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Noto Oyster Festival
Oysters come up out of the winter sea. Anamizu sits on an inlet of Noto, a quiet, shelter…
Oysters come up out of the winter sea.
Anamizu sits on an inlet of Noto, a quiet, sheltered bay where the waves stay low and the water runs thick with plankton, and in that calm the oysters fatten slowly through the cold. It is the slowness that does it; the shellfish take their time, and the time goes into the meat.
In February the town holds its oyster festival. Grills are set over charcoal, the oysters laid on in their shells, and you wait for the steam to rise and the shell to crack open of its own accord, then tip the hot flesh straight into your mouth. The taste of the sea, concentrated. The colder the day, the sweeter the oyster—locals will tell you the best of them are eaten while snow is falling.
This is also a coast that was struck by earthquake. The bay was damaged, the rafts where the oysters are raised were thrown into disorder, and for a while it was not clear the harvest would return. But the sea came back, and the oysters grew again, and people grill them and eat them once more—not as a triumph, just as the ordinary business of a Noto winter.
The rias coastline at Tsukumo Bay folds into itself — small inlets, still water, the smell of salt and drying squid. This is the outer edge of the Noto Peninsula, where the fishing ports of Matsunami, Takakura, and Ukawa have been working the Japan Sea for longer than the town's written records reach. Noto-cho sits at the center of this stretch, and its rhythms belong to the sea.
What gets pulled from these waters matters here in a specific way. Noto yellowtail in winter, snow crab, squid processed into ishiri — a fermented fish sauce that appears in kitchens throughout the region. Matsunami-ame, a local candy, and sasanoyuki speak to an inland confectionery tradition running alongside the maritime one. The Abare Festival and the Koi-ji Fire Festival — the latter a designated part of Japan's intangible cultural heritage — are not performances staged for outsiders; they belong to the agricultural and fishing calendar in ways that predate tourism entirely.
The deeper history surfaces at Mawaki, where a Jomon-period settlement has been excavated and studied, the site considered a kind of textbook of prehistoric coastal habitation. Matsunami Castle ruins, with their dry-landscape garden from the 15th and 16th centuries, occupy a ridge above the water. Yanagida Onsen, which began flowing in 1972, sits quietly inland — a national lodging facility rather than a resort, functional and unhurried. The Noto-cho Yanagida Botanical Garden nearby offers a planetarium and camping alongside its plant collections. None of these places announce themselves loudly. They simply exist within a landscape that has been continuously inhabited, worked, and marked by ritual for millennia.
Stay in Noto, Ishikawa
What converges here
- Mawaki Site
- Former Matsunami Castle Garden
- Nakatani Family Residence (Ishikawa Prefecture, Hosu-gun, Noto-cho, Kurokawa)
- Nakatani Residence (Ishikawa Prefecture, Hosu-gun Noto-cho, Kurokawa)
- Nakatani Family Residence (Kurokawa, Noto-cho, Hosu-gun, Ishikawa)
- Nakatani Family Residence (Kurokawa, Noto-cho, Hōsu-gun, Ishikawa)
- Nakatani Family Residence (Kurokawa, Noto-cho, Hosu-gun, Ishikawa Prefecture)
- Noto Hanto
- Yanagida Onsen
- Matsunami Fishing Port
- Takakura Fishing Port
- Ukawa Fishing Port
- Nanami Fishing Port
- Koura Fishing Port
- Hina Fishing Port
- Hanami Fishing Port
- Shiromaru Fishing Port
- Yanami Fishing Port
- Fujinami Fishing Port