Minamiyamashiro, Kyoto
Tea fields climb the slopes above the Kizu River, their rows running close together on the highland plateau that forms the eastern tip of Kyoto Prefecture. This is Minamiyamashiro, the prefecture's only village, sitting at an elevation where the air carries a different quality — cooler, quieter, pressed between the Yamato Plateau and the Iga Basin. Two rivers, the Kizu and the Nabari, converge at Yugen-kyo gorge, and where the Kizu was once a working waterway, the valley now holds the still surface of Tsukigase Lake, formed when Takayama Dam was completed.
The village's identity runs through Uji tea. The fields around Dosenbо̄, Takao, Tayama, and Imayama spread across the highlands, recognized as part of a Japanese Heritage trail tracing eight centuries of tea cultivation. Shigaraki ware, fired nearby, sits naturally alongside that agricultural history — ceramic and leaf, both shaped by the same slow processes of land and craft. In late winter and early spring, Tsukigase Bairin fills with plum trees, a nationally designated scenic site where the scent of青梅 — the green fruit still weeks away — hangs in the cold air.
The Kizu River Yamanami International Music Festival brings an unlikely sound into this mountain village each year. Otherwise, the rhythm is agricultural: the picking season, the drying sheds, the timber industry that has worked these slopes alongside the tea. Designated as a depopulated area, Minamiyamashiro moves at its own pace, shaped less by tourism than by the practical continuity of growing things.
What converges here
- 月瀬梅林
- 大和青垣