Thursday, May 14, 2026

Hinomisaki Western Cape of Shimane Peninsula

 


10,000 years ago, the Shimane Peninsula was a long narrow island running parallel to the coast of Izumo.


Looking at a map, it is not hard to imagine as the two large bodies of water, Lake Shinji, the 8th biggest lake in Japan, and Nakaumi, a large lagoon, take up much of the space where the sea used to be.


Even 1500 years ago, at the time of the first Izumo myths, much of what is now land was still estuary and marsh. The peninsula is the land at the heart of the Kunibiki Myth, wherein a kami pulls land from three other places to make the peninsula.


In pre-modern Japan, coastal shrines and temples used their lanterns as navigation guides for  ships at sea.


In the Meiji Period, with the opening up of more and more ports to foreign shipping, Japan began building western-style lighthouses.


In 1899, Hamada and Sakaiminato ports were opened to foreign trade, and in response, Hinomisaki Lighthouse was built.


It opened in 1903, and I believe it was the tallest lighthouse in East Asia at that time.


It remains the tallest lighthouse in Japan and was made an Important Cultural Property a few years ago. It is also included in the top 100 lighthouses of the world.


It is 43 metres high and built out of a cut-stone exterior and brick interior.


The light, which has the biggest lense in Japan , is 63 meters above sea level and can be seen from 40 kilometers away.


For a small fee visitors can climb to the top and enjoy the fantastic views.


There is a really nice walk around the cape....


With a major shrine nearby, the two small fishing villages have a collection of ryokan and minshuku and a modern, luxury Onsen


This visit was on mid-summers day, 2020, and I was on day 7 of my walk exploring the details of the Sea of Japan coastline....


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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Tanoura Coast to Orii Coast

 


After the Tanoura Beach my route heads inland and then starts up towards another pass.


It's May so paddies are flooded and in some cases planted.....


Miniature farm machinery is one of the reasons rice is so expensive in Japan. Every farmer, who has a tiny farm , must buy machinery to plant and a different one to harvest. Each is used for just a couple of days a year. I my little village there is some sharing, but still Yanmar, Honda, etc are very profitable for a reason...


In many cases after the machine has planted humans must go in finish tings off....


A tiny narrow road over the pass..... I love these roads.... no traffic and wide enough....


Coming down into the tiny settlement of Imaura.....


Really, ormer settlement would be more accurate..... there was a couple of inhabited houses among the abandoned ones, but by now they too are abandoned.....


There is a substantial shrine, and a little harbour without any buildings....


The shrines name is Imoyama Shrine but I can find no sources on which kami are enshrined or any history.


It does have a kaguraden that is still in use, so I guess there are enough scattered farms in the surrounding mountains to support an annual matsuri.






There seems to be just a couple of small boats at the harbour, out of the water.


It is a popular spot for recreational fishermen ( and women)....




After climbing out from Imaura harbour I pass by the Orii Cliifs, top photo of this post. A little while later I look down on the Orii Coast and Mount Taima looms ahead.


Then I drop down to Orii Beach, well "protected" by lines of tetrapods. On the way down I pass another abandoned love hotel..... at Orii Station I hop on a train and head home.


The previous post was on the walk from Kamate to Tanoura...


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Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Tanoura Higyokudo Temple 30 Sasaguri Pilgrimage

 


Higyokudo in the Tanoura area of the Sasaguri Pilgrimage is yet another of the tiny, unmanned "temples", but a little different...


Until 1996 there was a pilgrims lodgings here and so there are the remains of a small garden...


As usual, and to my continued delight, there were numerous Fudo's....


The honzon is an Amida, though because there was dispute on Shikoku with two different temples claiming to be the 30th for a while, the temple here has enshrined  Amidas from both of the Shikoku temples...


Also I've noticed that many of these smaller, unmanned sites have an older, smaller stone honzon on the altar next to a newer, gold-plated one.


Many of these small temples did not exist before the establishment of the Sasaguri Pilgrimage, so most of the new temples were simples a small stone honzon in a tiny structure.


Over the years the local people enlarged the little temples building bigger structures, erecting new, more expensive honzons, and adding more and more statues....


This pilgrimage, like the one on Shodoshima, shows a remarkable religious system not maintained by any powerful organizations, but simple by local communities....


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