The ferry from Miyajima-guchi crosses a narrow stretch of the Seto Inland Sea in minutes, and the torii of Itsukushima Jinja rises from the water before you've quite settled your bag. But Hatsukaichi is not only its island. Back on the mainland, the town carries the quiet weight of a medieval timber port — wood still moves through here, and the name Woodone appears on signage and in the collections of the Woodone Museum of Art, where Kyoto-school paintings hang in a building that feels unhurried, almost residential.
The coast around Jigozen produces oysters, and the smell of the sea reaches the roadside stalls where they're sold in mesh bags or grilled over charcoal. Asari clams from Ōno, wasabi from the mountain streams, soy sauce brewed locally — these are not souvenirs but ingredients that circulate through ordinary kitchens. The kendama, the wooden cup-and-ball toy, was first made here, and the craft still has a presence in the town's self-understanding. Sakurao Brewery and Distillery operates along the same shoreline, the industrial and the artisanal sitting close together as they tend to in port towns.
Inland, the terrain shifts entirely. The Yoshiwa district sits in the Nishi-Chugoku mountains under deep winter snow, a different climate from the mild coast. Misen, the peak above the island, is accessible from Daishōin temple at its base. The Kangenssai festival on the water, the old market called Hatsuka-no-ichi — these mark time in a place that has been, for centuries, a point where sea routes, mountain timber, and pilgrimage paths converge.
Stay in Hatsukaichi, Hiroshima
What converges here
- Art Gallery Miyauchi
- WoodOne Museum of Art
- Itsukushima Shrine Treasure Museum
- Umi no Miero Mori Museum of Art
- Miyajima Aquarium
- Itsukushima
- Hatsukaichi City Miyajima-cho Preservation District of Historic Buildings
- Misen Primeval Forest
- Itsukushima Shrine Five-Story Pagoda
- Itsukushima Shrine Treasure House
- Itsukushima Shrine Sessha Arakotoko Shrine Main Hall
- Itsukushima Shrine Tahoto Pagoda
- Itsukushima Shrine Sessha Omoto Shrine Main Hall
- Itsukushima Shrine Sessha Toyokuni Shrine Main Hall (Senjokaku)
- Hayashi Residence (Hiroshima Prefecture, Saeki-gun, Miyajima-cho)
- Hayashi Residence (Miyajimachi, Saeki-gun, Hiroshima)
- Momijidanigawa Garden Erosion Control Facilities
- Setonaikai
- Nishi-Chugoku Sanchi
- Megahira Onsen
- Miyahama Onsen
- Shiohara Onsen
- Mount Kanmuri
- Mount Omine
- Mount Misen
- Miyajimaguchi
- Miyauchi-Kushido
- Hatsukaichi
- Hiroden-Miyajimaguchi
- Ashina
- Maesora
- Hiroden-Hatsukaichi
- Ono-Ura
- Hatsukaichi-Shiyakushomae (Taira)
- Hiroden-Ajina
- Sanyo-Jogakuen-Mae
- Miyauchi
- JA Hiroshima Byoin-mae
- Jigozen
- Ashina-Higashi
- Miyajima-Boatrace-jo