Togitsu, Nagasaki
Along National Route 206, a large outcrop of rock rises unexpectedly from the roadside — rough, weathered, and locally called *saba-kure-ishi*, the "rotting mackerel stone." It is an odd landmark for a town, and yet it captures something essential about Togitsu: things here tend to be more layered than they first appear.
Togitsu sits on the southwestern shore of Omura Bay, pressed between the industrial flatlands near the port and the wooded ridges of Dōfūdake and Eboshidake to the west. In the Edo period it served as a post town along the Togitsu Kaidō, where domain lords lodged at the *ochaya* rest houses and goods moved through the harbor. That harbor, Togitsu Port, carries a quieter historical weight as well — it is the site where the Twenty-Six Martyrs of Japan came ashore, and the Catholic church that now stands nearby maintains a commemorative monument to that passage.
The present town runs on a different rhythm: Mitsubishi Electric's Nagasaki plant anchors the industrial zone, and the shopping center near the port draws weekday traffic from surrounding neighborhoods. Togitsu Canary Hall, with its concert and community spaces, doubles as a folk museum, keeping local material culture in circulation alongside the programming. The town functions less as a destination than as a place with its own internal logic — a working waterfront, a mountain backdrop, a post-town past still faintly legible in the street grid.