Tonosho, Kagawa
At Tonosho Port, ferries from Okayama arrive and depart with the quiet regularity of a town that has always faced the sea. This is the entry point to the northwestern corner of Shodoshima, and to the smaller islands beyond — Teshima among them — all of it part of the Seto Inland Sea, where the climate stays mild and rain comes sparingly.
The town earns its living from things that take time: hand-stretched somen noodles, olive products, sesame oil pressed from local seeds, and the distinctive Teshima stone quarried from the island's ground. None of these are quick industries. The somen especially — pulled thin by hand in a process that cannot be rushed — seems to carry something of the island's temperament. At Boshoin temple, a shinpaku cypress of extraordinary age still stands, its trunk thickened across more than a millennium, designated a Special Natural Monument. To stand near it is to understand that the island has been inhabited, tended, and observed for a very long time.
Between Shodoshima and a neighboring islet runs Dobuchi Kaikyo, a strait so narrow that you could almost reach across it — Guinness-recognized as the world's narrowest. The label is almost beside the point. What stays with you is the strangeness of a sea passage that feels like a footpath, and the reminder that in this part of the Seto Inland Sea, land and water negotiate in ways that don't follow ordinary rules.
The islands of Tonosho, Kagawa
What converges here
- 宝生院のシンパク
- 瀬戸内海