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Tono Furusato Village
History
Iwate, Tohoku

Tono Furusato Village

A living folk museum in the mythic Tono valley — home to Japan's most famous folklore including the river imp Kappa. Traditional L-shaped magariya farmhouses where horses once shared living space with families are preserved in working condition.

Duration

2–3 hours

Admission

¥550

Hours

9:00–17:00 (last entry 16:30); closed Tue in winter

Best Season

April–November

Access

Bus from Tono Station (approx. 25 min)

Location

Why Visit

  • 1

    The 1910 book "Tono Monogatari" by Kunio Yanagita recorded the valley's ghost and demon stories — still read today

  • 2

    Kappe-buchi riverside pool is said to be inhabited by kappa water sprites — stone effigies guard the bank

  • 3

    Magariya farmhouses had horses stabled at the end of the living room to share body heat through winter

  • 4

    Washi paper-making, indigo dyeing and pottery workshops run throughout the day

Local Tips

Tono is the Japanese equivalent of Brothers Grimm country — the folklore collection by Kunio Yanagita (1910) preserved tales of kappa water demons, zashiki-warashi house spirits, and mountain gods that are still alive in local culture. The open-air village recreates the old magariya L-shaped farmhouses. The Denshoen kappa pool is considered by locals to be genuinely inhabited.

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