Hello everybody:
We're in the process of researching a trip to Japan as a tag-on to a business trip to Tokyo that's on my horizon (mid February) and we're considering to stay at least once in a Ryokan in order to enjoy the experience as well as the onsen. Now I have come across a webpage about Ryokans and there the following can be read:
Staying at a typical ryokan is a traditional Japanese cultural experience, and it is not like staying at a Western-style hotel. For example ryokans do not have central heating and in the winter this means you will be staying in a room with a portable heater (kerosene, gas, electric). While your room may be heated, your private bathroom (if you have one) will probably not have a separate heater. In the summer time, your room may have an air conditioning unit but again your private bathroom (if you have one) will probably not have one. Many ryokan owners wish to preserve the traditional atmosphere of their ryokan, and this means maintaining old fashioned heating systems in order to preserve the traditional architecture, design, and atmosphere of the ryokan. If you prefer to sleep in a double room with twin queen-size beds and have: a full modern bathroom, carpeted rooms, perfect room temperature, insulated silence, the latest high tech gadgets, and every member of the staff speaking fluent English then a ryokan might not be for you.
(
http://www.japaneseguesthouses.com/a...okan/index.htm)
Does that mean that *all* Ryokans are like this and how do people handle this in the winter? As stated the trip would be in the middle of February and we're looking for a Ryokan in Hakone.
Thanks a lot,
cas_de