Namegawa, Saitama
The two stations on the Tobu Tojo Line tell the story plainly. Morishikoen Station has been here longer; Tsukiinowa Station opened in 2002, and with it came the land readjustment projects that reshaped the southern half of Namegawa-machi almost entirely. New housing blocks, convenience stores, a rhythm that belongs to the commuter belt — pool-to-platform in under an hour to Ikebukuro.
Yet the northern part of town holds a different register. The ridgelines of the Hiki Kita Highlands carry the eye across terraced paddies and the kind of small reservoirs — roughly two hundred of them scattered across the area — that speak of patient water management over generations. The Yamato River, the Namegawa River, and the Ichinokawa run east to west in parallel, quietly organizing the land between them. Yamatsu no Sato preserves something of that satoyama fabric: the cultivated edge between woodland and field, where the ordinary work of farming and the texture of older rural life remain legible.
Somewhere in the ponds and slow waterways, the Miyako Tanago — a small freshwater fish once reduced to near absence — has been coaxed back. Its recovery is a quiet, stubborn fact about this town: that the infrastructure of new development and the effort to sustain something older are running alongside each other, not yet resolved into either one.