From the AURA index Region

Hichiso, Gifu

municipality

image · pastoral × balanced (proxy)
Gifu / Hichiso
A reading of this place

At Kamiasou Station, a single platform receives the Hida Line train, and the first thing visible from the exit is a steam locomotive parked under a modest roof — C12-163, retired and still, its black paint absorbing the valley light. The Hichiso River valley runs close here, the Hida River cutting through gneiss that predates almost anything a traveler might have stood on before. Hichiso-cho sits in this narrow corridor between ridges, its name drawn from seven peaks to the north that have carried their own devotional weight since before written records.

The geology is not metaphor — it is the town's actual substance. The Hisui-kyo gorge along Route 41 shows potholes worn into ancient rock by the river's long patience, and the stone discovered here in 1970 proved to be among the oldest exposed rock on the Japanese archipelago. A UFO-shaped building beside the Roadside Station Rock Garden Hichiso holds specimens and explanations of Earth's deep history, oddly companionable with the surrounding cedar slopes. Up the valley, Kanbuchi Shrine stands where Ōama no Ōji is said to have prayed during the Jinshin War, its great cryptomeria designated a national natural monument — a tree so old that the war itself feels recent by comparison.

Ryūmon-ji, founded in 1308, sits quietly in this same landscape, a Rinzai temple whose age, measured against the gneiss, is almost recent. Forestry and hydroelectric development shaped the modern town; Kamiasou Dam was completed in the 1920s, the same decade the railway arrived. The population is sparse now, but the Community Center at Kinokuni Hichiso still runs a forestry consultation room alongside its cooking space and library — the ordinary infrastructure of a place that continues to use itself.

Inside this place

What converges here

文化財 2
  • 神淵神社の大スギ Natural Monument
  • 飛水峡の甌穴群 Natural Monument
自然公園 1
  • 飛騨木曽川 Quasi-National Park
文化財 自然公園