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Tashirojima: The Island That Belongs to Cats
The human population of Tashirojima is roughly sixty, most of them elderly. The cat popula…
The human population of Tashirojima is roughly sixty, most of them elderly. The cat population is comparable. The cats arrived generations ago — fishermen kept them to protect nets from mice, and the cats stayed, multiplied, and eventually became the island's defining feature. There is a small cat shrine. Dogs are not permitted on the island. The cats were not significantly affected by the 2011 tsunami, which devastated much of the Sanriku coast.
What is surprising about Tashirojima is not the number of cats but their disposition. They are not shy. They approach visitors, accept being petted, and recline in positions of moderate authority on the paths and steps of the island's small settlement. They have apparently concluded that humans are harmless and occasionally useful.
The island is not large. The ferry from Ishinomaki takes about fifty minutes. There is not much to do in the conventional sense. This is the point. Tashirojima offers a morning or an afternoon of simply being somewhere where the cats have the upper hand, and where this seems, after a while, like the correct arrangement.
Thirty-three fishing ports punctuate the coastline here, and on the docks at Ishinomaki the morning catch arrives before the town has fully woken. The waters off Kinkazan, where cold and warm currents converge, have shaped this city's character more than any administrative boundary ever could. Mackerel and bonito — known locally as Kinkazan-saba and Kinkazan-katsuo — move through the market in volume, alongside oysters and sea squirt and wakame pulled from the Rias coast of Ojika Peninsula. The smell of fish and salt water is not incidental here; it is structural.
The city's older layers surface quietly if you know where to look. At Ishinoi Kōmon, a Western-style lock gate completed in 1880, the stonework still manages the flow between river and canal — a reminder that Ishinomaki once functioned as the great rice-collection port of Ōshū, its warehouses fed by the Kitakami River's freight traffic running south toward Edo. The Saitō Family Garden, a late Meiji estate garden now designated a national scenic site, suggests the scale of wealth that accumulated here. Further back still, the Numanotsu Shell Mound holds the bone and antler tools of Jōmon-era inhabitants — people who were also, in their own way, reading this same coast.
The San Juan Museum preserves a replica of the galleon that once carried a Date-era diplomatic mission across the Pacific, and the San Juan Festival each year brings that improbable history briefly into the open air. Ishinomaki焼きそば — a local style of yakisoba — gets eaten at festivals and lunch counters without ceremony. The Kitakami River still runs through the center of the city to the sea, wide and unhurried, as if the old freight routes had simply never been fully retired.
Stay in Ishinomaki, Miyagi
What converges here
- Numazugaoka Shell Mound
- Saito Family Garden
- Ishii Sluice Gate
- Minamisanriku-Kinkasan
- Mount Kinka
- Ishinomaki
- Rikuzen-Yamashita
- Jabata
- Mangokuura
- Kakeyama
- Maeyachi
- Maeyachi
- Wabuchi
- Sobagami
- Sawada
- Watanoha
- Ishinomaki
- Ishinomaki-Ayumino
- Rikuzen-Inai
- Shikamata
- Watanoha Fishing Port
- Ishinomaki Fishing Port
- Ayukawa Fishing Port
- Nitoda Fishing Port
- Momonoura Fishing Port
- Aji Fishing Port
- Ogachi Fishing Port
- Samuraiha Fishing Port
- Maeami Fishing Port
- Kitagami Fishing Port
- Kugnarihama Fishing Port
- Naburi Fishing Port
- Ohara Fishing Port
- Yoriso Fishing Port
- Kojima Fishing Port
- Koamikura Fishing Port
- Tsukiura Fishing Port
- Mizuhama Bunhama Fishing Port
- Ikenohama Fishing Port
- Tomari (Ohara) Fishing Port
- Kumazawa Fishing Port
- Makinohama Fishing Port
- Kitsunezaki Fishing Port
- Fukiura Fishing Port
- Takenohama Fishing Port
- Kyubun Fishing Port
- Funakoshi Fishing Port
- Ara Fishing Port
- Hamaguri Fishing Port
- Tanigawa Fishing Port
- Nagato Fishing Port
- Nagatsura Fishing Port
- Samenoura (Ohara) Fishing Port