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Hamamatsu Kite Festival: One Hundred and Seventy Teams in the Sky
The Hamamatsu kite festival began as a private celebration — families flying kites to anno…
The Hamamatsu kite festival began as a private celebration — families flying kites to announce the birth of a child, the child's name written on the kite so the news could be read from a distance. The individual celebrations accumulated into something communal, and the community eventually organized it into a competition involving more than a hundred and seventy teams and three days of flying over the Nakatajima Sand Dunes.
The competitive element — teams maneuvering their kites to tangle the strings of opposing kites and bring them down — adds an athletic dimension to what would otherwise be simply spectacular. The skills involved in managing a large kite in competition, reading the wind, positioning against other flyers, are not immediately apparent to the spectator but become visible over the course of an afternoon.
Hamamatsu is a city of approximately eight hundred thousand, known as a center of musical instrument manufacturing and as an eel-producing region. For three days in early May, it becomes primarily a kite-flying city. The sand dunes provide the space; the spring winds provide the conditions; the teams provide the four-hundred-year history.
Eel smoke and gyoza steam have long shared the air near Hamamatsu Station, two flavors that speak to entirely different histories — one rooted in the brackish shallows of Hamanako, the other carried in by communities who settled here and stayed. The city itself sits where the Tenryū River meets the coastal plain, and that geography quietly shapes everything: the lake fisheries, the farms growing escarole and celery, the mikan groves up toward Mikkabi.
What few cities can claim is a manufacturing lineage as compressed as this one. Yamaha, Kawai, Roland — all emerged from the same concentrated stretch of ground, and the presence of that instrument-making culture is still palpable at the Acty City Hamamatsu complex, where a dedicated instrument museum holds a collection that ranges from antique keyboard instruments to electronic synthesizers. The city's membership in the UNESCO Creative Cities Network for music is not ornamental; it connects to the Hamamatsu International Piano Competition and Hamamatsu Jazz Day, events that pull professional musicians into a city most visitors pass through by Shinkansen without stopping.
The lake edge slows things down. At Kanzanji Onsen, a small cluster of inns lines the shore of Hamanako, reached from Bentenjima Station. The Kanzanji ropeway climbs to Ōkusayama, where the Music Box Museum holds antique automata that play without electricity. Across the water, the fishing ports of Maisaka and Murakushi still land the catch that feeds the eel farms. The Shinzuka ruins, a Jōmon-era shell midden adjacent to the city museum, sit inside an ordinary residential neighborhood — a mound of compressed time that most people walk past on weekday mornings.
Stay in Hamamatsu, Shizuoka
What converges here
- Mitake Castle Ruins
- Futamata Castle Ruins and Tobayama Castle Ruins
- Komyozan Tumulus
- Shijimizuka Site
- Ryutan-ji Garden
- Kyomaru Akayashio and Shiroyashio Colony
- Kitahama no Okaya no Ki (Great Kaya Tree of Kitahama)
- Hokoji Shichison Bosatsudo
- Nakamura Family Residence (Yuto-cho, Hamana-gun, Shizuoka Prefecture)
- Horin-ji Temple
- Horin-ji Temple
- Hamana Sosha Shinmeigu Shrine Main Hall
- Suzuki Family Residence (Inasa-cho, Kita-ku, Hamamatsu, Shizuoka)
- Suzuki Residence (Inasa-cho, Kita-ku, Hamamatsu, Shizuoka)
- Tenryu-Okumikawa
- Aichi Kogen
- Kanzanji Onsen
- Mount Shirakura
- Mount Takatsuka
- Mount Kyomaru
- Mount Akiha
- Hamamatsu
- Nishikajima
- Hamamatsu
- Nishi-Kashima
- Shin-Hamamatsu
- Takatsuka
- Tenryugawa
- Maisaka
- Hamakita
- Kamishima
- Daiichi-dori
- Hikuma
- Enshu-Kobayashi
- Sukenobu
- Enshu-Byoin
- Saginomiya
- Misono-Chuo-Koen
- Yawata
- Jidosha-Gakkomae
- Enshu-Nishigasaki
- Tsumishi
- Enshu-Komatsu
- Bentenjima
- Enshu-Shibamoto
- Enshu-Iwasui
- Kanasashi
- Mikkabi
- Tenryu-Futamata
- Miyaguchi
- Okachi
- Kiga
- Chubu-Tenryu
- Iwasujiji
- Tsuzuki
- Higashi-Tsuzuki
- Futamata-Honmachi
- Urakawa
- Ona
- Misakubo
- Oku-Hamanako
- Hamanako-Sakume
- Nishi-Kiga
- Miyakoda
- Tokoha-Daigakumae
- Fruits Park
- Oarase
- Kamiichiba
- Sakuma
- Mukaichiba
- Sunza
- Jonishi
- Shimokawai
- Kowada
- Aitsuki
- Hayase
- Idema
- Maisaka Fishing Port
- Murakushi Fishing Port