Uchinada, Ishikawa
Sand dunes run almost the full length of the town, and the wind off the Japan Sea has shaped everything here — the acacia windbreaks planted along the dune edges, the low-slung greenhouses where dune-soil vegetables grow, the posture of anyone standing near the shore. Uchinada is a bedroom town within the Kanazawa urban orbit, yet the dune landscape keeps it from feeling like a mere extension of the city.
At the northern end of the beach, the World Kite Festival turns the wide foreshore into a field of color and tension — kites from many countries pulling hard against the coastal wind. The same beach hosts beach baseball competitions in summer, the sand packed firm enough near the waterline. Inland, Kohama Shrine stands in its grove, an ancient site listed in the Engishiki, the surrounding trees known as Gongen-mori. The shrine's autumn festival marks a different register of time from the beach events — quieter, more internal.
The Sunset Wing windmill and Sunset Bridge mark the western edge of town, where the road-side station faces the open sea and the light falls long in the late afternoon. Dairy farming and coastal fishing both continue here, and the town's textile industry adds another layer to what might otherwise read as a purely agricultural place. Uchinada holds several histories at once: Jomon-period artifacts found in the dunes, the postwar Uchinada Struggle over American artillery testing grounds, and the ongoing reclamation of Kahokugata lagoon — each one deposited in the same narrow strip of sand between sea and city.