In Okinawa dialect, Masan means “delicious” or “tasty”. Our pâtissier’s handmade Okinawan sweets are “Masan-do! (really delicious)” Enjoy them with a cup of local tea.
As the sun sets, before dinner, why not enjoy a delicious local awamori with a light snack in the Reception Lounge? If you are trying awamori for the first time, we recommend mixing it with soda water. We also offer non-alcoholic cocktails based on shikuwasa or pineapple juice.
We are pleased to announce that the resort now has an occasional outdoor Bar. Lighting is kept to a minimum so that you can enjoy the moon and stars in Okinawa’s natural planetarium as you sip your after-dinner drink.
Yoga lessons in the morning sun, with a view of the sea, a luxury made possible by the hotel’s east-coast location. Suitable for beginners, with a clear and simple instruction style. Please feel free to wear loungewear.
Relax over a delicious awamori while enjoying utasanshin – ryuka or Okinawan songs in 8-8-8-6 syllable structure accompanied on the sanshin – the court music of the Ryukyu era.
Eisa, performed during O-bon (according to the old Japanese calendar), the festival when the spirits of our ancestors briefly visit this world, is a traditional dance to bid the spirits farewell as they return to the next world at the end of their stay. Accompanied by sanshin and drums, this powerful dance includes forms passed down in different regions of Okinawa from generation to generation.