Showing posts with label arifuku. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arifuku. Show all posts

Saturday, December 6, 2025

Along the Shimoko River

 


2nd of May, 2014, and I begin day 8 of my walk along the Iwami Kannon Pilgrimage from Arifuku, the small onsen resort in the mountains between Hamada and Gotsu.


The paddies are all flooded and will be planted with rice soon.


I stop in at a deserted, though not defunct, pottery.


Behind, some of the climbing kilns, anagama, no longer in use.


I think this may be the Yoshida Pottery, as they specialize in larger more utilitarian pieces, rather than the other potteries nearby which have modern showrooms and make more delicate pieces.


My route for a few days will be roughly SW, inland from the coast, down to where Iwami ends , then up the coast back towards my area of Gotsu.


After leaving the pottery I head over a pass and drop down into the Shimoko River valley and head upstream.


Heading upstream I start to pass numerous ruins of a "ghost railway", the Imafuku Line of a raiway that was planned to run over the mountains to Hiroshima.


It was started in 1933, then halted by the war, and never completed and opened.


Since I first moved here 20 years ago, they have started to turn it, somewhat successfully,  into a tourist attraction.




In Utsuicho I stop in at the local shrine, an Otoshi Shrine.


There are quite a lot of Otoshi shrines in Iwami. Otoshi was a son of Susanoo and is a kami of agriculture and rice.



The previous post in this series on my walk along the Iwami Kannon Pilgrimage was on Fukusenji Temple in Arifuku.


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Saturday, October 18, 2025

Fukusenji Temple 13 Iwami Kannon Pilgrimage

 


Fukusenji is a small, rural temple in Arifuku, a mountain village in Shimane.


It is a Rinzai sect temple, and the honzon is a Kannon. Otheer than that I can find no information.


There is documentation on the temple dating to 1580, but it is not clear to me if that is when it was established.


This was the end of the 7th day of my walk along the pilgrimage, and from here I took a bus home and restarted from here at a later date as the next section heads down the mountains to the southwest.


The previous post in this series on my walk along the Iwami Kannon Pilgrimage was on the walk to here from down near my home.


If you would like to subscribe by email just leave your email address in the comments below. It will not be published and made public. I post new content almost everyday, and send out an email about twice a month with short descriptions and links to the last ten posts.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Honmyozan Konpira Shrine, Arifuku

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Honmyozan is a 412 meter high mountain behind Arifukuonsen. On top of the mountain is the Konpira Shrine. This is the shrine featured in my hatsuhinode post. Mountaintop shrines are a development of medieval Japan. In ancient Japan the tops of mountains were reserved for the gods to alight upon, and shrines were placed at the base of mountains. It's not uncommon to find Konpira shrines on mountaintops. Atago are other shrines that are commonly found on mountaintops.

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The head Konpira Shrine is on the island of Shikoku, and while Konpira is known particularly as a sea journey protection kami, its widespread popularity owes more to its nature as a kami who answered all prayers, and so, like most kami, there are many different aspects to Konpira.

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The shrine was built by the Amago Clan who ruled this area of Japan until defeated by the Mori Clan. The Amago had a small fort on the mountain top. Actually the shrine is just a small hokora (wayside shrine) that has had a protective building built around and over it.

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The shrine has no priest or festival, but is opened by the Ujiko (parishioners group) on New Years day to sell amulets and talismans.

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Honmyozan is the highest mountain in the vicinity, and so has expansive views up and down the coast and inland.

Index of Shrines