Watarai, Mie
Tea fields slope down toward the Miyagawa, their rows catching the diffuse light that comes off the river in the morning. This is Watarai-cho, a small agricultural town in Mie Prefecture that sits within the broader Ise-Shima region, close enough to the great shrine complex to share its river watershed, yet entirely its own thing.
The town's identity runs through two currents: the cultivation of Watarai-cha and Ise-cha, and a set of folk rituals that surface through the year. The Ichinose Shishi Kagura and the Kankodori are not performances staged for outsiders — they belong to the agricultural calendar, rooted in communities that formed when four villages merged into one. Kushikutsu-hime Shrine, an auxiliary shrine of the Ise Jingu's inner precinct, sits quietly along the Miyagawa, dedicated to water and rice cultivation, its presence unremarkable from the road but historically dense.
The Watarai-cho Furusato Rekishikan occupies a former elementary school building, which tells you something about the scale of the place — the kind of repurposing that happens when a rural town decides its own memory is worth keeping. Miya River Watarai Park marks the seasons with local festivals along the same riverbank. The bus from Ise-shi station takes the better part of an hour on winding prefectural roads, and that gap in time is not incidental — it is roughly the distance between one Japan and another.
What converges here
- 伊勢志摩