Uken, Kagoshima
Fourteen settlements ring the deep inlet of Yakenai Bay, each one pressed between mountain and water with almost no flat ground to spare. The forested ridges that crowd the shoreline belong to Uken Village, on the western coast of Amami Oshima, and they rise steeply enough that the sky above the bay feels narrow, contained. At the top of those ridges sits Yuwan-dake, a peak dense with subtropical forest, designated a special protection zone within Amami Gunto National Park.
The sea here produces bluefin tuna and skipjack, and the village's marugo fishing tradition runs alongside tuna aquaculture in the surrounding waters. Ryukyu wild boar also appears in local cooking — a reminder that the land, not just the water, is hunted and known. The calendar moves through a rhythm of festivals: Hamakudari, the Yakenuchi Donto Festival, Shibasashi, and the fish festival called Osakana Matsuri, each one belonging to a specific community rather than to tourism in general.
The village's past holds layers that don't announce themselves. It was once part of the Ryukyu kingdom's administrative structure, passed through American occupation after the war, and returned to Japan in 1953. Some families emigrated to Brazil; the bridge called Hakkoku-bashi quietly marks that connection. In the 1970s, residents organized against a proposed petroleum storage facility — a resistance that shaped the coastline visitors see today. Uninhabited Edateku-jima, the largest unpopulated island in the Amami archipelago, sits offshore, visible but unreachable without arrangement.
What converges here
- 神屋・湯湾岳
- 奄美大島
- Mount Yuwan
- 宇検
- 平田
- 芦検