Saka, Hiroshima
The Seto Inland Sea sits at the edge of your view almost as soon as you step off at Saka Station, the ridge of Moriyama rising sharply behind the town and the flat coastal strip between them holding everything — houses, roads, a library tucked into the station's south exit, a shopping center, a hospital. The mountain and the water press the settlement into a narrow band, and that compression gives Saka its particular density of ordinary life.
The town's festivals move through the year on older rhythms. The Inoko Matsuri, with its accompanying Inoko Kagura performances, belongs to the agricultural calendar in a way that feels distinct from the spectacle of larger cities. At Hachimanyama Hachimangu, autumn brings lion dances and market stalls offered to the shrine in a ceremony that the neighborhood still organizes for itself. Meanwhile, at the Saka Ground maintained by Chugoku Electric Power, the Red Regrios rugby squad trains on the pitch — a weekday afternoon detail, unremarkable to locals, that speaks to how sport has been quietly folded into the fabric of industrial company life here.
What sits underneath all of this is a harder history. The slopes above the coastal plain have sent debris down onto the settlements below more than once, most recently in 2018. The landfill that connected Yokohama Island to the mainland added new ground, but the geography has not changed its terms. Saka is a town that has been rebuilt around its own risks, and the flatness near the shore is not simply convenient — it is, in some sense, hard-won.
What converges here
- 瀬戸内海