Sakado, Saitama
The Tobu Tojo Line runs south to north through flat Saitama farmland, and by the time the train slows into Sakado Station, the view from the window has already told most of the story: low-rise housing, wide roads, the particular geometry of a town built quickly and lived in steadily. Sakado is where the old Nikko Waki-okan post road once brought travelers through — the Edo-period staging post still traces its outline beneath the present-day streets, though you would need the Sakado City Historical Folk Museum to help you see it clearly.
The festivals mark the calendar with a different logic than the landscape does. At Sakado Yasaka Shrine, the summer matsuri known locally as O-Tenno-sama fills the streets with the kind of noise and light that belongs entirely to neighborhood ritual rather than tourism. Nearby, Chokeizan Eigenji temple holds the Shakka Kotan-sai — O-Shaka-sama — a gathering rooted in the temple's own congregation. The Sakado Yosakoi brings a different energy: dancers, teams, the borrowed form of a Kochi tradition now fully absorbed into this town's own calendar. And at Shoten-gu, the Poppy Festival arrives in season, the grounds given over briefly to color and crowds before returning to quiet.
What remains after the festivals is the ordinary texture of a commuter city that grew fast in the Showa decades — Kitasakado Danchi, Wakabadai Danchi — and has since settled into itself. The Komagawa river moves through the southwestern edge of the city, unhurried, cutting across the otherwise flat terrain. The town does not perform its history, but it has not erased it either.