There is a futsal court and a large parking lot near the administration building, from which you can drive up to the campsite ⛺ and park next to it.The tent setting area is a grassy field with steps around the music hall, and pitch your tent in the number assigned to you at check-in at the administration building. After sunset, it started raining, so I drove to the shower room🚿, but just before entering the paved road inside the campsite, my tire got stuck in the ditch of the drainage ditch. When it's pitch black, it's hard to notice the paths of cars, steps, and grooves, so be careful when moving on the first night when you don't know the location.There are several kitchens and toilets, which are kept clean.As for showers 🚿, there is a building with only separate shower rooms for men and women next to the administration building. It's 300 yen for 6 minutes, and there's a countdown to the remaining time, so it's manageable.There was a thunderstorm at night ⛈️, but the grass below had good drainage and the inside of the tent didn't get flooded with just one sheet.However, there seemed to be an ant's nest under the lawn, and large ants that had taken refuge from the water that had flowed into the nest had come up inside the tent, and I woke up several times because they crawled around me while I was sleeping and tickled me. It was done.Near the administration building, there is a pool, a fountain where you can bathe, and a wealth of play equipment that you no longer see these days, where children are having fun playing.In the summer, the temperature drops to around 25 degrees Celsius after sunset, and the humidity seems to rise. It was still cool in the early morning, below 25 degrees Celsius, but after sunrise, the weather was sunny and the humidity dropped, but by about 9 a.m. the temperature quickly exceeded 30 degrees Celsius.