Seki, Gifu
The smell of hot metal arrives before you see anything — a forge somewhere nearby, the rhythm of a hammer, the hiss of quenching water. Seki has shaped blades since the Kamakura period, and the craft never became merely historical. At the Seki Hamono Denshokan, smiths still perform the ancient forging process in public, pulling steel through fire with the same sequence of steps that defined this valley's identity for centuries. The knives and scissors sold in the shops along the main streets are not souvenirs; they are the actual output of an industry that continues on weekdays, in ordinary factory buildings, without ceremony.
The Nagara River runs through the lower city, and in summer the small boats of the Kose ukai drift out at dusk — cormorant fishing that Oda Nobunaga once came to watch. The river also yields ayu, sweetfish that appear on menus in a straightforward, unadorned way. Further into the hills, the Takaga Shrine sits at the base of Mount Takaga, a place associated with the wandering Edo-period sculptor Enku, who carved thousands of wooden Buddhist figures across Japan. His nyujo site, the Enku Nyujozuka, stands wrapped in wisteria, quiet and unremarked except by those who already know to look for it.
The city's shape — a wide V folded into mountain terrain — means its textures shift quickly. The valley floor holds the blade factories and the eel restaurants; the upper reaches of the Itadori River carry a different air entirely, slower, cooler, less trafficked. The Ibi River hot spring sits out that way, without fanfare, the kind of facility that locals use on a Tuesday afternoon without thinking much about it.
What converges here
- 弥勒寺官衙遺跡群 弥勒寺官衙遺跡 弥勒寺跡 丸山古窯跡 池尻大塚古墳
- 日竜峯寺多宝塔
- 新長谷寺三重塔
- 新長谷寺本堂
- 新長谷寺大師堂
- 新長谷寺薬師堂
- 新長谷寺釈迦堂
- 新長谷寺鎮守堂
- 新長谷寺阿弥陀堂
- 新長谷寺客殿
- 飛騨木曽川
- いび川温泉
- Mount Koga