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Kesennuma Fisherman Experience
Betrayed by the sea, and still living with the sea. Kesennuma in Miyagi is a port town of…
Betrayed by the sea, and still living with the sea. Kesennuma in Miyagi is a port town of Tohoku with one of the world's great fishing harbors. In 2011, the tsunami swallowed this town. Boats were swept away, houses vanished, many lives were lost. The sea took everything. And yet the people of Kesennuma did not abandon the sea. They rebuilt their boats and went out to fish again. There is no use in hatred; this is a town that has always lived with the sea. There are fisherman-experience programs: the early-morning market, fish fresh from the water, the feel of hauling a net. You can come to know a fisherman's life up close. More young people are working here too, drawn to the town after the disaster. The sea is terrifying, but the sea is also bounty, and people live holding both. Even having lost, you rise again. Kesennuma knows this.
The smell of fish arrives before anything else — salt, smoke, the faint sweetness of drying shark fin hanging in the harbor air. Kesennuma sits at the southern end of the Sanriku coast, its bay cut deep into the land by the rias that give the shoreline its folded, irregular character. Fishing vessels from across Japan move through this port, and the docks carry the low, practical energy of a place where the catch still determines the week.
Fuka-hire — shark fin — is the product most closely tied to Kesennuma's identity, processed here in volume and sold in forms ranging from dried sheets to finished soup. Saury and tuna land at the port with the seasons, and the Kesennuma Sanma Festival marks the arrival of that catch with an openness that feels more like a neighborhood event than a tourist production. At the Rias Arc Museum, designed by Ishiyama Osamu, the subject is the Sanriku coast itself — its nature, its people, and the weight of the 2011 earthquake that remade much of what stood here before.
The Kesennuma Earthquake Memorial and Heritage Museum occupies the shell of the former Mukaiyō High School, where the damage was left intact as testimony. Tokusenjō-yama draws visitors during the azalea festival, and the beaches of Jūhachinari-hama and Kukuranaki-hama are listed as cultural properties for the sounds they make underfoot. The library on the hill above the bay, opened in 2018, looks out over the water — a quiet civic gesture in a town that has had to rebuild much of its civic life from the ground up.
Stay in Kesennuma, Miyagi
What converges here
- Enunkaku Garden
- Juhachinarihama and Kukunakihama (Singing Beaches)
- Sanriku Fukko
- Minamisanriku-Kinkasan
- Mount Tokusenjo
- Kesennuma
- Kesennuma Fishing Port
- Kosaba Fishing Port
- Hikado Fishing Port
- Hajikami Fishing Port
- Ura no Hama Fishing Port
- Nijūichihama Fishing Port
- Kesaiso Fishing Port
- Tadakoshi Fishing Port
- Osawa (Karakuwa) Fishing Port
- Otani Fishing Port
- Shuku Fishing Port
- Odahama Fishing Port
- Iwaizawa Fishing Port
- Kawahara Fishing Port
- Suginoshita Fishing Port
- Tsumoto Fishing Port
- Isihama (Karakuwa) Fishing Port
- Isokusa Fishing Port
- Kamidome Fishing Port
- Kurauchi Fishing Port
- Yogai Fishing Port
- Saigo Fishing Port
- Kanetori Fishing Port
- Komagata Fishing Port