Shirahama Onsen — Seaside Rotenburo Hot Springs
Shirahama Onsen (白浜温泉) is one of Japan's three oldest hot spring resorts (along with Arima and Dogo), with a recorded history of over 1,350 years — emperors and nobility bathed here since the Nara Period (710-794 AD). The onsen's defining feature is seaside rotenburo (露天風呂, outdoor baths) built directly on coastal rocks, where bathers soak in naturally heated mineral water while waves crash against the bath's edge and sunset colors the Pacific horizon.
The most famous public bath is Saki-no-yu (崎の湯), a circular oceanfront rotenburo with no walls or roof — bathers sit in the hot spring water (42-45°C) while spray from breaking waves occasionally mists over the bath. The experience is primal — naked, in hot water, facing the endless ocean. Shirahama's hot spring water is sodium-chloride-bicarbonate type, said to improve circulation and skin conditions. The resort area includes dozens of onsen hotels and ryokan offering private rotenburo on balconies with ocean views, as well as public baths for day visitors. Shirahama Onsen combines beach resort amenities with traditional hot spring culture — a hybrid destination rare in Japan (most onsen towns are inland mountains, most beach resorts lack hot springs). The onsen is especially atmospheric in winter when steam rises dramatically against cool air and bathers can soak while watching winter storms roll in across the Pacific.
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