From the AURA index Region

Shirakawa, Gifu

municipality

image · pastoral × balanced (proxy)
Gifu / Shirakawa
A reading of this place

The road north through Shirakawacho runs tight against the Hida River, squeezed between water and slope, with barely enough flat ground for a house, let alone a town. Mountain forest covers nearly the whole of the municipal area, and what settles in the remaining slivers — along the Shira, Kuro, and Aka tributaries — is a quiet accumulation of timber yards, tea fields, and shrines older than the town's own administrative name.

Shirakawa-cha, the local green tea, grows in that compressed landscape, and the cypress of Tono hinoki has long moved through the timber trade here. At the roadside station Mino Shirakawa Piacere on Route 41, both appear on shelves alongside麦飯石, a stone particular to the river geology and used in water filtration. Further along, the Higashiza, a rural stage opened in the late nineteenth century, still holds its revolving platform and hanamichi — built for kabuki, still occasionally used for it. The 1926 suspension bridge at Shirakawa-bashi, now a registered tangible cultural property, carries foot traffic over the Hida with the particular sway of old cable work.

At Sakurata Shrine in Kurokawa, a cedar of considerable age stands in the precinct, and the annual festival there connects the settlement to older cycles of agricultural time. The Hisuikyo gorge, where the Hida River cuts through rock, has its own walking course — not a tourist loop so much as a path that follows the water's logic. A lamb meat festival surfaces in the calendar, unexpectedly, among the more expected rhythms of tea harvest and timber work. Such incongruities are part of the texture: a place shaped less by a single identity than by the long, layered pressure of mountain, river, and the people who found room between them.

Inside this place

What converges here

文化財 1
  • 大山の大スギ Natural Monument
自然公園 1
  • 飛騨木曽川 Quasi-National Park
文化財 自然公園