TOHOKU
Tōhoku (東北, literally
"East-North") is the northeastern region of Japan's Honshu island.
Understanding Tohoku
Traditionally a poor rural backwater with a harsh climate, today's Tohoku
offers the traveller some of the best scenery in Japan. In winter, the Snow
Country (Yukiguni) of the western Japan Sea coast racks up some of the
highest snowfall figures in the world, which also means great skiing and
lots of hot springs to warm up in.
Tohoku
Prefectures and Regions
Akita
Aomori
Fukushima
Iwate
Miyagi
Yamagata
Tohoku
Cities
Akita
Aomori
Hiraizumi — historical site with several large temples
Hirosaki — the cultural capital of the North
Morioka
Sendai — capital of Miyagi and the largest city in Tohoku. It enjoys the
epithet Mori no Miyako, "The Forest City", due to its dense tree lined
thoroughfares and forested public areas.
Yamagata
Other destinations
Ohata River, Shimokita PeninsulaDewa Sanzan — three mountains holy to the
ascetic cult of Shugendo
Lake Towada
Kinkazan — small island with a shrine and hiking trails
Matsushima — one of Japan's Three Great Views
Mount Bandai
Naruko — famous for its hot springs
Oirase River Valley
Shimokita Peninsula — featuring the scenic Yagen Valley as well as Mount
Osore, the mythical entrance to Hell
Talk
Information in English tends to sparse in rural Tohoku, since foreign
travellers are few in these parts; the positive side to this is that people
will go out of their way to help you.
The rural Tohoku accent, known as zūzū-ben for its characteristic feature of
turning all "s" sounds into "z", can be difficult to comprehend at times
even if you do understand Japanese. Younger people are, however, universally
versed in school-standard hyōjungo.
Get in
By plane
There are no major airports in Tohoku and most travellers arrive via
Tokyo.
Sendai and Akita airports do field some international flights, mostly to
China and Korea.
By train
The Tohoku Shinkansen connects
Tokyo to Mito,
Sendai, Morioka and Hachinohe,
with spur lines to Akita and Yamagata. It will take 2 hours from
Tokyo to
Sendai. The line remains under construction and is inching towards
Aomori,
from where it will eventually tunnel under the sea to Hokkaido.
By ferry
Ferry services connect ports in northern Tohoku to Hokkaido.
Get around
Tohoku is large and mountainous and getting around in the boondocks can be
time-consuming.
By train
Rural train services in Tohoku, known as donko, are slow and infrequent —
it's not unusual to have waits of 2 or even 4 hours between trains. The
scenery along the twisty mountain routes can be stunning though.
See & Do
Most visitors come to Tohoku for hiking, history and hot springs, not
necessarily in that order. Highlights include the temples of Hiraizumi, the
holy mountains of Dewa Sanzan and the secluded hot springs of the Shimokita
Peninsula.
Eat & Drink
Tohoku has not made very many contributions to the Japanese culinary scene,
although (as always in Japan) even the smallest hamlet will boast something
it claims to be famous for. But in mountain regions you will certainly have
a chance to sample sansai-ryōri, prepared from herbs and plants harvested
from the forests and hillsides.
Unlike the shōchū-swilling south, Tohoku is sake country and manufactures
some fine rice wines.
(Article
based on
Wikitravel article
by Based on work by Wikitravel user(s) InterLangBot, Jpatokal, Nzpcmad and
Huttite and Anonymous user(s) of Wikitravel. Article used under
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 1.0.) |