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Takachiho Gorge Autumn Leaves
The gorge is deep, and the depth is the first thing you feel. Takachiho was cut by water…
The gorge is deep, and the depth is the first thing you feel.
Takachiho was cut by water through old lava—the volcanic rock of Aso, sliced over millennia by the Gokase River into a narrow canyon of columnar cliffs that lean in from both sides, their basalt fluted into vertical pillars as though the stone had been combed. Between them the river runs, green and cold.
From the cliff top the Manai Falls drop seventeen meters straight down the rock face, and in autumn the trees around the rim color and frame the white of the water. You can take a rowboat to the very base of the falls and look up, and what you see is a long thin slot of red leaves and falling water and sky, the world narrowed to a single bright seam overhead.
This is also a place of myth, said to be where the grandson of the sun goddess first descended to earth. Standing at the bottom of the gorge, with the cliffs closing the sky to a ribbon, you understand the choice of setting. If a god were going to come down anywhere, it would be somewhere this deep, and this quiet.
Takachiho Night Kagura
In the land where the myths were born, people dance through the night. Takachiho in Miyaza…
In the land where the myths were born, people dance through the night. Takachiho in Miyazaki is held to be the place where the gods descended to earth. In winter, each village begins its night kagura, welcoming the local deity into a home or community hall and dancing thirty-three acts from evening until the next morning, all night long. Among the acts is the myth of the Heavenly Rock Cave, the story of Amaterasu hiding away and plunging the world into darkness, the gods dancing and clamoring before the cave to lure the goddess out. Onlookers ring the hearth, sharing shochu as they see the night through, the sacred and the relaxed coexisting. The tradition is old, danced in this land for at least several centuries. Myth is not a tale of the distant past here; tonight, too, it is being danced.
The road into Takachiho descends through layered ridgelines of the Kyushu Mountains, the valley deepening until the Gokase River appears below, cutting through columnar basalt left by ancient lava flows. That gorge — Takachiho-kyo — is where most visitors arrive first, peering down at the vertical stone walls and the mist rising off Manai Falls. The geology is abrupt, almost confrontational, and it sets the register for everything else in the town.
Away from the gorge path, the pace shifts. At the roadside facility known as Tunnel no Eki on Route 325,焼酎 — shochu — ages inside a repurposed tunnel, and visitors can walk through and taste without ceremony. The Kagura Shuzo operation here is unhurried, the bottles arranged in the cool dark. Nearby, Takachiho Shrine holds its kagura dances through the year, a form that in its full seasonal version — the Yo-Kagura — runs through the night and comprises dozens of sequences rooted in the myth of Amaterasu's retreat into the cave, the Iwato-gakure. The Kagura masks in the town's historical museum date to the Muromachi period, worn and specific, not decorative.
The other sound this area carries is older still: the Kariboshipi Kiuta, a harvest song with its own national gathering held at Kunimigaoka, the hill known for its sea of clouds. Amano Iwato Onsen, tucked near the shrine of the same name, offers a bath and a meal in the same building — the kind of stop that belongs to local rhythm more than to any itinerary.
Stay in Takachiho, Miyazaki
What converges here
- Ginkgo Tree of Shimono Hachiman-gu Shrine
- Shimonoya Hachimangu Keyaki Tree
- Tsuge no Taki Limestone Cave
- Tahara no Icho (Ginkgo Tree of Tahara)
- Takachiho Shrine Main Hall
- Sobo-Katamuki
- Amanoiwato Onsen
- Mount Furusobo