Mizuho, Gifu
Flat land, river-cut and flood-prone, stretches between the Nagara and Ibi rivers — this is the terrain that shaped Mizuho. The Nobi Plain offers no drama of mountain or coast, only the quiet geometry of fields and irrigation channels, and in autumn the persimmon orchards that made this area the acknowledged origin of the Fuyu-gaki variety. Near Tenjin Shrine, where the original Fuyu-gaki tree once stood, the connection between soil, water management, and fruit cultivation feels less like heritage display and more like a working logic that has simply persisted.
The old Nakasendo highway passed through here, and Mie Shrine still functions as the tutelary presence of what was once Mie-ji-juku, a post town along that route.穂積駅, opened in the Meiji era, anchors the modern settlement — its annual Kisha Matsuri keeps a certain civic pride alive around the station itself. More unexpected is Saboten-mura, where an improbable density of cacti — hundreds of varieties across a large cultivated farm — occupies flatland more commonly associated with rice and persimmon. The contrast is not explained away; it simply exists, as local agriculture sometimes does, through accumulated individual decisions rather than regional logic.
The library at Rakushukan holds local materials on flood control and water history, a quiet record of how much effort has gone into making this plain livable. Mizuho is, in the end, a place where the Nakasendo's layered past and the routines of a Gifu-Nagoya commuter town occupy the same streets without much fuss.