1 upcoming event
Daisen Hi Matsuri: Fire at the Foot of the Sacred Mountain
Daisen is the highest mountain in the Chugoku region — a dormant volcano with a shape that…
Daisen is the highest mountain in the Chugoku region — a dormant volcano with a shape that has led it to be called the Fuji of the San'in coast, visible from the Sea of Japan on clear days. The mountain has been sacred since at least the eighth century, when a major temple complex was established on its slopes. The fire festival in August is part of this long relationship between the mountain and the communities at its base.
Bonfires along the approach to Daisen-ji Temple and torchlight processions at the mountain's foot are the visible elements. The invisible element is the context — a mountain that has been receiving these offerings for over a thousand years, in a landscape where the sea is visible to the north and the mountain fills the southern sky.
The combination available on the evening of the fire festival is specific to this part of Tottori: the sun sets over the Sea of Japan to the west, the mountain darkens against the evening sky, and then the fires begin on its slopes. The sequence takes several hours and rewards waiting for each part of it.
The road from the coast climbs steadily, and within a short drive the air changes — salt giving way to cedar, the Pacific light replaced by the filtered canopy shade of the lower slopes of Daisen. This volcanic peak, isolated and massive, shapes nearly everything about Daisen-cho: the drainage that feeds the rice paddies and pear orchards, the snowfall that built the ski terrain of Daisen White Resort, the centuries of pilgrims who wore grooves into the Daisen-do trail walking up from Okayama toward Daisen-ji.
The temple itself was founded in the early eighth century and remains a Tendai head temple, its Amida-do designated a national important cultural property. Below it, Ogamiyama Shrine's inner sanctuary holds the same status. These are not preserved ruins — incense is still lit, the mountain-opening festival still draws crowds each year. In the Shoko district, the farmhouses of the traditional preservation area at Tokoro spread across the northern foothills, and the Kadowaki family residence, a grand village headman's compound built in 1769, still stands with its watermill and rice storehouses intact.
The town also grows Daisen broccoli and white leeks in the volcanic soil, raises Daisen chicken and Daisen black beef, and pulls turban shells and abalone from the fishing harbors at Hirata and Mikuriya. Young people have been moving here in numbers that catch the attention of regional planners. The texture of Daisen-cho is not nostalgic — it is a place where a 1,300-year-old pilgrimage route runs parallel to a working farm, and both are simply Tuesday.
Stay in Daisen, Tottori
What converges here
- Daisen Daisenkyaraboku Pure Forest
- Daisen-cho Shoko
- Daisen-ji Former Temple Precinct
- Mukibanda Site
- Daisen-ji Amidado
- Okamiyama Shrine Oku-miya
- Okamiyama Jinja Okumiya
- Kadowaki Family Residence (Daisen-cho, Saihaku-gun, Tottori Prefecture)
- Kadowaki Family Residence (Tottori Prefecture, Saihaku-gun, Daisen-cho)
- Kadowaki Family Residence (Tottori Prefecture, Saihaku-gun, Daisen-cho)
- Kadowaki Family Residence (Daisen-cho, Saihaku-gun, Tottori)
- Daisen-Oki
- Daisen Kyara Onsen
- Daisen Onsen
- Mount Daisen
- Oyamaguchi
- Mikuniya
- Nakayamaguchi
- Shimoichi
- Nawa
- Hirata Fishing Port
- Mikuriya Fishing Port