The Seto Inland Sea — enclosed between the islands of Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu — is the Japan that most travellers never reach. Its waters are calm and silver, its islands are scattered like punctuation across a still sentence, and its coastline carries the quiet authority of a civilisation that has been refining itself for centuries without audience or interruption.
This seven-day itinerary is designed around rhythm: a night in Fukuoka to arrive without urgency, a traditional ryokan stay in Setoda to calibrate the pace, and then embarkation aboard guntû — the most design-considered vessel on the inland sea, carrying a maximum of eighteen guests through waters that have been the subject of Japanese woodblock prints for three hundred years.
The guntû does not rush. It anchors off islands that have no roads to speak of, allows guests to cycle through villages where the seasons still matter, and serves kaiseki cuisine prepared from ingredients gathered that morning from the surrounding sea. This is Japan experienced at the pace Japan actually moves — slowly, deliberately, and with an attention to detail that requires stillness to perceive.
The guntû does not rush. It anchors where stillness is complete — and the Japan it reveals is the one that most travellers never reach.
The Seto Inland Sea changes with the season — spring cherry blossoms along the coastal hillsides, summer light on the water until nine in the evening, autumn colour on the island ridges. The itinerary accommodates any season; the landscape provides the context.
Every Richseen journey is individually crafted. Your private consultant will tailor each day to your preferences, pace, and passions.
Every detail — from your arrival in Fukuoka to your final morning on the inland sea — is composed entirely around you. Speak with your dedicated Richseen journey consultant today.
From USD 22,000+ per person
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