Spend a curated half-day in Akita city itself — the cherry-blossom moat of Kubota Castle ruins, the gravity-defying Kanto lantern festival performance, and a Hiroshi Sugimoto–designed art museum in a single elegant circuit.
What to expect
Senshu Park, built on the ruins of Kubota Castle, is Akita's green heart — its moat, earthworks, and reconstruction turret set against cedar groves have the quiet gravitas of a place that shaped 270 years of Satake domain history. A short walk brings you to the Neburi Nagashi Hall (Kanto Festival Museum), where you can try balancing a towering bamboo pole hung with 46 paper lanterns on your forehead — the very feat that defines Akita's famous August festival. The afternoon culminates at the Akita Museum of Art, a building designed by Tadao Ando collaborator Tadashi Kajima, housing Fujita Tsuguharu's monumental panoramic painting 'Akita Customs' in a purpose-built gallery of hushed grandeur. Finish with coffee or Akita craft sake at the museum's café overlooking the park.
Good to know
All three sites are within 10–15 minutes of Akita port by car — ideal if time ashore is limited or sea conditions affect the schedule. Book a private guide via GoWithGuide at least one week in advance. Museum closed Mondays. Kanto Museum entry approx. JPY 100 extra for the hands-on balancing experience.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Akita — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.