Exploring Japan's Seto Inland Sea region, on two wheels

The largely rural Setouchi area offers a different view of the country

Soil Setoda Rooms2.jpg

Picture perfect: Looking out onto the Seto Inland Sea from a room at SOIL Setoda, a stylish hotel in Onomichi, Hiroshima prefecture. (SOIL Setoda)

ZINARA RATHNAYAKE

ONOMICHI, Japan -- In late October, as the autumn leaves were turning yellow, I sat on the deck of a ferry crossing part of the Seto Inland Sea, a 440-kilometer-long body of water that separates the large Japanese islands of Honshu, Shikoku and Kyushu and connects the Pacific Ocean to the Sea of Japan.

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