Tateshina, Nagano
The town pinches to almost nothing at its waist — a narrow corridor of land connecting two utterly different worlds. To the north, the old post-town of芦田宿 still holds its shape along the former 中山道, a quiet residential belt where most of Tateshina's people actually live. To the south, the land rises sharply toward the volcanic cone of 蓼科山, and the air changes register entirely.
Up on the plateau, 白樺湖 sits at considerable elevation, a reservoir that began as an agricultural pond and acquired resort hotels over the decades. A little higher still, 女神湖 is smaller and quieter, ringed by 座禅草 in early season and レンゲツツジ as warmth settles in. The ski runs on the slopes of 八子ヶ峰 go quiet between seasons, and the birch forests that give this highland its name stand pale and unhurried. Somewhere among the resort buildings, the 蓼科テディベア美術館 keeps its unlikely collection — thousands of bears in glass cases, an oddity that somehow fits the slightly out-of-time feeling of a resort district between peaks.
Down in the northern villages, 津金寺 has stood since the early eighth century, its 聖観世音菩薩 receiving visitors with no particular fanfare. The 塩沢堰 and 蓼科三堰 — irrigation channels that once sustained the agriculture here — are woven into the landscape so quietly that you might walk beside one without registering its age. Silk production once shaped this economy; now local farm produce and the summer crowds of the plateau carry it forward.
What converges here
- 八ケ岳中信高原