Author: japan flower tour home

I enjoyed guiding sightseeing in Tokyo with a close-knit family of five.

Unfortunately it was a bit rainy but that wasn’t enough to hinder our tour which took in Meiji Shrine, the Imperial Palace, Tsukiji Fish Market, Asakusa, famous Tokyo tourist sites. A friendly group of five parents and their children from Cincinnati joined my tour after spending three days at Tokyo Disney Resort in Urayasu, enjoying the holiday resort.

The children, who are university students and high school students, had just started their summer vacation and were enjoying the best of their youth.All the sushi restaurants in Tsukiji Fish Market were crowded, so we had lunch at a sushi restaurant outside. Everyone in the family, including the vegetarian mother, was able to enjoy sushi according to their preferences.

Our tour with Atsu exceeded our expectations and was one of the highlights of our trip to Japan! He met us at our hotel in Tokyo and discussed what we would be seeing that day. Our group consisted of myself, my husband, and 3 children (ages 21, 18 & 15). While it was a rainy day, we didn’t let it stop us from seeing everything. We especially loved the sushi restaurant he took us to. We have very little experience with Japanese cuisine and would have been intimidated to try this on our own. Everyone was able to try new things and practice our chopsticks skills! Atsu provided so much information on the sites we visited as well as answering all our questions about Japanese culture. He took photos of our family and helped create great memories for us.

Guiding a group of tourists from Lithuania in modern Tokyo’s tourist’s spots

Today, I guided a group of guests who arrived at Haneda from Okinawa on a tour of Tokyo and then took them to the hotel.

The 13 Lithuanian guests who arrived at Haneda Airport were first taken to TeamLab Planets Toyosu. The original plan was to arrive at TeamLab at around 2:30 p.m. and have them enjoy themselves at their leisure for about two and a half hours, as instructed by the travel agency. On the bus to the first destination, the veteran tour leader requested me that they would go to Roppongi Hills early, so that they could get to the hotel early, since two hours on site is enough. In addition, we would arrive at the destination about 30 minutes early, so more than about an hour early.

For the time being, I had the guests enjoy themselves at TeamLab, and in the meantime, I was going to call Roppongi Hills and negotiate. However, it seems that it is difficult to enter Roppongi Hills earlier than the reservation time.

Therefore, after consulting with the bus driver, we slightly changed the route from Toyosu to Roppongi, and headed to Roppongi Hills, slowly going around Ginza, the Imperial Palace, Kasumigaseki, and the front of the State Guest House. However, we still had more than 30 minutes before the entrance time, so I decided to take a walk around the Mouri Garden below Roppongi Hills while explaining about it. Just when we were at the Mouri Garden, a TV station was preparing for a live broadcast, so we could quickly take a commemorative photo there, and everyone enjoyed it.

The guide arranged the team’s requests and responded flexibly, and was flexible in explaining various things, so we were able to rely on him for our trip. We are grateful for the guide’s flexibility (tour leader).

Enjoying the atmosphere of Tokyo’s old downtown area

Today, I guided two women from the United States around Tokyo’s downtown area. First, we went to Tsukiji Fish Market from the hotel in Ikebukuro. We strolled around the fish market looking at the seafood and vegetables, bought some sushi to take home, and then went to Ginza. We bought some sandwiches and other snacks in the basement of a department store in Ginza, and then went up to the rooftop of the department store. We had a light meal of sushi bought in Tsukiji and bread bought at the department store.

After that, we bought knives and other items at Kappabashi Shopping Street, and then visited Sensoji Temple. After Sensoji Temple, we took a leisurely stroll around the calm Yanaka area in the evening before heading home.

We enjoyed Tokyo in one day full trip, visiting Asakusa, Tokyo Skytree, Tsukiji, Meiji Shrine, Shibuya, Shinjuku, etc.

I attended to two female guests from the United States. They were staying at a hotel right next to Sensoji Temple, so we first went from the hotel to Sensoji Temple. One of the women was originally from Myanmar. I explained the difference between Theravada Buddhism and Mahayana Buddhism in the temple, and also explained the popularity of Kannon bodhisattva or Avalokiteśvara in Japan.

After that, according to the guest’s request, we enjoyed the view of Tokyo from the observation deck of Tokyo Skytree. Then, we enjoyed eating seafood and other things while walking around Tsukiji fish market. At Meiji Shrine, we explained the difference between Buddhism and Shinto and paid a visit. After that, we saw Shibuya Crossing and enjoyed the nightlife at Omoide Yokocho alley in Shinjuku.

Osaka Kansai Expo, Tips and information for how to enjoy the Expo in more advanced ways

I have compiled some information and tips I learned during my 10-day volunteer activities.

There are a variety of tickets available, including the regular One-Day Ticket, the Night Ticket, or the Season Pass, which allows entry throughout the period. For more information, please see here.

There are two types of multiple entry passes. The Season Pass allows you to enter on all days during the event. The Summer Pass allows you to enter any time from 19th Jul., 2025 to 31st Aug., 2025. The Season Pass allows you to reserve admission for three days at a time, and the Summer Pass allows you to reserve admission for two days at a time. After you enter venue, you can reserve admission for theadditonal one more day.

Once you have purchased your ticket and booked the date, time, and gate you will use, you can reserve facilities such as pavilions. There are three opportunities to make reservations : 2-month advance lottery, 7-day advance lottery, Available slot reservation (3days to 9:00 am one day before the reserved date) For reservation methods, please see here

You can also make a reservation on the day of your visit using the On-Site Registration terminals at the Pavilion and Event On-Site Registration Center (P32 on official map, located opposite the Brazil Pavilion in the Empowering Lives zone).

Even if you don’t have a reservation, there are many pavilions that you can enter by lining up in front of the pavilion on the day. Information on pavilions that you can enter without a booking on the day and useful information such as national days can be found here.

However, you should be prepared to wait in line for a long time at popular pavilions. Also, like the USA Pavilion, there are places where you have to line up separately for English and Japanese explanations. Usually, the English line will let you in earlier. Some facilities will post information on how to enter and what goods will be distributed on the day in front of the pavilion, so it’s best to ask the pavilion staff without hesitation.

Official stamp passport for stamp rally are available at the official shops at the Expo site (4 in total, 2 near the East and West Gates). Stamps are usually placed near the exits of each pavilion, and collecting stamps will make for good memories.

At the beginning of the stamp book, there is a place to stamp the official commorative visit stamp, which is available in front of the Personal Mobility station near the East and West Gates, but it is a little hard to find.

There is also a secret stamp somewhere that changes color every month, so it is fun to look for its location (ask the staff at the information center for the location). Also, at the end of the stamp book, there is a stamp of the official mascot Myaku Myaku surfing Great Waves. This is a colored picture like an ukiyo-e woodblock print that can be printed by overlapping stamps from 6 places, mainly in  Commons pavillion, and it is also fun to collect 6 of these.

There are 4 official shops, and you can buy the same stamp book at any one of them, but each official shop also sells its own novelty goods. For example, at the official shop run by JR West near the West Gate, they sell a ICOCA card, prepaid plastic IC card, a collaboration version of the platypus Iko-chan and Myakumyaku, which is only available at the Expo shop.

The electric bus, e Mover, runs around the perimeter of the Expo site and can be used to travel between the East and West Gates. Ordinary e Movers are manned, but there is a fully automated e Mover that runs once every 20 minutes.

When you ride, you can see the monitors with sensors for the automated driving, although the driver sits in the driver’s seat to prevent accidents, you can see the operation of the vehicle right next to you without touching the steering wheel. You can also enjoy the view from under the sea part of the The Great Ring and the backyard view that you can’t usually see. Reservations are required to ride the automated e Mover, but if there are seats available, you can ride it on the day.

The Osaka Expo is a completely cashless payment system, and not only foreign currency such as US dollars and Euros, but also Japanese yen cannot be used. Conversely, international credit cards such as VISA and American Express can be used for all payments within the venue. However, currently, signature payments for credit cards have been abolished in Japan, and PIN code entry is required, so you must check your PIN code again.

In addition, even in rare cases, payment errors may occur with credit cards issued overseas. In such cases, I recommend that you prepare plastic prepaid cards such as prepaid debit cards and prepaid IC cards. Inside the venue, you can purchase prepaid cards in Japanese yen at the Money Plaza near the East and West Gates, but the number of machines is limited and they cannot be purchased with foreign currency, so I recommend purchasing an IC prepaid card such as ICOCA at a station outside the venue before entering. The photo on the bottom left shows the Money Plaza near the West Gate. The green machine in the center of the photo is for charging prepaid cards and cashless payment methods with foreign currency, and the small machine on the right is for purchasing prepaid cards with Japanese yen cash (it would be nice if there were more machines like this).

Also, for 10 days, I have uploaded various topics in blog format on the following topics.If there is a topic that interests you, please take a look at it.

Opening ceremony, Access to the East Gate, Osaka Healthcare Pavilion Nest for Reborn

West Area Route Guide

Namba Station, Osaka tourist spots

Access to the west Gate, PASONA NATUREVERSE Pavilion, USA Pavilion, Italy Pavilion, Australia Pavilion

Accessibility Center, Japan Pavilion

Kansai International Airport

Medical Facilities, NIght event

East Area Route Guide, Netherlands Pavilion, Singapore Pavilion, China Pavilion, Cradle of life

Shin-Osaka and Mamba station

This information is updated and improved daily. Please check this site,

The many volunteer staff at the venue and the information center staff should have the latest information, so be sure to approach a volunteer staff member with a smile and ask.

Day 9-10, April 21-22, 2025, Osaka Kansai Expo, Shin-Osaka and Mamba station

Since the opening of the Osaka Kansai Expo on April 13, the volunteer activities that have been continuing for 10 days will end with the activity of providing access to the Expo site at Shin-Osaka Station and Namba Station. During these 10 days, I was able to get to know many visitors and fellow volunteers. I was also able to learn not only about the glittering world of the Osaka Kansai Expo, but also about the behind-the-scenes world that is working hard to support the Expo.

In addition, I have organized the information and impressions I learned during the 10 days of activities in the form of a diary for each day. I would like to summarize the information and impressions I gathered throughout the 10 days on the next page.

Day 8, April 20, 2025, Osaka Kansai Expo, Volunteer Guiding in the East Area

Today, I volunteered mainly as a guide in the East Area near the East Gate. This was my sixth day of volunteering in the venue, and my last day.

I have accumulated a fair amount of information and knowledge, and I am now able to respond to customer inquiries with smooth manner. The members working in the same group change every day, and some people are volunteering for the first day, while others have worked in other areas. I also try to share the information I have gathered with volunteers in the same team as much as possible, and also convbey to the staff who support the volunteer activities. In this way, I hope that the quality of volunteer activities will gradually improve and that the guests who visit will be able to spend their time comfortably.

Water is the source of life, but the Netherlands, which has fought against such water and built its land under the sea level has exhibited ideas for coexisting with water and creating a sustainable world. We can tour the museum with a color-changing sphere given to us at the entrance.

Singapore, a small city with a high population density, is exhibiting a view of how it can coexist with the world and pave the way for the future.

In front of the Osaka Healthcare Pavilion, the pavilion of the organizers of the exhibition, “Cradle of life” displays aquaponics, a system in which plants and fish coexist through material circulation, in a large sphere. This aquaponics technology is the cutting edge technology, and in November 2024, I introduced agricultural engineer team from Brunei to a company in Kanagawa using this technology. It is a little disappointing that the exhibition is outdoors and the information board is not very noticeable.

This pavilion displays moon sand, which China, which has a long history with Japan, has collected using the latest technology. Although it is a large exhibition hall, the Sinocentrism can be felt in every corner of the exhibition, and the attitude towards Japan, the host country, seems a little questionable, so I personally did not like the exhibition very much.

Day 7, April 19, 2025, Osaka Kansai Expo, Volunteering at Medical Facilities

Osaka Kansai Expo2025 has several Medical Facilities (Clinics and First Aid Stations) for visitors who need medical care. Medical Doctors and nurses are always on-site at the Clinics, and only nurses are staffed at the First Aid Stations.

Language volunteers sometimes go into the examination rooms to interpret for medical staff who are not always good at languages. Although I can interpret general English, I was a little unsure when it came to specialized medical terms. However, on the other hand, Medical Doctors can understand specialized medical terms to a certain extent, so we can manage to complete the job safely.

You can check the location of the Medical Facilities here, but unfortunately the signs are a little difficult to find. If you are not sure where it is, please feel free to ask the volunteer staff nearby who are guiding you.

The view of the Expo during the day is wonderful, but at night, each pavilion is lit up with unique lighting, so it is even more magnificent. Also, as the number of visitors decreases in the evening as visitors by group tours leave, it is relatively easy to get around, so I recommend staying until the evening.

I especially recommend the view from the top of The Grand Ring and Water Plaza, where the light and fountain show and drone show are held. However, since many customers head home after watching the drone show at Water Plaza, the gate on the way back is crowded. The drone show can be seen from near the gate, so I recommend coming to the gate before the drone show starts and watching it from there.

Day 6, April 18, 2025, Osaka Kansai Expo, Welcoming guests at Kansai International Airport, the gateway

Today, I welcomed many guests from overseas directly at Kansai International Airport, where they arrive. Many of the guests heading to the Osaka Expo 2025 were experiencing Japan for the first time, and they had many questions, including how to access the Expo site, as well as where to exchange money at the airport and where to buy daily necessities. In addition, the way to access the East and West gates differs depending on the admission ticket to the Expo site, so we need to pay attention to the directions.


And above all, we also explained to them that guests cannot bring suitcases with carriers to the Expo site, so we need to leave luggages at the hotel or keep them in coin locker at the terminal station before heading to the site.
Of course, not all arriving guests are heading to the Expo site, so we tried to explain as carefully as possible to those heading to other destinations.

Day 5, April 17, 2025, Osaka Kansai Expo, Support Volunteer at the Accessibility Center

Today, I volunteered at the Accessibility Center of Osaka Expo 2025. You may not be familiar with the term “Accessibility Center”. Osaka Expo 2025 aims to be an Expo that can be enjoyed easily by all kind of guests including physical disabilities.

For this reason, the Accessibility Center lends out wheelchairs and hearing amplifiers free of charge to guests with walking or hearing disabilities. I provided support for wheelchair rental at the Accessibility Center.

Wheelchairs and hearing amplifiers can be borrowed free of charge, but reservations cannot be made, so on the day of the visiting, you will need to go directly to the Accessibility Center next to the East and West Gates to complete the reception procedure. It was just after the opening of the Expo, and there were still few visitors, but depending on the model of machines, the inventory for rental may be low, and I was a little worried about whether the equipment would function properly even if the number of visitors increased in the future. In the future, I strongly wish improvement such as increasing the number of units in stock will be made.

The Accessibility Center is located outside the entrance gate, and you need to go through the procedures such as loaning before entering the venue. However, when visitors look at the map, it can be considered that it is located exactly on the border, so some people entered without getting a loan, left temporarily and then re-entered, so be careful.

After volunteering, I visited the pavilion of the host government. The exhibits were centered on algae, which is expected to be a future source of many materials such as energy and food, and there were some interesting points, but I personally didn’t like the exhibit that used popular characters to show the diversity of the many algae that exist.

Also, the highlight of the exhibit was a rock from Mars that arrived on Earth as a meteorite, but the controlling flow of visitors in front of the exhibit was not well managed, and the inside of the museum was quite chaotic. Since it is also the pavilion of the host country, I felt that immediate improvement was necessary (I guess it was improved quickly because an acquaintance of mine said that there were no problems when he visited later).

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