There are a few ryokans, however, I will never stay at again in Japan, such as Kanaguya at Yamanochi, Shimotakai District, Nagano by the snow monkey park. The reasons I won’t stay there are many. 1) The owners and proprietors are racist. They don’t want non-Japanese booking into their ryokan. You may be asking how I came to this conclusion? 2) You can’t book in English on their site, and booking for a single occupant is impossible. There is no negotiation, just a ‘no’ and that’s the end of the discussion. 3) When making a reservation, a hotel representative calls you to discuss your booking, and they explicitly tell you that no credit cards are accepted, only cash payments allowed. WoW! 4) This ryokan is a great place, and I’ve spent countless hours photographing inside this historical Edo period ryokan, but the staff, although making only minimum wage, stride the hotel with their noses in the air as if they’re Japanese aristocracy because of where they’re employed. No question this ryokan is unique, but, thankfully, I finished my years of photography of the ryokan on my last stay. Phew! The owners of this ryokan trace their connection back a couple of generations, and the hotel is cashing in on being the inspiration for the bath house scenes for the Studio Ghibli movie ‘Spirited Away’. The movie ‘Spirited Away’ was not solely inspired by this motel. There are several other historical ryokans where I have stayed, and they are fine. They don’t have staff with the terrible attitudes that this one does, and the upkeep of the other ryokans is excellent, not like Kanaguya. The staff doesn’t walk around high and mighty deigning to help the stray guest who’s wandered too far away from their room. And the others accept credit card payments and single occupants. During my last stay, I noticed mold growing in various places, sagging floors, and dust bunnies. The hotel is in desperate need of renovation in many spots as well as an attitude adjustment for the staff, and most of all the owner. For a one time stay, it’s okay, but for as many times as I’ve stayed there, you start to notice cracks in the facade. This place has too many, and it’s not worth the price they are asking to stay there. The worst part? The staff’s arrogance and poor upkeep. I will never stay there again, but the photography was fun. I’ll miss the inn, but not the staff and the management. On a side note the hotels main website is outdated, and I guarantee the photo's on the website were taken twenty year or more... WOW! Here is there English website page, prepared to be spirited away... http://www.kanaguya.com/english.html
The inn and all of its troubles are in direct contrast to an experience with me on a Japan photography workshop tour. From the moment my team and I greet you at Haneda Airport to your departure at the Tokyo-Haneda Airport, our photography workshop tour is fully-inclusive with business-class seating for your transportation at every stage of travel, and any level of photographer is welcome. At Blain Harasymiw Photography we don’t waste clients time and money, especially spending day one in a Tokyo Hotel to get over jet lag. My group support team and I are all locals with no jet lag, so we ask clients to arrive a day or two before our workshop start date, and choose lodgings in or around Haneda Airport. After a quick meet and greet at 10am, clients, my group support team, and I quickly drive out of Tokyo and start our cross country adventure, where you can sit back and enjoy the carefree photography workshop of a lifetime. To experience the true beauty of a country, as a photographer or simply wanting to take in the sites, a professional photographer is the way to do it. The adventurer photographer knows the best locations and times of day to visit, depending on weather. My team and I always deliver a new perspective of Japan on every adventure, the True Untold Stories of Authentic Japan.