![]() |
| One
weekend winter morning, I took a bus to the Park from commuter bus gate 5 of Omori Station. This Keikyu Bus route employs fuel cell cars. |
| Near the park, there is a huge warehouse of JR East. |
| Tokyo
Port Wild Bird Park Stop. The greenery on our right is the Park area. The Park is circled by 8-lane industrial roads. |
| The
notice board near the above stop says “Park Entrance this way, 300m ahead.” Just follow it. |
| We’ll find the gate. |
The Wild Bird Park is now owned and operated by Tokyo Port Terminal Corporation. The entity’s origin was a public corporation for the development and management of Port of Tokyo. After several organizational transformations, in 2007 it became company limited. With this background, the entrance fee to the Park is free for kids in elementary school or younger. If a 7-9th grader studies in Tokyo, s/he can use the facility free of charge. Adults pay 300 yen at the ticket booth, but on every October 1 entrance is free for all as this is the day for Citizens of Tokyo. The management of the Park is done by Terminal Corporation, but the operation of Nature Centre in the Park is by Japan Wild Bird Society. So, the facilities here for bird watching is, I would say, excellent. The data gathered and published from Wild Bird Park is also very interesting. If you’re a birdwatcher and in Tokyo with some reason, this is the place you can come at least once. It is closed every Monday and New Year holidays. Otherwise, the place opens 9:00-17:00 (February - October) or 9:00-16:30 (November – January).
| From
the gate, walk up this slope, which is, by the way, a completely artificial geographical feature. |
| At the
end of the entrance there is an admin office with ticket booths. |
| The
panel explaining how to for the usage of the park, with English translation. The place has parking spaces. |
| Tickets are sold by vending machines. |
| Entering
the Park. Before going through the gate, Park volunteers check your ticket. |
The Park is “divided” by a wide industrial road coming in Ota Market from the north. Hmmm, I think this expression may give you an impression the human activity destroyed the original wild forest for economic activity … actually the story is completely the other way around. I tell you about it next week. Well, so, the Park has two sections: West and East. West Park is smaller and contains rice paddies and veggie patches where volunteers engage in organic farming. This section also allows kids to catch and release insects with nets lent by the management office at the entrance. i.e. West Park has more facilities for human activity, and, I would say, is “garden-like.” East Park has Nature Center where rangers of the Wild Bird Society are resident. East Park directly faces Tokyo Bay and has tidal flat. I had an impression the area is more “forest-like.”. Let me continue the next week why the East and West are like that. Please stay tuned!
| West and
East Parks are connected by a long bridge that goes over the Market. |
Tokyo Port Wild Bird Park 東京港野鳥公園管理事務所
3-1 Tokai, Ota Ward, Tokyo, 143-0001
〒143-0001 東京都大田区東海3-1
Phone: 03-3799-5031
FAX: 03-3799-5032
You can send an enquiry to them by clicking the bottom line of their homepage at
https://www.tptc.co.jp/support/contact/park/yatyo






