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Yokote Kamakura Festival: Rooms Made of Winter
In Yokote, deep in the snow country of Akita, February brings rooms made of winter. Kamaku…
In Yokote, deep in the snow country of Akita, February brings rooms made of winter. Kamakura are snow huts, some three meters tall, and on the nights of the 15th and 16th about a hundred of them glow across the city. Inside each one: a small altar to the water deity, a charcoal brazier, and children who call out to passersby—"Haitte tanse," come in, come in—and hand you sweet amazake and grilled mochi. You duck through the low entrance, sit on a straw mat, and discover what everyone here already knows: a room made of snow is warm.
The custom is said to be some 450 years old, a weaving-together of two winter traditions—New Year prayers to the water god for a good harvest, and the snow caves children have always dug for play. The altar and the game became one thing.
The huts cluster near the city hall and along the old samurai street of Haguro-cho, and the scene is best after dark, when the walls glow orange from within. Down at the Janosaki riverbed, thousands of miniature kamakura hold single candles, a field of snow turned into a field of stars.
Yokote is reachable by train from Akita or Morioka, and the local yakisoba—thick noodles, a fried egg on top—is the correct way to warm up between huts. Dress for real cold. The warmth here is the kind you have to earn.
Steam off a flat iron griddle, the smell of Worcestershire sauce and fried noodles — yokote yakisoba is the kind of lunch you eat standing at a counter, and it anchors the city's self-image as firmly as any castle wall. Yokote sits in the center of the Yokote Basin, hemmed by the Ōu Mountains to the east and the Dewa Hills to the west, and the flatness of the surrounding rice paddies makes the winter sky feel very wide. Snow accumulates here in depth, and it is that snow that gives the February kamakura festival its form: hollow domes of packed white, lit from within.
The older grain of the city runs through Masuda, a district of merchant townhouses preserved as an Important Traditional Buildings group. Beneath the street-facing facades, the buildings extend back in long internal structures — a layout that speaks to how trade moved through in-town and out-of-town quarters during the castle town's centuries of commerce. The Masuda Manga Museum sits within this district, an unexpected pairing of contemporary pop culture with heavy timber architecture. At Yokote Park, the reconstructed keep of Yokote Castle stands on its hill, and from it the basin spreads out in every direction — water, field, and the low rooflines of a working agricultural city.
Iburigakko — smoked pickled daikon — appears on tables throughout the region, and the local imonoko festivals in autumn center on taro from Sanuchi. The Hōrōwa-yama Shimotsuki Kagura and the Bonton-hōnōsai at Asahiokayama Shrine mark the ritual calendar, each rooted in a specific hill or precincts rather than in performance for outsiders. Kamakura Onsen sits quietly off the main circuit. The texture here is agricultural and ceremonial in equal measure, the city's energy less about display than about continuity.
Stay in Yokote, Akita
What converges here
- Yokote City Masuda Preservation District of Historic Buildings
- Dewa Kanazawa Castle Ruins
- Otoriiyama Site and Jindate Site
- Waushibetsu Shrine Kaguraden
- Sato Residence
- Sato Family Residence
- Former Matsuura Family Residence
- Former Matsuura Family Residence
- Former Matsuura Family Residence
- Kurikoma
- Kamihata Onsen
- Yokote
- Jumonji
- Ainono
- Komatugawa
- Yanagida
- Yokote
- Daigo
- Kurosawa