Showing posts with label ebisu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ebisu. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Utago Miho Shrine

 This small shrine goes overboard with marine-safety gods, has the most strangely looking Fudo Myoo, and proves that angry ghosts can be horses.


The main shrine in the old fishing harbour of Utago is a Miho Shrine on what was until the 1700's a small island named Ebisujima, but which was connected to the mainland by a man-made causeway.


As a branch of the famous Miho Shrine in Mihonoseki, the main kami is Kotoshironushi, now equated with Ebisu. Also enshrined are a whole slew of other kami with connections to maritime safety.


The Sumiyoshi Sanjin are enshrined here, the three kami associated with Sumiyoshi Shrine, and then there are Omononushi and Emperor Sutoku, the two kami of Konpira shrines, and finally Ichikishimahime, one of the three Munakata kami associated with the safety of travel between Japan and Korea, and alone often equated with Benzaiten, a water kami.


Standing at the side of the main shrine building is a very unusual statue of Fudo Myoo. No longer carrying a sword, it is carved out of some kind of eroded black rock. My feeling is a kind of volcanic rock but it is full of holes. The head in particular is most weird.


Behind the shrine in an altar among rocks is a horse made of straw. I had seen similar things before at shrines on the Tottori coast, but this one comes from a fire that badly damaged the village and in the process, killed a horse. Subsequently, fires kept breaking out until they figured out it was the angry ghost of the dead horse causing the fires and so created the straw horse and altar to propitiate it. Angry ghosts are never far away in Japan....


The previous post was on the village of Utago where the shrine is.


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Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Heading West Off the Beaten Track in the Mountains of Yamaguchi

 


After visiting Kanyoji and its wonderful gardens, there were still a couple of hours of daylight left in the day.


The next temple on the pilgrimage was in Yamaguchi City, about 40k almost directly west.


The route was across a very remote section of mountains, although the Chugoku Expressway roughly went the same way.


It was not an area I had ever been to before, and there seemed to be no notable sights or settlements along the way....


I stopped in at any local shrines I passed....


In Suyama,  a Kumano Shrine with two pairs of Ebisu and Daikoku masks...





As the sun gets lower I keep my eyes peeled for a place to sleep for the night.... something I  habitually do even if I am in a car or on a train....50 years of sometimes having to sleep out means I know what to look for ...... I believe the contemporary term is stealth camping...

 
And then over a small pass  from the Seiryoji River valley to drop into the Kushi River valley....




In Kushi, a small park....


And next to it on the hillside a small Hakusan Shrine....


Rusting metal covering thatched roofs are very common around here...



Kushi Hachimangu is quite rare, a shrine with a thatched roof...


It claims to have been founded in the early 8th century


An unusual pairing of masks... a Karasu Tengu with a Daikoku...


The sun has gone down so it seems this is the best place to sleep..... The previous post in this series on day 21 of my walk along the Chugoku Kannon Pilgrimage was on some of the Mirei Shigemori gardens at Kanyoji Temple...


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Sunday, September 14, 2025

Along Nagahama

 Continuing with my walk along the Sea of Japan Coast........


After leaving the roadstation at Taki Kirara I headed off along Nagahama, the long beach that runs up to near Izumo Taisha.


Sanpoko Shrine is a small, local shrine, just across from the shoreline. Can't find which kami is enshrined here though there is a small statue of Ebisu.


Not surprising as he is the kami for fishermen. Also was a Kojin straw serpent wrapped around a tree.


I have found one if these at every single shrine I have visited in Izumo, and with some shrines having more than one, which suggests that Kojin is the most common deity in this area...


A small stream with its source just a few kilometers away enters the sea.


It was a pleasant Saturday so lots of people were enjoying the beach. This was late June, 2020, and while social distancing was in operation, there was no kind of lockdown in Japan....


The beach runs pretty much all the way to the Shimane Peninsula, and according to one of Izumo's myths, the Kunibiki Story, the Peninsula was formed by "pulling" land from other areas including the Korean Peninsula.


When the god had drawn these lands together, he anchored them to Izumo with two great ropes. Nagahama was the rope that anchored the western end of the peninsula to Mount Sanbe, the volcanic peak not too far away down in Iwami.


An unusual wind farm in that the wind generators are relatively small....


The other rope that anchored the eastern end of the peninsula was the huge sandbar of Sakaiminato which connected the peninsula to Mount Daisen.


Soon I reach the mouth of the Kanda River, a main river that flows down from the Chugoku Mountains.


Not long after moving to Shimane, one of the first long-distance walks I did was a three-day walk down the Kanda River to Izumo Taisha for Kamiarizuki. One of these days I will write it up and post it.


All the waterways that pass through the Izumo Plain, between the mountains and the Shimane Peninsula, are heavily engineered with straightening and embankments etc. This whole area was the sea 10,000 years ago and in historical times was mostly marsh.


As I am going to be sleeping out on the beach I need to stock up on food and drink and the most convenient convenience store involves heading up the river a little ways and then crossing and heading to the store before coming back to the river and heading back downstream on the opposite bank.


The line of pruned trees is a windbreak protecting an old farmhouse. Called tsujimatsu, these "living walls" are unique to Izumo and traditionally use Black Pine.


A newer tradition of the area is growing grapes for the Shimane Winery.



Near the mouth of the Kanda River another river, the Shinnaito runs parallel with it before joining it. The Shin in Shinnaito suggest that this is an engineered river part of land draining and reclamation.


The fact it has massive flood control barriers also suggests that...



I have never seen cormorants so high up in a tree before....


I'm getting close to my resting place for the night. Up ahead is the famous Inasa Beach next to Izumo Taisha where all the kami of Japan arrive later in the Autumn.


Looking back, Mount Sanbe is clearly visible. The previous post in this series was on the section of coast between Tagi and Taki Kirara...