Overview
Located in the heartland of Niigata Prefecture, the city of Nagaoka is blessed with an abundance of water. It lies on the banks of the Shinano River, the longest river in Japan, which is fed by snowmelt from the nearby mountains. The city's Settaya district is known for its traditional producers of sake, shoyu (soy sauce) and other fermented foods, for which the water is drawn from underground water sources below the city. Yamakoshi, up in the mountains, has become famous for its scenic rice terraces and the beautifully colored nishiki-goi carp that are bred and raised in the area. Here, too, people have prospered thanks to the plentiful water from the annual snowfall. On this edition of Journeys in Japan, photographer Tom Miyagawa Coulton meets the people of Nagaoka for whom water is the wellspring of their livelihood.
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16 - 1The Mountain Spirit of Shiiba Village February 04, 2025 -
16 - 2Kyushu: Land of Samurai Swords February 18, 2025 -
16 - 3Enku's 120,000 Smiles over Gifu February 25, 2025 -
16 - 4Hokuriku 1: Foods and Flavors of the Trading Ships March 04, 2025 -
16 - 5 -
16 - 6Gunma: Raking in Good Luck March 18, 2025 -
16 - 7Hida: Deep Winter Escape March 25, 2025 -
16 - 8Hokkaido Sapporo: Sensing the City through its Architecture April 01, 2025 -
16 - 9NIIGATA: SNOW COUNTRY WONDERLAND April 15, 2025 -
16 - 10Wakayama: The Cradle of Japan's Flavors May 13, 2025 -
16 - 11Kure Port, Kochi — The Lure of Katsuo May 27, 2025 -
16 - 12Izu Peninsula: Volcanic Beauty June 10, 2025 -
16 - 13Nagaoka: Water, the Wellspring of Abundance June 24, 2025 -
16 - 14Matagi: Yamagata’s Spiritual Hunter-Gatherers July 01, 2025 -
16 - 15Nishio: Whisking up the Global Matcha Boom July 08, 2025 -
16 - 16Tochigi: Life Away from the Sea July 22, 2025 -
16 - 17Okinawa: A World in Bloom August 05, 2025 -
16 - 18With Isabella Bird — Part 6: On the Road to Biratori August 12, 2025


