On the southern slopes of Mount Taima can be found the Murodani Rice Terraces.
In 1999 they became classified as one of the top 100 rice terraces in Japan.
There is currently about 1,000 of them here, but in earlier days, there were four times as many.
There are signs and a short path to a designated viewing point. I guess that reduces the amount of trespassing to get good photos.
The best times to view would be around Mat and June, when the paddies have been flooded and seedlings planted....
The interesting thing, for me at least, is that these rice terraces, like those up in Okuizumo, were a by-product of the traditional iron industry.
Japan has almost no iron-ore, so domestic iron and steel was produced using iron sand, something the Chugoku Mountains have a lot of. The terraces were made after the valley had been " mined" for the iron sand. I did read a complicated, translated explanation on how the soil and rocks of the ground were separated from the sand, and that this process somewhat started the process of the terraces being formed, but I didn't really understand it.
A couple of years ago, while visited Hagi and its World Heritage sites connected to Japans industrialization in the Meiji period, I can across a tatara, the kind of forge used in creating iron from iron sand, that the Mori Clan had set up to create iron for its building of a western-style ship.
It seems that here in Murodani is where the iron sand came from. It was shipped down to the coast on horses, transferred to Kitamaebune ships and taken down the coast to Abu, near Hagi, then packed up into the mountain site of the tatara by horses again. If you have any interest in the history of tatara I have
plenty of posts on Okuizumo about the topic.
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