Results for Female Solo

Contains x5 guides in one bundle pack. - Tokyo Mega Guide ā˜† +100 Locations - Kichijoji (West Tokyo) ā˜† +25 Locations - The Ultimate Kyoto Guide ā˜† +175 Locations - Osaka Hidden Gems & Food Guide ā˜† +50 Locations - Yokohama ā˜† +50 Locations Whether you're traveling solo, with a group, or as a family, these guides have something for everyone. You'll find interactive maps guiding you to: ā›©ļø shrines, temples, parks, & gardens šŸŒ‡ incredible views šŸ–¼ļø museums & art galleries šŸ›ļø souvenir shopping šŸŗ street food spots šŸ¢ traditional cuisine ā˜•ļø coffee shops šŸ° cafes & bakeries šŸ± Japanese comfort food šŸŒ± vegan & vegetarian spots šŸ” desserts & snack spots šŸœ ramen, udon, and soba šŸ¶ Japanese izakayas šŸŒ® international food šŸŗ craft beer & cocktail bars ā­ļø locations found in King Kogi videos These guides also include travel advice, useful links, and basic Japanese phrases. If you're looking for videos with free information about places to visit in Japan, check out the King Kogi YouTube channel! Happy travels, and don't forget to take some time to get lost! ā­ļø Martina
50+ ā€¢ Backpacker ā€¢ Couples ā€¢ LGBTQ+ ā€¢ Family ā€¢ Female Solo ā€¢ Vegan ā€¢ Vegetarian ā€¢ Adventure ā€¢ Art ā€¢ Coffee ā€¢ Design ā€¢ Foodie ā€¢ History ā€¢ Outdoors ā€¢ People & Culture ā€¢ Photography ā€¢ Relaxation ā€¢ Shopping ā€¢ Slow Travel
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If youā€™re looking to explore a more local Tokyo neighbourhood with a bohemian feel, this guide is for you. šŸ”‡šŸ™‰ This area has a residential, relaxed vibe. It is great for people who don't enjoy loud, downtown noises and flashy neon lights. Iā€™ve included over 40 places to explore in this trendy, quirky, and hipster neighbourhood just west of Shibuya. And I've also added a newly built onsen/ryokan hotel which is super rare to find in Tokyo. šŸš‡ three station guides for travel and exploration ā˜•ļø cute cafes and coffee shops šŸŒ± vegan & vegetarian spots šŸŒ… scenic spots and local parks šŸ® desserts šŸ› Japanese curry šŸ¶ izakayas šŸ£ sushi šŸ¤ tempura šŸ• stone oven pizzeria šŸŒ® international food šŸŗ craft beer & friendly social bars ļ½”ļ½„:*:ļ½„ā˜…,ļ½”ļ½„:*:ļ½„ļ¾Ÿā˜† ļ½”ļ½„:ļ½„ļ¾Ÿā˜…,ļ½”ļ½„:*:ļ½„ā˜† šŸ—ŗšŸš¶ā€ā™€ļøAll the spots provided in this guide are in walking distance of each other. You can explore leisurely at your own pace without relying on trains. šŸ§‘ā€šŸ¤ā€šŸ§‘ šŸ‘€ šŸ² There are plenty of great spots for people watching, strolling, and food. Small shops run by local owners outweigh the chains, so all the spots have a much more personal feel. ļ½”ļ½„:*:ļ½„ā˜…,ļ½”ļ½„:*:ļ½„ļ¾Ÿā˜† ļ½”ļ½„:ļ½„ļ¾Ÿā˜…,ļ½”ļ½„:*:ļ½„ā˜† This guide includes activities and shops located around three train stations and neighbourhoods: 1) Umegaoka Station 2) Setagaya-Daita Station and the area leading into 3) Shimokitazawa Station You can spread out a few days of adventuring with the amount of spots on this list, or you can plan for a full afternoon of fun, and then into the evening with the izakaya and bar listings. ā­ļø All locations featured in the Tokyo Tours video, "Curry, Coffee, and Cream Puffs" are included in this guide. Places in the video will be marked with a ā­ļø = featured in Tokyo Tours
Couples ā€¢ Car-free ā€¢ Female Solo ā€¢ Vegan ā€¢ Vegetarian ā€¢ 50+ ā€¢ LGBTQ+ ā€¢ Gluten-free / Celiac ā€¢ Family ā€¢ Adventure ā€¢ Foodie ā€¢ Slow Travel ā€¢ Photography ā€¢ Coffee ā€¢ People & Culture
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A digital travel guide containing vegan, vegetarian, macrobiotic, organic, and gluten-free restaurants in Japan. Majority of them are located in Tokyo, but I've also included some excellent spots in Kyoto and Fukuoka. šŸŒŸ Iā€™ve organized each restaurant with a convenient category that explains what type of food they serve šŸŒŸ Iā€™ve also included links to their websites/social media. This guide contains 50 locations with many varieties of food, including: šŸ°šŸ© desserts šŸœšŸ„¢ ramen šŸŒ®šŸ” international cuisine šŸ›šŸ± Japanese food ā˜•ļøšŸ„Ŗ cafes and bakeries šŸ’–šŸ’° higher end restaurants for a special meal šŸ“Œ This guide also includes a zero-waste Guesthouse that has an earth-friendly plant-based cafĆ© and bar, that sells by weight, without trash. šŸ’•āœØ I've also created a FREE vegan and vegetarian Japanese word and phrase list to help you navigate Japan, so you can just show people your phone, and point. Iā€™ve also including a handy Gluten Free phrase and help guide, too. My hope is that even if you don't purchase my guide, these free phrase lists will at least help you! āœØ ā˜†ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ā˜† ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ā˜† Helpful Terms for Vegan and Vegetarian travellers: The more commonly used terms: vegetarian: 惙ć‚øć‚æćƒŖć‚¢ćƒ³ (beh-ji-tarian) vegan: ćƒ“ć‚£ćƒ¼ć‚¬ćƒ³ (vui-gan) OR ćƒ“ćƒ¼ć‚¬ćƒ³ (bee-gan) The more traditional terms: Buddhist vegan: 完å…Øčœé£Ÿäø»ē¾©č€… (kanzen saishoku shugisha) vegetarian čœé£Ÿäø»ē¾©č€… (saishoku shugisha) ā˜†ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ā˜† ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ā˜† NOTE: Even if youā€™re vegan, itā€™s good to start with this phrase, ā€œbeh-ji-tarian desā€ (Iā€™m vegetarian) since it is already rare to be a vegetarian in Japan. Saying youā€™re vegan will go over many people's heads, so if they say that they "canā€™t serve a vegetarian", they definitely can not serve a vegan. Some helpful phrases you can keep handy on your phone: I donā€™t eat meat, seafood, eggs and dairy products 肉ćØć‚·ćƒ¼ćƒ•ćƒ¼ćƒ‰ćØ卵ćØä¹³č£½å“ć‚’é£Ÿć¹ć¾ć›ć‚“ (o-niku, shifudo, tamago, to nyÅ«seihin wo tabemasen) I donā€™t eat pork č±šč‚‰ć‚’é£Ÿć¹ć¾ć›ć‚“ (buta niku wo tabemasen) I donā€™t eat chicken é¶č‚‰ć‚’é£Ÿć¹ć¾ć›ć‚“ (tori niku wo tabemasen) I donā€™t eat fish stock é­šć®ć ć—ć‚’é£Ÿć¹ć¾ć›ć‚“ (sakana no dashi wo tabemasen) I donā€™t eat eggs åµć‚’é£Ÿć¹ć¾ć›ć‚“ (tamago wo tabemasen) I donā€™t eat cheese ćƒćƒ¼ć‚ŗć‚’é£Ÿć¹ć¾ć›ć‚“ (chizu wo tabemasen) ā˜†ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ā˜† ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ā˜† How to express having an allergy: I am allergic to shrimp ć‚Øćƒ“ć®ć‚¢ćƒ¬ćƒ«ć‚®ćƒ¼ćŒć‚ć‚Šć¾ć™ (ebi no arerugi ga arimasu) For example: I am allergic to _____________________ _____________________ 恮 ć‚¢ćƒ¬ćƒ«ć‚®ćƒ¼ćŒć‚ć‚Šć¾ć™ _____________________ no arerugi ga arimasu ā˜†ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ā˜† ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ļø¶ā˜† GLUTEN FREE TIPS: Many Japanese dishes contain soy sauce and/or miso, and most of them contain gluten. I am allergic to wheat 小éŗ¦ć‚¢ćƒ¬ćƒ«ć‚®ćƒ¼ć§ć™ (Komugi arerugi desu) éŗ© č³Ŗ Fushitsu is the Japanese word for gluten 悰 惫 惆 ćƒ³ sometimes it is written in Katakana, as ā€œgu-ru-tenā€ Things to avoid: 小éŗ¦, 小éŗ¦ ē²‰ Komugi is wheat, komugiko is wheat flour. éŗ¦ Mugi is barley, usually in mugicha, barley tea. Or rye, called rye-mugi (ćƒ©ć‚¤éŗ¦). 醤 ę²¹ Shoyu, or soy sauce 味噌 Miso paste ę°“ 飓 Mizuame, or malt syrup, and barley malt syrup are in many sweets Helpful Phrases: I cannot eat food that contains gluten. So I cannot eat anything made with wheat, rye or barley. That means that I cannot eat soy sauce which contains wheat, or miso that contains wheat. ē§ćÆć‚°ćƒ«ćƒ†ćƒ³ć‚’å«ć‚€é£Ÿå“ćŒé£Ÿć¹ć‚‰ć‚Œć¾ć›ć‚“ć€‚å°éŗ¦ćƒ»å¤§éŗ¦ćƒ»ćƒ©ć‚¤éŗ¦ćŒä½æć‚ć‚Œć¦ć„ć‚‹ć‚‚ć®ćÆå…ØéƒØć§ć™ć€‚ćć®ćŸć‚ć€å°éŗ¦ć‚’åŽŸę–™ćØć—ć¦ć„ć‚‹é†¤ę²¹ć‚„å‘³å™Œć‚‚ć„ć£ć•ć„å£ć«ć§ćć¾ć›ć‚“ć€‚ I have a serious disease called celiac disease, so that I cannot eat food that contains gluten. I cannot eat anything made with wheat, rye, or barley. I cannot eat soy sauce which contains wheat or miso that contains wheat. ē§ćÆć€ć‚°ćƒ«ćƒ†ćƒ³ć®ę‘‚å–ć«ć‚ˆć£ć¦ē™ŗē—‡ć™ć‚‹ć€Œć‚»ć‚¢ćƒŖ惃ć‚Æē—…ć€ćØć„ć†ę·±åˆ»ćŖē—…ę°—ć‚’ć‚‚ć£ć¦ć„ć¾ć™ć€‚ćć®ćŸć‚ć€å°éŗ¦ćƒ»å¤§éŗ¦ćƒ»ćƒ©ć‚¤éŗ¦ćŒä½æć‚ć‚Œć¦ć„ć‚‹é£Ÿå“ćÆé£Ÿć¹ć‚‰ć‚Œć¾ć›ć‚“ć€‚å°éŗ¦ć‚’åŽŸę–™ćØć—ć¦ć„ć‚‹é†¤ę²¹ć‚„å‘³å™Œć‚‚ć„ć£ć•ć„å£ć«ć§ćć¾ć›ć‚“ć€‚ Does this contain wheat? 恓悌ćÆ小éŗ¦ć‚’ä½æć£ć¦ć„ć¾ć™ć‹ć€‚ Does this contain barley? 恓悌ćÆ大éŗ¦ć‚’ä½æć£ć¦ć„ć¾ć™ć‹ć€‚ Does this contain soy sauce? 恓悌ćÆé†¤ę²¹ć‚’ä½æć£ć¦ć„ć¾ć™ć‹ć€‚ When you go to a chicken grilling shop, they can dip it in a sauce which contains soy sauce, but you can ask them to do the salt sprinkled version instead: Can you do shio-yaki (salt-flavored)? å”©ć ć‘ć§ē„¼ć„ć¦ć‚‚ć‚‰ćˆć¾ć™ć‹ć€‚
Vegan ā€¢ Gluten-free / Celiac ā€¢ Vegetarian ā€¢ Female Solo ā€¢ Couples ā€¢ Foodie ā€¢ Vegan ā€¢ Gluten Free ā€¢ Vegetarian ā€¢ Cafes and Bakeries ā€¢ Japanese Food ā€¢ Higher End Cuisine ā€¢ Sustainable/Eco ā€¢ Coffee ā€¢ Wellness
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Welcome to your ultimate Kyoto Guide packed with +175 places to explore and visit. Things to Do: ā›©ļøšŸŒ³ shrines, temples, parks, & gardens šŸŽ‹šŸŽ Arashiyama Bamboo Forest Area Guide šŸŗšŸ— Nishiki Market Food Guide šŸ–¼ļø šŸŽØ museums & art galleries šŸ›ļøšŸ¬ unique shopping spots Food Spots: šŸ¢ traditional Kyoto cuisine ā˜•ļø favourite coffee shops šŸ° cafes & bakeries šŸ± Japanese comfort food šŸŒ± vegan & vegetarian spots šŸ” desserts & snack spots šŸœ ramen, udon, and soba šŸ¶ Japanese izakayas šŸŒ® international food šŸŗ craft beer & cocktail bars ā˜†This guide contains the best of Kyoto adventuringā˜† 1. The top tourist locations with my notes and tips. 2. My favourite off-the-beaten path temples and shrines to avoid the crowds. 3. A dedicated Arashiyama Bamboo Forest section, including my favourite spots to see that are lesser known. 4. A full separate guide to Nishiki Market and the side streets around it. There is a lot to do in the area, even once the market closes at night! 5. A massive selection of food spots to choose from, there is something for everyone. ā˜† Have fun in Kyoto, and don't forget to take some time to just get lost in the backstreets ā˜† Love, Martina aka King Kogi
Vegetarian ā€¢ Vegan ā€¢ Female Solo ā€¢ Couples ā€¢ Car-free ā€¢ Family ā€¢ Gluten-free / Celiac ā€¢ LGBTQ+ ā€¢ Backpacker ā€¢ Adventure ā€¢ Architecture ā€¢ Art ā€¢ Coffee ā€¢ Design ā€¢ Foodie ā€¢ History ā€¢ Outdoors ā€¢ People & Culture ā€¢ Photography ā€¢ Relaxation ā€¢ Romantic ā€¢ Slow Travel ā€¢ Shopping
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Ready to explore Prague like a local? This comprehensive guide, crafted from my decade of living in Prague and my love for food blogging, covers the best places to stay, eat, and explore in the city center and Vinohrady. Whether you're looking for vegetarian options, traditional Czech meals, or the best coffee shops, you'll find it all here. . What's included? šŸ˜Ž How to Eat in Prague Restaurants Without Looking Like a Tourist - all the cultural differences tips you wouldn't have known existed . āœØExperience Prague Like a Local: City Center and Vinohrady/Žižkov Explore the bustling city center and discover hidden local gems, then venture into my neighborhood, Vinohrady/Žižkov, one of the most popular areas among locals. Each neighborhood guide includes: āœ”ļø3 spots for the best coffee āœ”ļø3 spots for the best breakfast āœ”ļø3 restaurants offering lunch menus (the CZ version of happy hour) āœ”ļø 3 restaurants to get traditional Czech food šŸ‡ØšŸ‡æ āœ”ļø 2 super budget friendly food spots āœ”ļø 2 vegetarian restaurants āœ”ļø my personal recommendation of what to order on the menu along with a link to my instagram account to see what I ordered āœ”ļø1 beer pub āœ”ļø1 grocery store āœ”ļø3 spots to spend time outdoors āœ”ļøTravel time to the city center. āœ”ļøDetails about what kind of traveler would enjoy this neighborhood. ALSO INCLUDED āœ”ļø yearly events! Festivals and fun things to do based on the season āœ”ļø Summer terraces & where to spend warmer months āœ”ļø Christmas vibes: where to see the markets . That's over 50 spots in Prague! You won't need any other guide to help you plan your meals and nights out in Prague.
Couples ā€¢ Vegetarian ā€¢ Female Solo ā€¢ Digital Nomads ā€¢ Backpacker ā€¢ Coffee ā€¢ Romantic ā€¢ Wine ā€¢ Foodie ā€¢ Budget
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