Gero, Gifu
Mountain forest presses in on all sides along the Hida River, and the steam rising from the baths at Gero Onsen carries the faint mineral edge that has drawn travelers here since the Edo period. Gero sits along the JR Takayama Main Line, a corridor of small stations threading through Gifu's interior, where the ratio of forested slope to habitable flat ground tips heavily toward the former. The town is known as one of Japan's three celebrated hot spring destinations — a designation attributed to the scholar Hayashi Razan — but the surrounding municipality holds a quieter geography than that reputation alone suggests.
Down the line at Hida-Kanayama, the old post-town of Kanayama-juku survives in its back lanes: the筋骨めぐり, a tangle of narrow passages between wooden houses where the Edo-period street logic still operates. Nearby, the Kanamaru Hachiman Shrine marks the neighborhood's ritual calendar with its flower-palanquin festival. At the Michi-no-Eki Hida Kanayama, local tomatoes and rice share shelf space with craft goods — ichii ittobori, the wood-carving tradition worked from a single blade, is among the area's recognized products. Keicha, a dish of chicken and vegetables grilled on houba leaves, and houba-zushi point toward a cooking culture shaped by what the mountain villages preserved and fermented.
Further into the highlands, Nigorigawa Onsen sits at elevation, its waters clouded, its atmosphere sparse. The Gero no Tanokami Festival at Morimizunashi Hachimangu — a designated intangible folk cultural property — involves flower-hat dancing and a scattering of coins as a harvest prayer, the kind of local rite that runs on its own schedule regardless of who is watching.
What converges here
- 下呂市下呂ふるさと歴史記念館
- 久津八幡神社の夫婦スギ
- 禅昌寺の大スギ
- 竹原のシダレグリ自生地
- 久津八幡宮本殿
- 久津八幡宮拝殿
- 旧大戸家住宅(旧所在 岐阜県大野郡白川村)
- 飛騨木曽川
- 下呂温泉
- 下呂げろ温泉
- 下島温泉
- 南飛騨馬瀬川温泉
- 濁河温泉