Sakai, Ibaraki
At the southern edge of town, the Tone River moves wide and unhurried past the embankment, and the old rhythm of water transport still registers in the shape of the streets near the riverbank. Sakai grew around the point where the Tone and Edogawa rivers diverge — a junction that made it, through the Edo period, a hub of freight and passage, with cargo boats working the shallow draft of the river and river merchants occupying the quayside warehouses. The silhouette of that era is legible at Kashi-no-Eki Sakai, where the old landing site has been preserved and opened as a historical facility, connected by a walking route to the Michi-no-Eki Sakai, whose buildings are styled after the architecture of the Edo-period river trade.
On the plateau above — the Sashima upland — tea has been cultivated since the Edo period, and Sashima-cha was among the first Japanese teas to be exported abroad in the modern era. The leaves are still grown here, and the tea finds its way into bottled drinks as well as the dedicated salon inside the roadside station. Alongside the tea, Baizanton pork — a rare breed raised at Tsukahara Farm — is part of what the town produces and, quietly, defines. The Sakai Daruma-ichi, a market built around the sale of the round papier-mâché figures, marks the town's festival calendar alongside the Tone River raft race and the菜の花 festival that moves across the floodplain in season.
There is a naturalness to the way the town holds its history — not as spectacle but as infrastructure still in use, still generating the texture of daily commerce.