Lanterns sway from the floats of Nihonmatsu Shrine each autumn, their paper skins glowing amber against the castle-town grid that has barely shifted since the Edo period. Nihonmatsu sits in a basin between the Abukuma River to the east and Adatara-san rising to the west, a geography that has always kept the town turned slightly inward, attentive to its own rhythms. The castle ruins still stand above the streets, and at Dairinji temple the graves of the Nihonmatsu Shōnentai — the young fighters lost in the Boshin War — sit quietly under old cedars.
The town's crafts and ferments accumulate without announcement. Sake breweries cluster along the older streets, and the tradition of Nihonmatsu furniture — a regional woodworking lineage — continues in workshops nearby. At the Adatara foothills, Gakuonsen is the kind of hot-spring settlement that operates on its own slow schedule, indifferent to trend. In October, chrysanthemum figures assembled for the Nihonmatsu Kikuongyō fill the castle grounds with the faint green smell of stems and damp soil — a festival that turns the whole town into a temporary horticultural argument.
Adatara-san gives the place its horizon and its water. The mountain feeds the sake rice, the apple orchards of Hayama, and the thermal springs below. At Kakurinji temple, hydrangea blooms in dense clusters across the hillside — not a spectacle arranged for visitors, but a planting that simply recurs each year. Nihonmatsu carries its layers — castle town, sake town, chrysanthemum town, mountain town — without insisting you notice any particular one.
Stay in Nihommatsu, Fukushima
What converges here
- Nihonmatsu Castle Ruins
- Former Nihonmatsu Domain Kaisekimeihi
- Scenic Places along Oku no Hosomichi
- Great Cedar of Kiwata
- Sugisawa no Osugi (Great Cedar of Sugisawa)
- Bandai-Asahi
- Mount Adatara
- Mount Hiyama
- Nihonmatsu
- Adachi
- Sugita