Orchards run along the flat basin floor in long, ordered rows — peach trees in one direction, grapevines in another — and the smell of ripening fruit in season hangs over the roads between them. Fuefuki sits in the eastern part of the Kofu Basin, enclosed by the Misaka range and the Chichibu mountains, with the Fuefuki River threading through agricultural land that has been worked for a very long time. The same grapes pressed here become Koshu wine, bottled at places like Lumière Winery and Mars Yamanashi Winery, where production continues alongside the harvest calendar without much ceremony.
The ground beneath this farmland carries older layers. The ruins of Kai Kokubunji, a provincial temple founded in the Nara period, mark what was once a political center of ancient Kai Province. Nearby, Ichinomiya Sengen Shrine holds the status of the province's principal shrine, and since the postwar period, wine rather than sake has been offered there as sacred drink — a quiet convergence of the ancient and the agricultural. Isawa Onsen, developed from an Edo-period post town, still draws visitors into its ryokan district along the river.
Festivals here follow the fruit and the history in roughly equal measure — the Peach Blossom Festival, the Isawa Onsen Ukai Festival, the Daibunkake fire on the hillside. The釈迦堂 site museum holds artifacts from the basin's prehistoric layers, while the Yamanashi Prefectural Museum addresses the longer arc. Between these, the ordinary texture of the place — roadside stands, winery driveways, the station at Isawa Onsen on a weekday afternoon — does most of the work.
Stay in Fuefuki, Yamanashi
What converges here
- Kai Kokubunji Temple Ruins
- Kai Kokubun-niji Temple Ruins
- Yamanashioka Jinja Honden
- Asama Shrine Sessha Yamamiya Shrine Main Hall
- Jigen-ji Temple
- Jigen-ji Temple
- Jigen-ji Temple
- Fuji-Hakone-Izu
- Isawa Onsen
- Mount Settogatake
- Mount Kurodake
- Isawa-Onsen
- Kasugai-cho