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Nozawa Onsen Dosojin Matsuri: The Fire Festival of Midwinter
On the evening of January 15th, in the snow of the northern Nagano mountains, a large wood…
On the evening of January 15th, in the snow of the northern Nagano mountains, a large wooden structure built by the young men of Nozawa Onsen Village is set on fire. The men aged twenty-five and forty-two — the traditionally unlucky years — serve as guardians of the structure against the crowd that tries to light it before the ceremony reaches its proper moment. The pushing and shouting between guardians and crowd is ritualized but physical.
The Dosojin festival is a Koshogatsu observance — part of the cluster of rituals that mark the traditional lunar new year, the period after January 15th when spring planting begins to be anticipated. The fire drives away misfortune for the village's families. The unlucky-aged men who protect the structure and then surrender it to the flames are doing something specific: processing their unlucky years through ritual exposure rather than avoidance.
Nozawa Onsen is a ski village, and most winter visitors come for the slopes. The January 15th festival gives the village a second reason to visit in winter — the combination of the ceremony, the subsequent onsen soak, and the quality of the winter landscape in this part of Nagano is specific and complete.
Steam rises from open drains cut into the stone-paved lanes, and the smell of sulfur settles over the rooftops before you have found your bearings. The thirteen communal baths of Nozawaonsen are not tourist infrastructure — they are maintained by the village itself, and the etiquette of entering one is the same etiquette that has governed the neighborhood for generations. Source temperatures run hot enough that the water must be tempered with cold before a body can enter, a small act of negotiation repeated every morning by locals and visitors alike.
Nozawaonsen village sits at the foot of Marunashi-yama, a dormant volcano whose heat feeds the baths below. The mountain also provides the vertical drop that made this village a serious ski destination long before such things were common in Japan — a jump ramp was installed in the 1920s, and a civilian ski lift followed in 1950. The Nihon Ski Hakubutsukan holds the material record of that history: equipment, photographs, documents arranged without fanfare. Nearby, Kenmeiji temple, founded in the Eiroku era, is credited as the origin point of nozawana — the brassica leaf pickled into the sharp, brined condiment sold at the roadside station and eaten across the prefecture. The pickle and the powder snow are perhaps the two things that have most defined what this village is.
The Dosojin Festival falls on January 15th, and the Yuzawa Shrine holds its lantern festival each September 8th — two fixed points in a calendar that otherwise runs to the rhythms of snow and agriculture. The village is designated a heavy-snowfall zone, and the annual accumulation is considerable, shaping everything from roof pitch to daily movement. In summer, part of the surrounding terrain falls within the Joshinetsu Kogen national park, and Sukataka-ko offers a quieter register entirely.
Stay in Nozawaonsen, Nagano
What converges here
- Joshin'etsukogen
- Nozawa Onsen
- Kamikochi Onsen