Kanten — the translucent dried seaweed extract used in wagashi and jellied dishes — has been made in this highland for centuries, its production spreading outward from here during the Edo period. The town that grew around it, Chino, sits on the broad skirt of the Yatsugatake range, its streets spread across an elevated plateau where precision-machinery factories and electronics plants occupy the same postal zone as Jōmon-era ruins. At the尖石縄文考古館, fired clay from settlements that predate any written record sits in glass cases a short walk from the train station.
The 諏訪大社式年造営御柱大祭 — the great pillar festival of Suwa — periodically pulls the whole region into a ceremonial gravity that has nothing to do with tourism promotion. The 神長官守矢史料館 holds the documents of the Moriya family, who served as chief ritualists of Suwa's upper shrine across many generations; the building itself, designed by Fujimori Terunobu, is modest and precise. Higher up, the 唐沢鉱泉 occupies a hollow in the Yatsugatake foothills at considerable elevation, its mineral-rich water drawn from rock rather than volcanic heat.
In autumn, the 信州八ケ岳新そばまつり brings fresh buckwheat to the foreground, and the 小津安二郎記念蓼科高原映画祭 screens films in the civic hall with the quiet seriousness of a town that takes culture as ordinary infrastructure rather than spectacle. The 車山神社, perched at the summit of Kurumayama, conducts its own version of the 御柱 rite on the exposed ridge — a ceremony that feels less like a tourist event and more like an obligation the mountain itself expects.
Stay in Chino, Nagano
What converges here
- Togariishi Stone Age Site
- Takashima Domain Lord Suwa Family Mausoleum
- Kaminodan Stone Age Site
- Komagata Site
- Yatsugatake-Chushin Kogen
- Oku-Tateshina Onsen
- Tateshina Mimuro Onsen
- Mount Yokodake
- Mount Amida
- Mount Tengu
- Mount Minenomatsume
- Mount Tateshina
- Mount Yokodake
- Mount Shimagare
- Chino
- Aoyagi