Lift, Sakyu Center Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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japanese_doremi
It is a "Tourist Lift Sand Dune Center" that connects "Dune" and "Dune Center View Hill".
Original Text
It is a "Tourist Lift Sand Dune Center" that connects "Dune" and "Dune Center View Hill". There is a free parking lot at "Dune Center View Hill". I stopped at a toll parking lot near the dunes so I didn't use the "Sightseeing Lift Dune Center", but this may be the case.
If you visit Tottori Sand Dunes by car, you can choose to use the parking lot next to the "Visitor Center" near the sand dunes or the parking lot of the "Dune Center" on the hill, but the latter is overwhelmingly recommended. Because if you park at the dune center, you can use this nearby lift and rent boots at the end point. Tottori dune is naturally on the sand, so I think it is necessary to take some measures such as dirty shoes, covers such as vinyl and changing shoes. I ...
I've been to Tottori Sand Dunes many times, but I always parked my car in a large parking lot on a flat ground and stepped on it. This is my first experience of lift. In conclusion, it feels like it's okay sometimes. Parking around the lift area is free, so you may think of the lift fee as a parking fee. While I hadn't been there for a while, restaurants, souvenir shops, observatory, etc. were well maintained, and my liking was greatly increased.
The ticket office was difficult to understand. I stopped the car and headed to the lift platform. When I arrived at the platform and searched for "Oh, where is the ticket office?" It was a vending machine a little far away. It was a short time with a lift that felt nostalgic, but I enjoyed it.
A lift down from the observatory to the dune. Even if you say that you go down, there is almost no difference in height, so you can see the dunes and the sea beautifully, and you can see the front lift and the side tree 々. Long shoes are lined up on the right side of the place where you got off. It's free, but the locker for the shoes you've worn is 100 yen. There is a lift ticket vending machine on the right side of the observatory entrance, but is it only me who thinks it is easier to understand by lying next to the lift? 200 yen one way, 300 yen round trip. I am Ba ...
It is a "Tourist Lift Sand Dune Center" that connects "Dune" and "Dune Center View Hill".
It is a "Tourist Lift Sand Dune Center" that connects "Dune" and "Dune Center View Hill". There is a free parking lot at "Dune Center View Hill". I stopped at a toll parking lot near the dunes so I didn't use the "Sightseeing Lift Dune Center", but this may be the case.
I can borrow boots.
If you visit Tottori Sand Dunes by car, you can choose to use the parking lot next to the "Visitor Center" near the sand dunes or the parking lot of the "Dune Center" on the hill, but the latter is overwhelmingly recommended. Because if you park at the dune center, you can use this nearby lift and rent boots at the end point. Tottori dune is naturally on the sand, so I think it is necessary to take some measures such as dirty shoes, covers such as vinyl and changing shoes. I ...
sometimes.
I've been to Tottori Sand Dunes many times, but I always parked my car in a large parking lot on a flat ground and stepped on it. This is my first experience of lift. In conclusion, it feels like it's okay sometimes. Parking around the lift area is free, so you may think of the lift fee as a parking fee. While I hadn't been there for a while, restaurants, souvenir shops, observatory, etc. were well maintained, and my liking was greatly increased.
the ticket office.
The ticket office was difficult to understand. I stopped the car and headed to the lift platform. When I arrived at the platform and searched for "Oh, where is the ticket office?" It was a vending machine a little far away. It was a short time with a lift that felt nostalgic, but I enjoyed it.
Lift to dune
A lift down from the observatory to the dune. Even if you say that you go down, there is almost no difference in height, so you can see the dunes and the sea beautifully, and you can see the front lift and the side tree 々. Long shoes are lined up on the right side of the place where you got off. It's free, but the locker for the shoes you've worn is 100 yen. There is a lift ticket vending machine on the right side of the observatory entrance, but is it only me who thinks it is easier to understand by lying next to the lift? 200 yen one way, 300 yen round trip. I am Ba ...