Katashina, Gunma
Snow accumulates here in depths that reshape the landscape entirely — Katashina Village sits in one of the heaviest snowfall zones in the Kantō region, a high-altitude pocket of Gunma where the roads narrow and the cedars bend under winter weight. The village has held its own municipal form since 1889 without merging into a larger city, a fact that shows in the grain of daily life: small, self-contained, operating on its own seasonal clock.
The 丸沼ダム, a buttress dam completed in 1928, still stands as a registered cultural property — a piece of engineering that predates the postwar resort era by decades. Above it, the 金精峠 cuts through at considerable elevation, where 金精神社 keeps watch over the pass. The 武尊神社, founded in the Kamakura period, anchors the village's older religious geography and hosts the 片品の猿追い祭り each year. These are not reconstructions; they are working structures in a working village.
At the 道の駅尾瀬かたしな, local farmers set out tomatoes, flower beans, and high-altitude vegetables grown in the cool air of the plateau. The produce is direct and unpretentious — the same flower beans that have been cultivated here through generations of short growing seasons. Katashina is also the Gunma-side gateway into the Oze wetlands, meaning the village absorbs foot traffic heading toward 尾瀬 while remaining something distinct from it: a place with its own dams, shrines, ski slopes, and root vegetables.
What converges here
- 丸沼堰堤
- 尾瀬
- 日光
- 越後三山只見
- 片品温泉
- 丸沼温泉
- 尾瀬戸倉温泉
- Mount Shirane
- Mount Kuroiwa
- Mount Kinunuma
- Mount Keizuru