This site uses cookies as defined in our Cookie Policy, by continuing to use this site you agree to their use.
Continue
| Arrive | Depart | ||||||
| 5th05 | AprApr | 202929 | Osaka, Japan, embark on the Scenic Eclipse II | ||||
From Minami's neon-lighted Dotombori and historic Tenno-ji to the high-rise class and underground shopping labyrinths of Kita, Osaka is a city that pulses with its own unique rhythm. Though Osaka has no shortage of tourist sites, it is the city itself that is the greatest attraction. Home to some of Japan's best food, most unique fashions, and warmest locals, Osaka does not beg to be explored—it demands it. More than anywhere else in Japan, it rewards the impulsive turn down an interesting side street or the chat with a random stranger. People do not come here to see the city, they come to experience it.Excluded from the formal circles of power and aristocratic culture in 16th-century Edo (Tokyo), Osaka took advantage of its position as Japan's trading center, developing its own art forms such as Bunraku puppet theater and Rakugo comic storytelling. It was in Osaka that feudal Japan's famed Floating World—the dining, theater, and pleasure district—was at its strongest and most inventive. Wealthy merchants and common laborers alike squandered fortunes on culinary delights, turning Osaka into "Japan's Kitchen," a moniker the city still has today. Though the city suffered a blow when the Meiji government canceled all of the samurai class's outstanding debts to the merchants, it was quick to recover. At the turn of the 20th century, it had become Japan's largest and most prosperous city, a center of commerce and manufacturing.Today Osaka remains Japan's iconoclastic metropolis, refusing to fit Tokyo's norms and expectations. Unlike the hordes of Tokyo, Osakans are fiercely independent. As a contrast to the neon and concrete surroundings, the people of Osaka are known as Japan's friendliest and most outgoing. Ask someone on the street for directions in Tokyo and you are lucky to get so much as a glance. Ask someone in Osaka and you get a conversation.The main areas of the city, Kita (north) and Minami (south), are divided by two rivers: the Dojima-gawa and the Tosabori-gawa. Between Kita and Minami is Naka-no-shima, an island and the municipal center of Osaka. Kita (north of Chuo Dori) is Osaka's economic hub and contains Osaka's largest stations: JR Osaka and Hankyu Umeda. The area is crammed with shops, department stores, and restaurants. Nearby are a nightlife district, Kita-shinchi; Naka-no-shima and the Museum of Oriental Ceramics; Osaka-jo (Osaka Castle); and Osaka Koen (Osaka Park). Restaurants, bars, department stores, and boutiques attract Osaka's youth to Minami (south Chuo Dori); theatergoers head to the National Bunraku Theatre and electronics-lovers to Den Den Town. For a glimpse of old Osaka, visit Tenno-ji Temple and Shin Sekai. The main stations are Namba, Shin-sai-bashi, Namba Nankai, and Tenno-ji. There's easy access to the Municipal Museum of Fine Art and Sumiyoshi Taisha (Sumiyoshi Grand Shrine).The bay area, to the west of the city center, is home to the Osaka Aquarium and Universal Studios Japan. The Shinkansen stops at Shin-Osaka, three stops (about five minutes) north of Osaka Station on the Mido-suji subway line. To the north of Shin-Osaka is Senri Expo Park. Welcome to Osaka, Japan’s vibrant culinary capital and gateway to the treasures of the Kansai region. Renowned throughout the country for its street food culture and warm, convivial spirit, Osaka blends the grandeur of its imposing 16th-century castle with a dynamic cityscape of neon-lit neighbourhoods, historic temples and lively waterside districts. Nearby, the ancient capitals of Kyoto and Nara invite exploration of serene gardens, sacred shrines and centuries of imperial heritage. Please book your flight to arrive into Osaka prior to 02:00 PM. | |||||||
| 6th06 | AprApr | 202929 | Matsuyama, Japan | ||||
Discover Matsuyama, the largest city on the island of Shikoku and a place where history, literature and the art of bathing converge. Presiding over the city from a forested hilltop, Matsuyama Castle is one of only twelve original castles remaining in Japan, its elegant keep and stone ramparts offering sweeping views across the urban landscape to the Seto Inland Sea beyond. | |||||||
| 7th07 | AprApr | 202929 | Hofu, Japan | ||||
Arrive in Hofu, a quietly distinguished city in Yamaguchi Prefecture where centuries of spiritual devotion have shaped both the landscape and local character. The revered Hofu Tenmangu Shrine, one of the oldest and most significant Tenmangu shrines in Japan, crowns a hillside above the city, its sweeping stone staircase and vermillion structures dedicated to the deity of learning and scholarship. The shrine grounds are particularly celebrated during the spring months, when cherry blossoms frame the approach in a canopy of delicate pink. | |||||||
| 8th08 | AprApr | 202929 | Busan, South Korea | ||||
White-sand city beaches and hot-spring resorts may not be everyone's first image of Korea, but these are what Koreans flock to Busan for all year. And there are plenty of opportunities for rest, relaxation, retail therapy, and even a touch of glamour every October with the Busan International Film Festival. Busan's beaches are the big summertime draw but there is plenty to be seen year round. Quintessential experiences include taking some rest and relaxation at a local spa and exploring the Beomeosa temple complex. Cross the Korea Strait to discover Busan, South Korea’s dynamic coastal metropolis. Stretched along a dramatic shoreline of beaches, cliffs and wooded hillsides, the city reveals a distinctive character quite unlike any Japanese port on this voyage. The bustling Jagalchi Fish Market, one of the largest in Asia, hums with energy as vendors display the morning’s catch, whilst nearby Gamcheon Culture Village cascades down a hillside in a mosaic of pastel-coloured houses and street art. | |||||||
| 9th09 | AprApr | 202929 | Oki Islands, Japan | ||||
After a morning at sea, arrive at the Oki Islands, a remote archipelago in the Sea of Japan that feels a world apart from the mainland. Designated a World Heritage-listed Global Geopark, these islands reveal a dramatic geological story written in sheer sea cliffs, volcanic rock formations and coastlines sculpted by millennia of wind and wave. The towering Matengai Cliff, one of the highest sea cliffs in Japan, plunges vertically into the ocean, creating a spectacle of raw natural power. | |||||||
| 10th10 | AprApr | 202929 | Miyazu, Japan | ||||
Miyazu sits on the shores of Miyazu Bay in northern Kyoto Prefecture, serving as the gateway to Amanohashidate, one of Japan’s celebrated “three most scenic views.” This extraordinary natural sandbar stretches across the bay, its narrow ribbon of white sand lined with thousands of pine trees, creating a scene that has inspired poets and artists for centuries. Viewed from the surrounding hillsides, the pine-clad bridge appears to float between sea and sky, an image long held as one of the most beautiful in all of Japan. | |||||||
| 11th11 | AprApr | 202929 | Toyama, Japan | ||||
Arrive in Toyama, a city framed by one of the most dramatic mountain backdrops in Japan. The Tateyama Mountain Range of the Northern Alps rises to over 3,000 metres directly behind the city, its snow-capped peaks creating a stunning contrast with the coastal plains below. The city itself blends modern civic spaces with a historic castle park and a network of elegant waterways, whilst the surrounding region is celebrated for its exceptionally fresh seafood, drawn from the deep, cold waters of Toyama Bay.Beyond the city, the traditional mountain villages of the Gokayama district, a World Heritage-listed site, preserve the distinctive gassho-zukuri farmhouses that have sheltered communities through centuries of heavy snowfall. These steep-roofed structures, set among terraced rice paddies and forested valleys, offer a rare glimpse into a way of life shaped by the rhythms of nature and the demands of a mountain environment. | |||||||
| 12th12 | AprApr | 202929 | Niigata, Japan | ||||
Niigata city is the capital of Niigata prefecture and faces the Japan Sea on the island of Honshu, the largest of the four islands that comprise Japan. With a population of 810,000, Niigata is the largest Honshu city along the Japan Sea coast. The city is located at 300 km northwest of Tokyo and the bullet train would take you there in only two hours. Niigata offers four distinct seasons throughout the year, and people may find the winter season to be the best time to visit as many people would come for winter sports such as skiing or snowboarding. However, you will find the place abundantly beautiful throughout the year as well. Niigata is famous for growing rice as well as fresh seafood. If you try white rice without any seasonings, you would be able to taste the difference and appreciate its flavour. Thanks to the quality of the rice, they produce great Sake in the area. If you have time, why don’t you extend your journey to one of the famous Sake Brewery? Discover Niigata, a prosperous port city on Honshu’s Sea of Japan coast, renowned for producing some of the country’s finest rice and, by extension, its most celebrated saké. The Niigata region is home to an extraordinary concentration of saké breweries, many with histories stretching back generations, where master brewers draw on pure mountain water and locally grown Koshihikari rice to craft beverages of exceptional quality. | |||||||
| 13th13 | AprApr | 202929 | Akita, Japan | ||||
Arrive in Akita, a city steeped in samurai heritage and the traditions of northern Japan’s Tohoku region. Once the seat of the powerful Satake clan, Akita retains a strong sense of its feudal past, with the historical relics of Kubota Castle set amid expansive parkland that is particularly striking during cherry blossom season, when hundreds of sakura trees transform the grounds into a sea of soft pink. | |||||||
| 14th14 | AprApr | 202929 | Hakodate, Japan | ||||
Facing out on two bays, Hakodate is a 19th-century port town, with clapboard buildings on sloping streets, a dockside tourist zone, streetcars, and fresh fish on every menu. In the downtown historic quarter, a mountain rises 1,100 feet above the city on the southern point of the narrow peninsula. Russians, Americans, Chinese, and Europeans have all left their mark; this was one of the first three Japanese ports the Meiji government opened up to international trade in 1859. The main sights around the foot of Mt. Hakodate can be done in a day, but the city is best appreciated with an overnight stay for the illumination in the historic area, the night views from either the mountain or the fort tower, and the fish market at dawn. City transport is easy to navigate and English information is readily available. Evening departure trains from Tokyo arrive here at dawn—perfect for fish-market breakfasts. Cross to Hokkaido and arrive in Hakodate, a port city at the island’s southern tip with a distinctive cosmopolitan heritage. Among the first Japanese cities to open to international trade in the mid-19th century, Hakodate retains a fascinating blend of Western and Japanese architectural influences, particularly in the Motomachi district, where European-style churches, former consulates and elegant merchant houses line hillside streets overlooking the harbour. | |||||||
| 15th15 | AprApr | 202929 | Sendai, Japan | ||||
After a morning at sea, arrive in Sendai, the largest city in the Tohoku region and a place known affectionately as the “City of Trees” for the graceful zelkova-lined boulevards that define its urban character. Founded in the early 17th century by the powerful feudal lord Date Masamune, Sendai carries a rich samurai legacy that is beautifully preserved at the Zuihoden Mausoleum, an ornate complex of lacquered and gilded buildings set among towering cedars on a forested hillside. | |||||||
| 16th16 | AprApr | 202929 | Oarai, Japan | ||||
Discover Oarai, a seaside town on the Ibaraki coast that serves as the gateway to one of Japan’s most celebrated landscape gardens. Kairakuen, built in 1842 by the local feudal lord and ranked among Japan’s three great gardens, is renowned for its vast plum grove of over 3,000 trees, which fills the hillside with fragrant blossoms in early spring. Beyond the plum season, the garden unfolds across bamboo groves, cedar forests and open meadows designed for the enjoyment of all. | |||||||
| 17th17 | AprApr | 202929 | Tokyo, Japan | ||||
Lights, sushi, manga! Sprawling, frenetic, and endlessly fascinating, Japan’s capital is a city of contrasts. Shrines and gardens are pockets of calm between famously crowded streets and soaring office buildings. Mom-and-pop noodle houses share street space with Western-style chain restaurants and exquisite fine dining. Shopping yields lovely folk arts as well as the newest electronics. And nightlife kicks off with karaoke or sake and continues with techno clubs and more. Whether you seek the traditional or the cutting edge, Tokyo will provide it. Arrive in Tokyo, Japan’s extraordinary capital and one of the world’s great metropolises. A city of ceaseless reinvention, Tokyo layers ancient tradition upon cutting-edge modernity with a fluency unmatched anywhere else. The serene grounds of Meiji Jingu Shrine and the Imperial Palace Gardens offer moments of contemplation amidst a vast urban landscape, whilst the neon-lit corridors of Shibuya, Shinjuku and Akihabara pulse with the energy of contemporary Japanese culture. | |||||||
| 18th18 | AprApr | 202929 | Toba, Japan | ||||
Arrive in Toba, a quiet port city on the Shima Peninsula that holds an outsized place in Japanese cultural history. It was here, in the sheltered waters of Ago Bay, that Mikimoto Kokichi pioneered the technique of cultivating pearls in the late 19th century, transforming a local fishing tradition into a global industry. The legacy of pearl cultivation remains woven into the fabric of the city, and the traditions of the ama, the free-diving women who have harvested shellfish and seaweed along these shores for over two thousand years, endure as a living connection to the region’s maritime past. | |||||||
| 19th19 | AprApr | 202929 | Osaka, Japan, disembark the Scenic Eclipse II | ||||
From Minami's neon-lighted Dotombori and historic Tenno-ji to the high-rise class and underground shopping labyrinths of Kita, Osaka is a city that pulses with its own unique rhythm. Though Osaka has no shortage of tourist sites, it is the city itself that is the greatest attraction. Home to some of Japan's best food, most unique fashions, and warmest locals, Osaka does not beg to be explored—it demands it. More than anywhere else in Japan, it rewards the impulsive turn down an interesting side street or the chat with a random stranger. People do not come here to see the city, they come to experience it.Excluded from the formal circles of power and aristocratic culture in 16th-century Edo (Tokyo), Osaka took advantage of its position as Japan's trading center, developing its own art forms such as Bunraku puppet theater and Rakugo comic storytelling. It was in Osaka that feudal Japan's famed Floating World—the dining, theater, and pleasure district—was at its strongest and most inventive. Wealthy merchants and common laborers alike squandered fortunes on culinary delights, turning Osaka into "Japan's Kitchen," a moniker the city still has today. Though the city suffered a blow when the Meiji government canceled all of the samurai class's outstanding debts to the merchants, it was quick to recover. At the turn of the 20th century, it had become Japan's largest and most prosperous city, a center of commerce and manufacturing.Today Osaka remains Japan's iconoclastic metropolis, refusing to fit Tokyo's norms and expectations. Unlike the hordes of Tokyo, Osakans are fiercely independent. As a contrast to the neon and concrete surroundings, the people of Osaka are known as Japan's friendliest and most outgoing. Ask someone on the street for directions in Tokyo and you are lucky to get so much as a glance. Ask someone in Osaka and you get a conversation.The main areas of the city, Kita (north) and Minami (south), are divided by two rivers: the Dojima-gawa and the Tosabori-gawa. Between Kita and Minami is Naka-no-shima, an island and the municipal center of Osaka. Kita (north of Chuo Dori) is Osaka's economic hub and contains Osaka's largest stations: JR Osaka and Hankyu Umeda. The area is crammed with shops, department stores, and restaurants. Nearby are a nightlife district, Kita-shinchi; Naka-no-shima and the Museum of Oriental Ceramics; Osaka-jo (Osaka Castle); and Osaka Koen (Osaka Park). Restaurants, bars, department stores, and boutiques attract Osaka's youth to Minami (south Chuo Dori); theatergoers head to the National Bunraku Theatre and electronics-lovers to Den Den Town. For a glimpse of old Osaka, visit Tenno-ji Temple and Shin Sekai. The main stations are Namba, Shin-sai-bashi, Namba Nankai, and Tenno-ji. There's easy access to the Municipal Museum of Fine Art and Sumiyoshi Taisha (Sumiyoshi Grand Shrine).The bay area, to the west of the city center, is home to the Osaka Aquarium and Universal Studios Japan. The Shinkansen stops at Shin-Osaka, three stops (about five minutes) north of Osaka Station on the Mido-suji subway line. To the north of Shin-Osaka is Senri Expo Park. Today, it is time to farewell Scenic Eclipse II after 15 extraordinary days on board. Be sure to fit in one last indulgent breakfast at the Yacht Club or ask your butler to deliver coffee to your suite so you can take your time packing. Disembark in Osaka with the memories of an unforgettable Discovery Voyage around Japan at its most enchanting time of year. Please book your flight to depart out of Osaka after 12:00 PM. #Spa treatments and services at additional cost. Daily activities may be subject to change; please consult your Daily Wonder for updates. Helicopter and submersible not in operation in Japan. The itinerary is a guide only and may be amended for operational reasons. As such, Scenic cannot guarantee the voyage will operate unaltered from the itinerary stated above. Please refer to our terms and conditions for further information. Hotels are indicative and subject to change. | |||||||

The images shown are for illustration purposes only and may not be an exact representation of what you find on the ship.
The images shown are for illustration purposes only and may not be an exact representation of what you find on the ship.
The images shown are for illustration purposes only and may not be an exact representation of what you find on the ship.
The images shown are for illustration purposes only and may not be an exact representation of what you find on the ship.
The images shown are for illustration purposes only and may not be an exact representation of what you find on the ship.
| Return flights including luggage allowance | |||
| Overseas Transfers | |||
| 14 nights aboard the Scenic Eclipse II | |||
| Return Flights (including regional) | |||
| All Verandah Suites | |||
| Butler service for every guest | |||
| Nine Dining Venues | |||
| Gratuities Included | |||
| Complimentary drinks on-board | |||
| Free use of electric bikes | |||
| Comprehensive choice of shore excursions | |||
| Complimentary Wi-Fi | |||
| Explore under the sea in our submarine (additional charge) | |||
| Soar above and beyond by helicopter (additional charge) | |||
| Port Taxes and Fees | |||
![]() | ABTA and ATOL Protection* | ||
Fly/cruise package |
Date 5th Apr 2029 |
Nts 14 |
Interior ![]() |
Oceanview ![]() |
Balcony ![]() |
Suite £19,245pp |
Interior ![]() |
Oceanview ![]() |
Balcony ![]() |
Suite £38,490pp |
Date 5th Apr 2029 |
Nts 14 |
Interior ![]() |
Oceanview ![]() |
Balcony ![]() |
Suite £19,245pp |
Interior ![]() |
Oceanview ![]() |
Balcony ![]() |
Suite £38,490pp |






Fusion Cruises when selling travel arrangements is a trading name of Co-op Travel Services Ltd. Fusion Cruises is an Accredited Body Member of Co-operative Travel Consortium. (ABTA:P6652, ATOL:12904).
Book with Confidence. We are a Member of ABTA which means you have the benefit of ABTA’s assistance and Code of Conduct.
Some of the flights and flight-inclusive holidays on this website are financially protected by the ATOL scheme but ATOL protection does not apply to all holiday and travel services offered on this website. This website will provide you with information on the protection that applies in the case of each holiday and travel service offered before you make your booking. If you do not receive an ATOL Certificate then the booking will not be ATOL protected. If you do receive an ATOL Certificate but all parts of your trip are not listed on it, those parts will not be ATOL protected. Please see our booking conditions for information, or for more information about financial protection and the ATOL Certificate go to: www.caa.co.uk

