The smell of incense reaches you before the gate does. Along the approach to Toyokawa Inari, small shops sell fox-shaped sweets and grilled skewers, and the stone-paved lane fills on weekday mornings with visitors who have come not as tourists but as worshippers — a distinction the town quietly maintains. Toyokawa has grown around this shrine for centuries, and the density of that relationship is still legible in the layout of streets near the station.
Step further and the register shifts. At Ōhashiya, a former inn on the old Tōkaidō road, the timber framing and low eaves recall the Akasaka-juku posting station that once stood at the edge of town. Nearby, the Goyū no Matsunamiki — a row of pine trees designated a natural monument — lines the old highway without ceremony. The Mikawa coast feeds into this inland basin through the Toyokawa River, and the agricultural land along the river produces Otowa rice, Toyokawa strawberries, and the large perilla leaves that appear in local markets with quiet regularity.
At Saigaji temple, founded in the eighth century, a pair of wooden guardian figures from the late Heian period stand in the dim interior — not behind glass, simply there. The Kaze Matsuri at Usotari Shrine brings hand-held fireworks and festival floats into the summer streets. These are not performances staged for outside eyes; they follow their own calendar, as they have done for a long time.
Stay in Toyokawa, Aichi
What converges here
- Mikawa Kokubunji Temple Site
- Mikawa Kokubun-niji Temple Ruins
- Mikawa Kokufu Ruins
- Goyu Pine Tree Avenue
- Nagi Tree of Ushikubo
- Sanmyo-ji Three-Story Pagoda
- Sanmyo-ji Main Hall Inner Shrine
- Hachimangu Main Hall
- Zaiga-ji
- Zaiga-ji Temple
- Mikawa Wan
- Kokufu
- Toyokawa
- Toyokawa-Inari
- Suwamachi
- Yahata
- Ina
- Aichi-Mito
- Nishi-Kozakai
- Ushikubo
- Mikawa-Ichinomiya
- Inarigu chi
- Meiden-Akasaka
- Kozakai
- Goyu
- Meiden-Nagasawa
- Odabuchi
- Nagayama
- Higashiue
- Ejima
- Kokufu
- Mima Fishing Port