From the AURA index Region

Urausu, Hokkaido

municipality

image · pastoral × balanced (proxy)
Hokkaido / Urausu
A reading of this place

Along the right bank of the Ishikari River, where the Kabato mountains press close and the flatlands open into farmland, the pace of Urausu is set by soil and season. Peony buckwheat grows here — ぼたんそば — and the harvest draws a festival each autumn, the kind of gathering that belongs to the fields rather than a stage. Melon, asparagus, potato: the produce is unremarkable in the way that good agricultural produce always is, grown steadily rather than performed.

The town carries a particular origin. In the late nineteenth century, settlers from Tosa — present-day Kochi — arrived under the influence of Sakamoto Naohiro and established what they intended as a model community rooted in Christian faith. The Seien Church, opened in 1893, still stands as evidence of that ambition. It is not a famous building, but it holds a specific gravity: the idea that a group of people came here not merely to farm but to build something according to a belief. Urausu Shrine, founded in 1910, sits nearby in Tsuruma Park, its grounds dense with katakuri and Ezo corydalis in bloom.

The Tsuruma Winery presses local grapes into wine, and the Wain no Sato Festival marks that production with some ceremony. The Michi-no-Eki Tsurunuma on Route 275 serves as a practical threshold — a place to stop, reorient, and notice that the town's identity is agricultural before it is anything else.