Ono, Gifu
Rose nurseries line the flat land where the Ibigawa and Neogawa rivers converge, and in May the town's dedicated rose park fills with varieties in bloom, tended for cutting and sale rather than spectacle. Ono-cho sits at the northwest edge of the Nōbi Plain, a working agricultural town where rose cultivation has become the dominant crop — the nursery output is among the most substantial in the country. Rows of grafted rootstock, destined for gardens far beyond Gifu, give the fields a different texture from ordinary farmland.
The town's deeper grain shows in its religious sites. Kofukuji temple holds a set of silk-mounted Buddhist paintings designated as national treasures, housed quietly within a Shingon complex that also serves as the second stop on the Nishi-Mino pilgrimage circuit. Nearby, Kiburi Shrine traces its founding to the early eighth century; its festival music, known as Kiburi Bayashi, is preserved by a local conservation group. The Setsubun Hoshi Matsuri at Kofukuji and the Neogawa fireworks in summer mark the town's ritual calendar with regularity rather than fanfare.
The Ibigawa Nido-zakura, a cherry variety unique to this region and designated a natural monument, flowers twice in a single year — a biological anomaly that locals have long taken as a kind of landmark. The Makimura family residence and the Taishō-era Kita-Okada house, with its main building and cluster of storehouses intact, stand as quiet evidence of the layered histories — wartime, Edo, and Shōwa — that have moved through this otherwise unhurried plain.
What converges here
- 野古墳群
- 揖斐二度ザクラ
- 牧村家住宅(岐阜県揖斐郡大野町)