Mount Fuji

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Mt. Fuji is 3,776 meters high and is the most noteworthy mountain in Japan, arranged in the southeast piece of Yamanashi at the fringe of Shizuoka. With unrivaled superbness and a lovely cone shape, Mt. Fuji has frequently been chosen as the subject of artworks and writing. It is world acclaimed as an image of Japan. 

At the foot of Mt. Fuji will be Fuji-Goko (Fuji's Five Lakes), Aoki-ga-hara-jukai (an ocean of trees that is dim notwithstanding amid the day), and Kitaguchi-Hongu Fuji-Sengen Shrine (which was developed to quiet the emission of Mt. Fuji). The Fire Festival of Yoshida, held toward the end of the late spring as a custom for shutting the climbing season for Mt. Fuji, is one of the three most exceptional celebrations in Japan. 

Mt. Fuji has long been the focal point of mountain love of old Japan. Today, it is a prominent mountain to climb, and numerous individuals climb Mt. Fuji to watch the dawn called Goraiko from the summit. Access to the fifth station is very much kept up, so you can go so far and altogether appreciate the wonderfulness of Mt. Fuji by simply taking a gander at the wonderful sight and its encompassing surroundings close nearby in all seasons without climbing the distance to the top. 

Fujisan, object of love and wellspring of aesthetic motivation was engraved as a World Heritage site (Cultural Heritage) at the 37th meeting of the World Heritage Committee in June 2013.
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