morning we visit Oura Cathedral, built by a French priest to service the growing community of foreign merchants following Japan’s opening to the West. The Gothic architecture harmoniously combines elements of Western and Japanese architecture and was the first Western-style building to be classified as a Japanese National Treasure of Japan. It is also a UNESCO World Heritage site. On a walking tour this afternoon we see the influence of international traders at Dejima, a man-made island built on the orders of the Tokugawa shogun to segregate the Portuguese from the Japanese population and to control their missionary activities. Passing by Meganebashi or Spectacles Bridge, we come to Kofukuji, an important temple founded by Chinese residents in 1620. The temple was established by Chinese residents in 1620 as a place where Chinese could pray for a safe voyage. Returning to the hotel, the evening is at leisure. Overnight Nagasaki.

    FRIDAY 13 NOVEMBER – MODERN NAGASAKI (B)

    Nagasaki played a pivotal role in the end of World War II, following the devastating second US atomic bomb attack on the city on August 9, 1945. This morning, there is the opportunity to understand the sobering effects on the victims and survivors at the Nagasaki Peace Park and Atomic Bomb Museum. Nearby, the 26 Martyrs Monument and adjoining museum memorialise the foreign missionaries and Japanese laymen executed during the two-century long persecution of Christians. The afternoon is at leisure before we ascend Mount Inasa by ropeway for spectacular evening views over Nagasaki. Overnight Nagasaki.

    SATURDAY 14 NOVEMBER – POTTERY TOWNS OF KYUSHU (B, L)

    Today we travel approximately 80km to the towns of Imari and Arita, centres for artisanal Japanese pottery since production began over 400 years ago. In Arita, we visit the Kyushu Ceramics Museum, featuring pottery from all over the island, and learn about the origins and evolution of ceramic production in the region. Strolling alongside the Tonbai wall alleys, constructed from bricks, porcelain and pottery discarded from the kilns, we then visit a local gallery and learn about the historic 50m-long Tengudani kiln. After lunch, we continue to Imari and call in at the Ceramic Merchants Residence Museum, a handsomely preserved Edo-era merchant’s house with a display of eighteenth-century Koimari ware. We stop at the Koimari porcelain clock, as it strikes the hour, plays music and re-enacts scenes of village life, before we continue on to Fukuoka for the final two nights of the tour. Overnight Fukuoka.

    SUNDAY 15 NOVEMBER – YAYOI CULTURE (B, L, D)

    This morning we take an excursion into Saga Prefecture to Yoshinogari Historical Park, a large archaeological site from a Yayoi period settlement (300 BCE to 300 CE). Dozens of dwellings, storehouses and tombs are reflected in careful reconstructions, offering a valuable insight into Yayoi life and culture. Yayoi culture emerged in the fourth century BCE. An agrarian society, it heralded the development of wet-rice production and laid the foundations for ensuing Japanese political and social structures. After lunch at the site, we return to Fukuoka for an afternoon at leisure. This evening, we gather for a farewell diner. Overnight Fukuoka.

    MONDAY 16 NOVEMBER – DEPARTURE (B)

    Our tour concludes this morning. While no departure transfers to Fukuoka airport or Hakata railway station are included in the tour price, our partners at Mary Rossi Travel will be pleased to assist with this and any other arrangements, including comprehensive travel insurance, to enable you to depart the tour; contact us for further information.

  • Mitsui Garden Hotel 4* Fukuoka Gion, 5 nights

    https://www.gardenhotels.co.jp/fukuoka-gion/eng/

     

    Suginoi Hotel 4* Beppu, 3 nights

    https://global-suginoi.orixhotelsandresorts.com/LUC2ORISUG/
    cdata/luc2orisug_0_jaen.html

     

    Solest Takachiho 3* Takachiho, 1 night

    https://solest-takachiho.jp/ (Japanese only)

     

    ANA Crowne Plaza Hotel 4* Kumamoto, 2 nights

    https://www.ihg.com/crowneplaza/hotels/us/en/kumamoto/kmjja/hoteldetail

     

    Nagasaki Marriott Hotel 5* Nagasaki, 3 nights

    https://www.marriott.com/en-us/hotels/ngsmc-nagasaki-marriott-hotel/overview/

    NB: hotels of a similar standard may be substituted. Please note that most Japanese hotels have only a few rooms with a “true” double bed for sharing by two people. Most rooms for sharing are twin-bedded.

    • 14 nights’ accommodation at 4* and 5* hotels

    • All breakfasts and 13 lunches or dinners

    • All ground transport, guided tours and entrance fees to sites as mentioned in the itinerary, and tipping

    • Talks by and expertise of an Australian tour leader throughout

    • Assistance by an English-speaking Japanese national guide throughout

  • A $1,000pp deposit is required at the time of booking to hold your place on tour.

    A second deposit of $2,000 is due on 06 July 2026.

    We will invoice you for final payment for the tour, due on 19 August 2026.

  • When you book on one of tours, we ask you to accept our terms and conditions. You can read our terms and conditions here.