Katsura, Chiba
1 upcoming event
Katsuura Morning Market
In the fishing town of Katsuura on the Boso Peninsula, a morning market has been held almo…
In the fishing town of Katsuura on the Boso Peninsula, a morning market has been held almost every day since 1591.
It was established by the lord of Katsuura Castle as a place where farmers and fishermen could exchange what they grew and caught — rice and vegetables from the hills, bonito and shellfish from the sea. For more than 430 years, this arrangement has continued.
The stalls offer fresh bonito and other fish, dried seafood, mountain vegetables like fuki and bamboo shoots, and preserved foods. The sellers are local; the produce is local; the morning conversation is in the dialect of the Outer Boso coast.
The market rotates locations within the town: from the 1st to the 15th of each month, it occupies Shimohoncho street; from the 16th to the end of the month, it moves to Nakahoncho street. The same market, the same town, different ground underfoot.
Katsuura is also known as a place that has never recorded a temperature above 35°C in its recorded weather history. Even in August, the morning air is cool enough to walk slowly.
One of Japan's three great morning markets, alongside Wajima and Takayama. Closed Wednesdays and January 1st.
The morning market opens before the town has fully woken up. Stalls at Katsuuraasamichi carry dried fish, root vegetables, and fresh catch in rough wooden crates, the smell of brine moving through the air with the early sea wind. This has been the rhythm of Katsuura since the late sixteenth century — a harbor settlement organized around what the ocean gives and what the land beside it grows.
Katsuo — skipjack tuna — shapes the town's identity more than any landmark does. The fishing port at Katsuura handles a volume of it that defines the local calendar, culminating in the Katsuura-ko Katsuo Matsuri each year. From that same tradition of bold, labor-driven flavor comes Katsuura Tantanmen, a local ramen variant built on chili oil and minced onion rather than sesame, designed to warm fishermen from the inside out. It is a dish that makes sense here, at a table near the port, after a cold morning.
The coastline along Minami-Boso Quasi-National Park runs in jagged inlets — Rias topography that keeps the water unusually clear. At Moroya Beach, the transparency is immediately visible from the shore. Inland, the hills of the Boso Range press close, leaving a narrow inhabited strip between ridge and sea. The JAXA tracking station at Katsuura Uchu Tsushinjo sits somewhere in that hinterland, its exhibition room quietly open to anyone who passes through — a small, odd reminder that this fishing town also has a role in watching the sky.
What converges here
- Minami Boso
- Katsuura Ubara Onsen
- Katsuura Onsen
- Katsuura
- Kazusa-Okitsu
- Namegawa Island
- Ubara
- Katsuura Fishing Port
- Matsube Fishing Port
- Moriya Fishing Port
- Ubara Fishing Port