Far from the bustle of Tokyo, Shikoku Island offers wisdom
traditions and hospitality unique to Japan,
text by Don George, pictures taken from Google, executive summary by darmansjah
I sat on the steps of a 300 year old wooden house in the Iya Valley, Japan, as he watched the verdant expanse of mountains packed cedar trees. Morning mist coiled creeping valley. There was no other than the house. The only sound that caught the sense of hearing is the rest of the rain early this morning dripping of twigs and a roof made of straw. Vague smell of charcoal hearth rest overnight. The atmosphere is depicted here is like a monastery in the 17th century.
"Incredible, is not it?"
Chirps Paul Cato, expats and manager of this village-style inn. "Quite often
when waking in the morning, I was amazed at the era of when."
We are located at Chiiori, house
owned Alex Kerr, an American writer's. In the 1970's, while still a student in
Tokyo, he explored the Iya Valley
and found this house that makes it fall in love. He bought it as an effort to
preserve the tradition.
Iya Valley being in the cluster of mountains of Shikoku, the smallest island of the four main islands of Japan, is flanked on the west side of the island of Kyushu and Honshu main island, separated the Seto Inland Sea in the north and the Pacific Ocean on the south side.
MY LOVE TO Shikoku
also in the 1970's, when visited with a lover, Kuniko. We are a long way from
the campus in Tokyo to meet his family who live on this island. This trip
opened my eyes about Japan that I never knew: Rural farming and fishing
villages, places of worship and temples in the mountains by the sea, coral
beaches and forested valley, tradition and hospitality unique to Japan. Thirty-two
years later, I returned with Kuniko to celebrate the anniversary to commemorate
the 28th as well as a special place that ever existed. Kuniko while mingle with
his family at home, I did a solo trip tracing the winding path to find the
other side of Japan.
Kuniko hometown, Johen, it is
wonderful. Located on the southwest side of Shikoku and inhabited by about 9000
people. Shikoku tooi Inaka still
considered rural, even though the main island. There are many well-known
destinations and Kochi Matsuyama palace relics of the 17th century, the park Ritsurin Koen in Takamatsu, and spa Dogo Onsen in Matsuyama. For most
Japanese people, Shikoku
implies mystery, although access
to this island already qualified, with
the construction of three bridges
linking Shikoku with Honshu (first opened in 1988). As for foreigners who
rarely visit remote areas,
Shikoku scratch the deeper
sense of mystery.
Kuniko parents house flanked by
ditches and streams. When I tried to turn on the narrow road, the car rear
wheel slipping ditch. That was the beginning of my meeting with the prospective
in-laws. I asked for his help to move the car out of the ditch. Mother Kuniko.
Obaachan recalled the incident 32 years later, when the whole family gathered
on the porch celebrate cheerful September. "Don-san, stay away from the ditch," he called in Japanese made
me spontaneously shifted.
I marvel of Cape Ashizuri at the southern tip island. Last night, I asked the parents and two sisters
Kuniko where the heart
of Shikoku.
Kuniko's eldest brother, Nobuhisa,
proposed Cape Ashizuri, the same place he showed on my first visit. "Make sure that
taking this path," he said, tracing
a graffiti with
chopsticks. "For me, it is a great way to
see what we refer
to as aoi Shikoku kuni: 'blue city Shikoku.' Blue sky, blue mountains, fields
blue, blue sea."
Rice blue? He realized the confusion on my face. "In Japan, first, aoi means blue and blue-green."
After several hours of driving
across a row of green
trees, I stopped in a village
where there are about two dozen wooden houses.
Summer air still felt.
"Wow!" Said grandmother behind the bakery counter. "Foreign guests!" He was about 1.5 meters tall and dressed in traditional regional dress blue shorts and Kasuri (made with patterned fabric dye techniques) are white. Her tanned and full of wrinkles seemed happy.
I asked him if he was born and raised in the village. "Oh, yes, I was born and lived here all my life." He counted on his fingers. "Seven decade."
Ever think of staying anywhere else?
"Oh, no!" She retorted quickly. "Why would I live anywhere else?"
What about the young people,
I asked, do they stay
here? "Ah, young man,"
he sighed, "they
do not think much can be done here, so they went to Nagoya
or Kobe. They
prefer to live in the city.
But I love living
here: peaceful
and close to nature. I have no reason to
leave this place. "
When I handed the coin to pay for the
coffee cans, she refused. "I am honored that the arrival of foreign guests," he said. "Thank you for visiting Shikoku. Have a nice trip! "
Arriving at the tip of Cape Ashizuri, standing right where Kuniko, Nobuhisa, and I've stood 32
years ago. I stared at the white lighthouse, coastal cliffs, cedar trees
covered mountains. I called Kuniko and preach this beautiful panorama. Over the
years, images of this place is embedded in my heart and mind-offering the
widest charm of authenticity, peace, purity,
and a panorama that will never be
found in any urban area in Japan.
"Yes," said Kuniko, as if
he already knew, "that's why I married you. Shi has opened your hearts and
minds, and there is no other place in Japan were able to do it. "
I spent the night at the inn that serves a panoramic expanse of rice fields, mountains, and one of the longest sandy beaches in Japan pith. "Welcome to the Lodge Kaiyu" Mistu Ohkada, the innkeeper greeted in English when I entered the lobby. He started the business after working at an inn standard international hotel in Bali. "I enjoy the tranquility here-and of course natural. Do you know about aoi kuni Shikoku? "Yes, I know.
The next day, I hiked up the slopes
of the green valleys and steep yes. Looks countryside in the mountains, farmers
were plowing a field. Dusk until my arrival in Chiiori,
renovated village house into an inn. Kuniko sister, Fumiyaki, insisted I should
stay here.
Chiiori have material wood and thatched roofs, like the village described in Japanese books.
"Irasshaimase! Welcome! "Paul Cato, manager of American origin, say hello while sliding doors made of wood inn. The interior of the inn looks airy and beautiful, 12 meters long and six meters wide, polished wooden floors, thick timber, paper lanterns, paper and curtains. Set foot in the doorway like a lodge foot into the past.
"True," said Cato. "Chiiori indeed ancient house is 300 years old. Author
Alex Kerr fell in love with architecture and traditional Japanese aesthetics.
He restored the house resembles a farmhouse Iya three
centuries ago.
One characteristic of modern
Chiiori Wi-Fi
is extra fast, and
I saw an e-mail from Kuniko.
"We follow the journey,"
he wrote. "How is Iya and Chiiori?
Fumiyaki say, this
is the quietest place in Shikoku.
At dusk, I and Cato cut once boiled turnips, onions, cucumbers, carrots, potatoes, and squash from our Chiiori garden to eat near the fireplace. Afterwards, say lay down on the futon (mattress, bed traditional Japanese) thick under the 300 year old wooden beams and 25-year-old hay. I was typing an e-mail to Kuniko: "Convey my thanks to the recommendation that Fumiaki topnotch. Staying here makes me understand the relationship between nature and man. "
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