Oguchi, Aichi
The Gojo River runs quietly through the flat alluvial plain of Oguchi, and along its banks the cherry trees planted by Shamoto Eirō in the postwar years have grown into a canopy recognized among Japan's notable cherry-blossom sites. The town sits on a gentle northward-sloping fan of Kiso River sediment, crossed by the Gojo and the Ase rivers, and reached most naturally from Kashiwamori Station on the Meitetsu Inuyama Line — a functional stop, not a scenic one.
What surrounds that station is less postcard than productive: Toyoda Boshoku, Yamazaki Mazak, Okuma, and Rinnai have plants here, and the industrial presence has shaped the town's pace and demographics as much as any festival. Yet Oguchi has also built inward — the Kenkou Bunka Center, which opened in the late 1990s, holds a health clinic, a historical folk museum, a training gym, and a hall under one roof. The town library, several floors above the welfare center, loans freely to residents. The Okuma heated pool, open since the early 1980s, draws both townspeople and those from surrounding municipalities.
History surfaces in quieter corners: the Koguchi Castle ruins, where Oda Hirotsugu built his stronghold in the fifteenth century, now hold a reconstructed watchtower and a relocated gate from Nagoya Castle. Tokurinji temple preserves a gate moved from Inuyama Castle and a middle gate dating from the 1470s. The Rengematsuri and Yaro Mai Taisai mark the civic calendar. None of this is arranged for outside consumption — it simply continues alongside the factories and the river.