Kashima, Kumamoto
Water rises from the ground here without announcement — at the washing places of the 六嘉湧水群, it simply wells up, cold and clear, drawn through the rock from Aso far to the east. Residents still use these spots, and the act of gathering there, briefly, over water, carries something of the old life of Kashima intact.
The shrine at 浮島神社 sits at the edge of a spring-fed pond, the surface broken only by waterbirds. The pond is the source of the shrine's particular atmosphere, not its architecture. Nearby, the 嘉島湧水天然プール makes use of the same underground flow — a swimming pool fed entirely by spring water, which is rare enough that its existence alone says something about the depth of the aquifer beneath this small town. Melon, strawberry, sweetfish from the rivers, soybean — the agriculture here draws on the same water, and the produce carries that coldness in it.
The 井寺古墳, dating to the late fifth or early sixth century, holds a decorated stone chamber with carved linear patterns — 直弧文 — that survive largely intact. The festivals at 浮島神社, the 獅子舞 of 六嘉, the 足手荒神大祭 at 甲斐神社 — these are not performed for outside audiences. Kashima is surrounded by rivers, underlaid by invisible water, and its rhythms follow accordingly.
What converges here
- 井寺古墳