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Mibu Rice Planting Festival
Here, planting rice becomes performance. In a mountain village in Hiroshima, on the first…
Here, planting rice becomes performance. In a mountain village in Hiroshima, on the first Sunday of June, oxen adorned with brightly colored saddles till a flooded paddy while flutes, drums, and bamboo clappers keep time. Women in indigo kimono and woven hats line up shoulder to shoulder and set the seedlings in rows. The tradition reaches back to the medieval era, a rite to pray for a good harvest and a way of turning hard labor into festivity through song. The sight of dozens of decorated oxen wading into the mud, flowers swaying on their backs, makes the field look like a garden. In an age of machines, people and animals plant by hand and hoof, not for efficiency but out of respect for the land and the season. A UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage.
Snow accumulates here at depths that reshape the landscape — Kitahiroshima sits in the Chugoku Mountains of northwestern Hiroshima Prefecture, where the Japan Sea climate presses cold air inland and winter becomes the town's dominant season. The mountains that trace the border with Shimane — Garyūzan, Tengushiyama, Unzukiyama — hold their snow long after the lowlands have dried. The Ōta and Gōno rivers begin here, quietly, as snowmelt threading through beech forest.
History left its marks in stone. The ruins of Yoshikawa Motoharu's retirement villa, Kikkawa Motoharu-kan Ato, still stand with stone walls rising to head height and a garden that has not entirely lost its form. Motoharu was a son of Mōri Motonari, and the clan's presence across this territory is legible in the scattered castle ruins — Ogurasan, Surugamaru — now organized as historical parks with parking lots and interpretive signage, the ordinary infrastructure of local heritage. At the Geihoku Minzoku Hakubutsukan, farmhouses relocated from the bed of Tarudoko Dam stand with their original roof angles intact, surrounded by agricultural tools collected from the surrounding villages.
The town's festivals carry a different register. Mibu no Hana-taue and Aki no Hayashida are rice-planting ceremonies with designated cultural status, performed in fields rather than on stages. The temple Jōkenjii, a Jōdo Shinshū institution, is known for a style of shōjin cuisine that draws on Italian technique — an unlikely combination that the temple apparently takes seriously. Local products include yuzu, rice, and the sake labeled Yaeno Tsuyu and Ōkame. These things coexist without obvious narrative: deep snow, medieval earthworks, a temple kitchen, a ski slope, a bus terminal at Ōasa where regional routes converge and JR tickets are sold at a window.
Stay in Kitahiroshima, Hiroshima
What converges here
- Yoshikawa Clan Castle and Residence Ruins (Surugamaru Castle Ruins, Ogurayama Castle Ruins, Hiyama Castle Ruins, Yoshikawa Motoharu Residence Ruins)
- Kikkawa Motoharu Yakata Ruins Garden
- Former Mantokuin Garden
- Oasa Tengu-shide Grove
- Tateyama Hachimangu Shrine Main Hall
- Nishi-Chugoku Sanchi
- Mount Garyu
- Mount Tenguishi
- Mount Ungetsu