Kunitomi, Miyazaki
Dried strips of daikon hang in rows along roadside sheds, pale and papery in the inland air — a sight that tells you, before any signboard does, that you have entered Kunitomi-chō. The town sits in the middle stretch of Miyazaki Prefecture, where the coastal plain gives way gradually to the foothills of the Kyushu mountain range, and the Honjo River threads through its southern edge.
The Honjo Kofun-gun, clusters of burial mounds from the ancient period, surface quietly among the streets and fields, neither fenced off nor dramatized. Tobacco cultivation still shapes the agricultural calendar here, as it has for generations, and the summer festival at Honjo Kenka Inari Shrine carries its own particular weight — the Yoimaka drum floats moving through the August heat, and the Rokunichimachi traditional puppet kabuki performed alongside them. These are not reconstructed traditions but living ones, returning each year with their own logic and their own crowd.
What sits alongside all of this is harder to see from the road: semiconductor fabrication plants operating quietly in the same landscape where washi paper was once the town's defining industry. The mountain at the northwest edge, Kamoridake, holds groves of old-growth trees and is said to mark the southern limit of Japanese serow habitat. The place runs on these coexistences — ancient earthworks, dried vegetables, precision manufacturing, and a river that regional accounts consistently describe as among the clearest in Kyushu.
What converges here
- 本庄古墳群
- 九州中央山地