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Ouchijuku Snow Festival
Snow settles on the thatch. Ouchijuku was a post town once, a way station on the road tha…
Snow settles on the thatch.
Ouchijuku was a post town once, a way station on the road that linked Aizu to Nikko, where travelers stopped, ate, slept, and moved on. The road's importance faded centuries ago, and the town, forgotten, simply stayed as it was: a single street lined with thatched-roof houses, the streetscape of the Edo period left almost untouched.
In February the snow festival comes. Lanterns are carved from packed snow and lit from within, and at dusk the white road fills with small uneven points of orange light, as if the village had decided to answer the dark in its own quiet handwriting. Fireworks rise—modest ones, the fireworks of snow country—and color scatters across white roofs, a white road, a white dark.
It would be easy to mistake this for a scene arranged for visitors, and in part it is. But people still live here, and still cross each winter the way their grandparents did, with the snow rather than against it. The festival is lovely. The ordinary life beneath it is lovelier.
The thatched roof of Yunokami Onsen Station sits beside the tracks of the Aizu Railway like a farmhouse that simply refused to move. From here, the Aizu-Nishikaido — the old post road once called the Shimotsuke Kaido — runs north through the mountains, and the logic of the landscape becomes clear: this was a corridor, not a destination, and Shimogo-machi grew along it accordingly.
Ouchi-juku, a few kilometers up that road, preserves a row of kayabuki farmhouses that once served travelers crossing the mountains between the Kanto plain and Aizu. The practice of eating Takato soba using a whole green onion as chopstick is still observed here — not as performance, but as the dish itself. Elsewhere in town, shingorō — rice skewered and coated in miso — belongs to the same register: food made from what the land offered, shaped by the cold. The Sarugaku Plateau holds buckwheat fields that ripen in late summer, their harvest feeding directly into the soba culture that runs through the whole valley.
The Agawa River has cut through tuffaceous rock at Tono-hetsuri into a formation of columns and caves that the water is still, slowly, working on. Upstream, the Asahi Dam, completed in 1935, stands as one of the oldest operational dams of its kind in the country, its gates lit up in winter against the snow. Ouchi-juku's Yuki Matsuri fills the post town with lanterns and snow figures each February, the old street briefly loud again before the quiet returns.
Stay in Shimogo, Fukushima
What converges here
- Shimogo-machi Ouchi-juku Preservation District of Historic Buildings
- Shimono Kaido
- Nakayama Fuketsu Special Plant Community
- To no Hetsuri
- Kannondo
- Nikko
- Mount Ono
- Yunokami-Onsen
- Aizu-Shimogo
- Tono-Hetsuri
- Furusato-Koen
- Yagoshima
- Yosonkoen