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Naruko Gorge in Autumn: A Canyon of Color and Hot Water
Narukokyo is a gorge a hundred meters deep, cut by the Oya River through the mountains of…
Narukokyo is a gorge a hundred meters deep, cut by the Oya River through the mountains of northern Miyagi, and for two weeks between late October and early November its cliff walls turn to flame. Beech, oak, and maple blaze red and gold against the dark green of pines that keep their color. The best-known view is from the observation deck near the resthouse, looking down the canyon toward the arch of the Ofukazawa Bridge.
Photographers know a second reason to come. The Rikuu East Line threads through the gorge, and several times a day a two-car local train emerges from a tunnel directly into the foliage—a moment so brief and so composed that people wait hours with tripods for it. The timetable is public. The light is not guaranteed.
A walking path loops 2.2 kilometers through the canyon in about fifty minutes. Wear real shoes; autumn mornings here are cold and the boardwalks can be slick.
And then there is the other reason Naruko exists: hot water. Naruko Onsen, one of Tohoku's great spa towns and the home of the painted kokeshi doll, sits just beside the gorge. The correct order of operations, locals will tell you, is simple. Walk the canyon while the light is good. Then get in the bath.
Rice paddies stretch across the Ōsaki plain between the Eai and Naruse rivers, and the fields here have been producing Sasanishiki and Hitomebore for generations. The volcanic geology beneath Naruko Onsen-kyō feeds seven distinct spring types into the valley — sulfur, salt, and the alkaline bicarbonate water of Nakayanadaira that leaves skin with the slippery quality locals call "unagi-yu." The Rikuu Tōsen line threads through the gorge, stopping at Higashi-Naruko and Nakayanadaira stations where small ryokan cluster along the Arao River, their wooden eaves close to the water.
Further into the plain, the weight of history accumulates quietly. At Yūbikan, a garden and study hall arranged under the influence of Date Masamune, the irrigation channels still function — the site is registered as a World Irrigation Structure Heritage. Nearby, the kilns of the Kido tile works left their mark in the soil centuries before. One-no-Kura brewery operates out of the Matsuyama district, where the Matsuyama Furusato Rekishikan keeps a restored passenger cart from the old jinrikisha rail line. ずんだ sweets appear at roadside stalls, and the Zenkoku Kokeshi Matsuri draws craftspeople whose turned-wood figures have been made in this volcanic district for well over a century.
The Kabukuri and Kabana wetlands, registered under the Ramsar Convention, sit at the edge of the agricultural plain, drawing large flocks of white-fronted geese each season. The Naruko Dam, an early arched concrete structure, backs up into the Arao-ko lake within Kurikoma Quasi-National Park. The land holds its layers without announcement — ancient burial mounds, paddy fields, mineral baths, and a brewery all occupying the same basin.
Stay in Osaki, Miyagi
What converges here
- Onikobe Megama and Ogama Intermittent Hot Springs
- Nakazawame Shell Mound
- Myogakan Governmental Office Ruins
- Daikichizan Kawara Kiln Site
- Miyazawa Site
- Yamahata Yokoana-gun
- Former Yubikan and Garden
- Kido Tile Kiln Site
- Mutsu Kami-Kaido Road
- Gikoji Temple Koyamaki
- Kurikoma
- Nakayamadaira Onsen
- Kawatabi Onsen
- Higashi-Naruko Onsen
- Naruko Onsen
- Futakuchi Onsen
- Joge Onsen
- Mount Arao
- Furukawa
- Furukawa
- Kashimadai
- Matsuyamamachi
- Naruko-Onsen
- Naruko-Onsen
- Uwanome
- Nakayamadaira-Onsen
- Tsukame
- Iwadeyama
- Kawatabi-Onsen
- Yubikan
- Higashi-Osaki
- Ikezuki
- Tajiri
- Nishi-Furukawa
- Nishi-Osaki