- Source:
- @347ki
Related Article
-
Japan Releases New Umeshu Kit Kats Using Premium Sake and Plum Wine
-
Some Of Japan’s Best And Brightest Bento Are Waiting For You At A Tokyo Department Store[PR]
-
Fluffy cat in Japan cooks up the derpiest look ever when he discovers rice cooker
-
Wife makes husband adorable Japanese pub menu since he can’t go out to drink
-
Jumbo-sized Pie no Mi puff pastries unleashed at FamilyMart stores nationwide
-
Squishy, Talkative, And Responsive Pikachu Light And Table Top Cleaner Are Your New Best Pokémon Friends
For all of Japan's natural beauty, it's some to some particularly bone-chilling and scary spots. While many of these spooky areas have some sort of unnerving history to them, it's often the unexplained that give us the most creeps. Take, for instance, this seemingly forgotten shrine, overtaken by nature and perhaps other things, spotted by Japanese Twitter user @347ki.
Source: @347ki
Source: @347ki
Source: @347ki
Source: @347ki
@347ki found the ominous torii gate, which looks like the opening to a ghostly dimension, in Yokosuka-shi Taura in Kanagawa prefecture. While many would be put off by this worn down path, @347ki was filled with curiosity and headed down to see what laid in wait at the end.
Source: @347ki
As it turns out, no ghouls had taken up shop at the actual shrine, but instead an o-inari guardian fox spirit marked the end of the mysterious path!
Source: @347ki
Source: @347ki
As it turns out, the creepy pathway leads to Fushimi-Hakuseki Shrine in Yokosuka-shi Taura. While Japan has many major shrines that have routine visitors, there are also many smaller local ones that do not see many guests. Because of this, their torii gates and architecture become rusted and battered down by the elements, and the paths that lead to them become reclaimed by nature. Taking a trip to these lesser known shrines might be an even more rewarding experience than some famous tourist spots. The way with which they appear as they may have in Japan's early days spirits you away to an untouched Japan. But perhaps also a slightly scarier one.