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Hyuga Hyottoko Summer Festival
Wearing a Hyottoko mask, they dance while comically stumbling. In Hyuga, Miyazaki, the Hyo…
Wearing a Hyottoko mask, they dance while comically stumbling. In Hyuga, Miyazaki, the Hyottoko Summer Festival sends dancers in three masks, the goofy Hyottoko, the round-cheeked Okame, and the fox, dancing through the town with clownish gestures. The movements are absurd, knees bent, heads cocked, bodies lurching, and onlookers cannot help but laugh. The dance comes from a local folk art called the Hyuga Hyottoko dance, performed to pray for good harvests and prosperous business. At the festival, more than a thousand dancers gather from across the country, professionals, amateurs, children, it makes no difference; once the mask is on, everyone is Hyottoko. Laughter becomes prayer, clowning becomes art. A laughing god, perhaps, is better than a stern one.
The light here is relentless, pouring off the Hyūganada without apology, and the rias coastline at Hyūgamisaki breaks it into something more complicated — fractured cliffs, the columnar basalt dropping sheer into the sea, the Umagasé headland holding its shape against the swell. Hyūga sits with its back to the mountains of Osuzu and its face to open Pacific water, the small rivers of Komarugawa and Mimikawa threading down behind the town before the land simply ends.
Hosojima port has been a working harbor for a long time, and it still carries that weight — the smell of catch and diesel, the Hosojima Minato Festival moving through streets that know the difference between a celebration and a ceremony. Inland, Myōkokuji's borrowed-landscape garden holds a technique that traces to the Nanbokuchō period, moss and stone arranged so that the hills beyond become part of the composition. On the market side, heibei-zu — a local citrus pressed for its juice — appears quietly in the town's food, sharp and particular in a way that mass-distributed fruit rarely is. The hamaguri go-ishi festival points to another local specificity: clam-shell Go pieces, a craft that belongs to this coast.
Typhoons come through with regularity, and the town is matter-of-fact about it. The same exposure that batters the cape in August floods the streets with sun the rest of the year. The Miminashi Okiyo Festival in Mimitsumachi, the Hyūga Hyottoko summer festival — the calendar is dense, rooted, practical about its own continuity.
Stay in Hyuga, Miyazaki
What converges here
- Hyuga City Mimitsuku Important Preservation District of Historic Buildings
- Myokoku-ji Garden
- Columnar Joints of Cape Hyuga
- Nippo Kaigan
- Hyugashi
- Minami-Hyuga
- Miyazu
- Zaikoji