The Ono River and the Ogata River cut through the hills separately before the land opens into basin farmland, and it is in this geography that Bungo-Ono sits — not a gateway to anywhere, simply itself. The JR Hōhi Main Line threads through on its way between mountains, stopping at stations like Misakimachi and Ogata, where the platforms are quiet on weekday mornings and the surrounding fields carry the particular flatness of reclaimed valley floor.
The festivals here are not performed for outside audiences. The Mitake-ryū Kagura at Mitake Shrine — designated an important intangible folk cultural property — is rooted in the shrine's own ritual calendar. The Komatsu-akari fire festival and the Ogata Gosengoku Matsuri belong to communities that have been marking the seasons this way for generations. Nearby, Fuköji is known for its cliff-carved Buddha and its hydrangeas, while Shinkakuji temple holds a nationally designated Important Cultural Property in its main hall. These are not attractions assembled for a tour itinerary; they are nodes in a local religious geography that continues to function.
The roadside station near Harajiri Falls stocks local agricultural produce from the Höhi district, and the falls themselves — wide, low-stepped, spreading across the riverbed — draw visitors who come specifically for them rather than passing through. The sculptor Asakura Fumio was born in this area, and the memorial museum dedicated to his work stands as an institutional anchor in a town that otherwise wears its cultural life quietly, in fire and water and stone.
Stay in Bungoono, Oita
What converges here
- Ogata River and Ogata Basin Rural Landscape
- Iwato Site
- Inukai Stone Buddha
- Ogata Miyasako Higashi Stone Buddha
- Ogata Miyasako Nishi Stone Buddha
- Sugao Stone Buddhas
- Jinkakuji Temple Main Hall
- Kojikkyo Bridge
- Chinda no Taki
- Koumori no Taki (Bat Falls)
- Sobo-Katamuki
- Mount Katamuki
- Miemachi
- Asaji
- Inukai
- Ogata
- Sugao
- Bungo-Kiyokawa
- Oita Kenoh Airfield