Ichikawa, Hyogo
Iron-forging skills, once used to shape sword blades, found a different purpose here — bent toward the manufacture of golf club heads. That pivot is the quietly unusual fact at the center of Ichikawa-cho, a small town in Hyogo's Kanzaki district where the river of the same name runs through a valley flanked by forested ridgelines. The connection between sword craft and iron-headed clubs is not decorative local mythology; it sits at the base of the town's industrial identity.
The mountains to the east belong to the Kasagata-Chigamine Prefectural Natural Park, and the peak known locally as Harima Fuji — Kasagata-yama — has a hiking course that draws walkers up through the kind of slope that demands attention to the ground underfoot. Below it, かさがた温泉せせらぎの湯 opened in the late 1990s as a day-use bath at the mountain's foot, with a ceramics workshop and a rolled-sushi hall attached — practical amenities that suggest the place was built for residents as much as for passing visitors.
The 思い出博物館, a personal collection of vintage cameras, folk tools, and mounted butterflies from the Meiji through Showa eras, occupies a different register entirely — the kind of accumulation that happens when one person decides that ordinary objects deserve to be kept. The Ichikawa Matsuri marks the town's calendar. Two stations on the JR Bantan Line — Amaji and Tsurui, names carried over from the villages that merged to form this town — anchor the rail connection, and the Banshu Renraku Expressway passes through overhead, linking this valley to larger flows without quite absorbing it.