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Wakasa: Sleeping in a Farmhouse That Someone Brought Back to Life
The farmhouses of the Wakasa Town area have been standing for generations — thick-beamed s…
The farmhouses of the Wakasa Town area have been standing for generations — thick-beamed structures built for the winters of the Fukui coast, some with thatched roofs, most with the dark patina that old Japanese timber accumulates. As the rural population declined, many of these buildings stood empty. Some have been renovated by people who moved to the area and saw in the abandoned houses a different kind of possibility.
Staying in a renovated kominka in Wakasa means sleeping in a building that someone chose to save. The choice is visible in the work: the structural repairs that preserved the bones while updating the essentials, the retention of the features that made the building worth saving — the earthen floor, the heavy beams, the alcove where the household altar stood. The building has a history before you arrived, and you can feel it in the proportions.
Wakasa Town sits along the Wakasa Bay coast with the Mikata Goko lakes nearby — five interconnected lakes of different colors, a landscape that rewards simply sitting and watching. The combination of the renovated farmhouse and this particular natural environment produces the kind of rest that is specific to places where both the built and natural environments have been handled with care over a long time.
Sediment does not lie. At the Fukui Prefectural Varve Museum, cores pulled from the bed of Lake Suigetsu display layer upon layer of annual deposits — an unbroken record stretching back through deep time, now used as a global standard for radiocarbon calibration. Wakasa-cho holds this kind of evidence quietly, without fanfare. The town sits along the rias coast of Wakasa Bay, where five interconnected lakes — the Mikata Goko, registered under the Ramsar Convention — press up against梅 orchards and fishing hamlets, the water shifting color between each basin.
Along the old post road that once carried salted mackerel from the coast toward the capital, the preserved streetscape of Kumagawa-juku still reads as a working town rather than a museum piece. The Wakasa Saba Kaido Kumagawa-juku Shiryokan occupies a Western-style building that was once the village office — an odd, practical elegance. Shops along the road sell Wakasa-nuri lacquerware, its layered surface ground back to reveal translucent patterns. At Uriwari no Taki, water emerges from the grounds of Tentoku-ji temple at a constant cool temperature, collected in a stone basin before flowing on.
The Mikata Jomon Museum near Torihamakaiduka presents dugout canoes and artifacts from a shell midden site, grounding the area's deep habitation in physical objects you can stand beside. The festivals at Uwanishi Shrine — dengaku dance, the O-no-mai, lion dance — continue as seasonal obligations, not performances for outside audiences. Wakasa-cho's texture comes from this layering: geological, historical, culinary, ritual, each stratum still visible if you look at the right angle.
Stay in Wakasa, Fukui
What converges here
- Wakasa Mikata Jomon Museum
- Wakasa Town History and Culture Museum
- Fukui Prefectural Varve Museum
- Wakasa-cho Kumagawa-juku
- Kaminotsuka Tumulus
- Kamifunezuka Tumulus
- Shimofunezuka Tumulus
- Nakatsuka Tumulus
- Nishizuka Tumulus
- Mikata Five Lakes
- Kojin no Sotetsu (Cycad of Kojin)
- Ogino Residence (Wakasa-cho, Mikata-Kamigun, Fukui Prefecture)
- Ogino Family Residence (Wakasa-cho, Mikata-Kamigun, Fukui)
- Ogino Family Residence (Wakasa-cho, Mikata-Kamigun, Fukui)
- Ogino Residence (Wakasa-cho, Mikata-Kamigun, Fukui)
- Wakasa Wan
- Biwako
- Mount Kumodani
- Kiyama
- Kaminaka
- Otoba
- Mikata
- Tomura
- Wakasa-Arita
- Fujii
- Sekumi Fishing Port
- Shiosaka-goe Fishing Port
- Ogawa Fishing Port
- Tsunekami Fishing Port
- Miko Fishing Port