From the AURA index Hot-spring town

Kitaakita, Akita

municipality

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Akita / Kitaakita
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A reading of this place

The drum at Tsuzuko Shrine is not decorative — it is among the largest taiko in existence, and the hall built to house it, the Otaiko no Yakata, holds it year-round, waiting for the annual tatakizome ceremony that opens the new year with a sound that moves through the chest rather than the ears. Kitaakita sits in the Takanotsu Basin, ringed by the forested ridges of the Ou Mountains, where the Ani and Koani rivers feed into the Yoneshiro before the valleys open into farmland and scattered settlements. The land is not sparse in the way of abandonment — it is sparse in the way of deep occupation, each community rooted in something specific: copper mining at the Ani Kopzan, which operated for roughly six and a half centuries; the matagi hunting tradition, which traces its origins to these same hills; and the small-boat trade that once moved goods along the Koani River.

Food here is particular and unsentimental. Kiritanpo nabe is not a restaurant concept but a cold-weather staple — pounded rice on cedar skewers, browned and simmered with Hinai-jidori chicken in a broth that smells of burdock and soy. Bata-mochi, butter-kneaded rice cake, is the kind of local sweet that never travels far because it doesn't need to. Marmelo and shishito pepper appear in the fields and on tables without ceremony. The 浜辺の歌音楽館 commemorates Narita Tamezō, who composed the well-known song "Hamabe no Uta" and was born in this basin — a detail that sits quietly alongside the Jomon World Heritage site at Isedotai, where the ground itself holds evidence of continuous habitation reaching back thousands of years.

Forest covers most of the municipality. Moriyoshi-yama rises into cloud and rime ice in winter, its gondola carrying visitors above the treeline where beech forest gives way to open snowfields. The Yasuragi-no-Taki waterfall drops through the mountain's lower slopes, and the Taihei-ko reservoir holds rainbow trout and char in cold, still water. Kasumi Onsen, little known outside the prefecture, sits in this landscape without fanfare. Ōdate Noshiro Airport connects the basin to the wider world, but the rhythm of Kitaakita itself moves at the pace of the rivers — steady, lateral, unhurried.

Stay in Kitaakita, Akita

ONSEN Onsen in this area
Inside this place

What converges here

Museums 1
Cultural Properties 8
  • Jomon Prehistoric Sites in Hokkaido and Northern Tohoku World Heritage
  • Isedotai Site Historic Site
  • Momo-do and Sado Sugi Virgin Forest Natural Monument
  • Former Ani Mine Foreign Officials' Residence Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Kon Family Residence Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Kaneie Residence Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Kon Family Residence Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
  • Kaneie Residence Important Cultural Property (Architecture)
Natural Parks 1
  • Towada-Hachimantai National Park
Onsen 1
  • Kasumi Onsen TIER2
Mountains 2
  • Mount Moriyoshi
  • Mount Daibutsu
Stations 22
  • Takanosу 奥羽線
  • Takanotsu 秋田内陸線
  • Aikawa 秋田内陸線
  • Aniai 秋田内陸線
  • Ani-Maeda-Onsen 秋田内陸線
  • Yonaisawa 秋田内陸線
  • Hitatchi 秋田内陸線
  • Katsurase 秋田内陸線
  • Kamisugi 秋田内陸線
  • Maeda-Minami 秋田内陸線
  • Ani-Matagi 秋田内陸線
  • Onodai 秋田内陸線
  • Jomon-Ogata 秋田内陸線
  • Nishitakanasu 秋田内陸線
  • Kobuchi 秋田内陸線
  • Warauchi 秋田内陸線
  • Arase 秋田内陸線
  • Oku-Ani 秋田内陸線
  • Kayakusa 秋田内陸線
  • Maeyama 奥羽線
  • Iwanome 秋田内陸線
  • Nukasawa 奥羽線
Airports 1
  • Odate Noshiro Airport
Museums Cultural Properties Natural Parks Onsen Mountains Stations Airports