Seven fishing harbors notch the western coastline of the Noto Peninsula here, and on a weekday morning the smell of salt air and diesel reaches the road before the water does. Shika-cho emerged from the merger of two old towns in 2005, but the older layers press through — the Kitamaebune trading ships that once called at Fukura Port, the timber lighthouse built there in 1876, and the shrine at Takatsume-yama whose founding is recorded in the early eighth century.
Inland, the terraced paddies of Oosasanami hold their shape against the hillside, and the dry persimmons known as koro-gaki hang from farmhouse eaves in the curing season. Hikkari-mochi and Noto beef both come from this same stretch of coast and plateau. The Shika-no-Sato Onsen — sodium chloride spring water that surfaced by accident during construction in 1978 — sits without ceremony in the landscape, the kind of facility that serves the town rather than advertising itself.
The Noto Kongo coastline runs along the western edge: stacked rock formations, sea caves, the Yase-no-Dangai cliffs, the white sand of Masuho-ura beach. At Fukura Port, excursion boats depart into the same water the Kitamaebune once crossed. The Daita Kiriko Festival and the prefectural taiko competition keep a particular rhythm in the calendar — not for spectacle, but as events the town still holds for itself.
Stay in Shika, Ishikawa
What converges here
- Matsuo Shrine Honden
- Noto Hanto
- Shika no Sato Onsen
- Togi Fishing Port
- Abeya Fishing Port
- Akasaki Fishing Port
- Takahama Fishing Port
- Nanaumi Fishing Port
- Akasumi Fishing Port
- Ryoge Fishing Port