From the AURA index Region

Nakai, Kanagawa

municipality

image · pastoral × balanced (proxy)
Kanagawa / Nakai
A reading of this place

震生湖 sits quietly among the hills of Nakai-machi, its surface unmarked by any boat launch or tourist pier. The lake formed suddenly, during the Great Kanto Earthquake, when a hillside collapsed and dammed a valley stream — an origin that gives it an unsettled, geological freshness. A stone monument bearing a haiku by Terada Torahiko stands near the water, easy to miss if you are walking fast, which few people here seem to do.

The surrounding land is working land. Rows of mikan trees cling to the southwest-facing slopes at two to three hundred meters, and lower down, fields yield daikon, imo, and peanuts alongside the town's distinctive Hojo shiso. Dairy farms occupy the quieter hollows. The Nakamura River and Katsura River cut through the valley floors, threading together a landscape that is roughly a third forested, a quarter under cultivation — not wilderness, not suburb, but something in between that has its own unhurried logic.

At the Gosho Hachimangu shrine, the annual festival preserves a performance called Sagi no Mai, designated as a town cultural property, which connects this agricultural community to a longer ceremonial calendar. Nearby, the Edo Mingu Kaido traces older patterns of rural material culture. Nakai-machi does not announce itself loudly — the Tomei Expressway passes through on its way elsewhere, and most drivers do not stop. That indifference, perhaps, is part of what keeps the texture intact.