mytokushima
Shikoku · Japan

Whirlpools, vine bridges,
and a dance that never stops.

Tokushima is the quiet corner of Japan most travellers miss — the one with mountain temples, the world's loudest summer festival, and an indigo dye so deep they call it Japan Blue.

A prefecture worth the detour.

Cross the Naruto Strait from Honshu and you arrive in Tokushima — the east-coast prefecture of Shikoku, an island many international visitors never reach. That is most of the appeal.

Here, tides ten metres high crash through a narrow channel and twist themselves into whirlpools the size of city blocks. Hand-woven bridges of mountain vine sway above jade-green rivers. Pilgrims in white robes leave a thousand-year-old temple to begin a 1,200-kilometre walk around the island. And every August, more than a million people pack into the streets to dance.

This site is a slow guide to all of it. Wander when you like.

Start with these seven.

A short list of places that capture the range of the prefecture — water, mountains, faith, festival, craft, food.

No. 01

Naruto Whirlpools

鳴門の渦潮 · Naruto

Stand on a glass-floored walkway above some of the largest tidal whirlpools on Earth.

No. 02

Iya Vine Bridge

祖谷のかずら橋 · Miyoshi

A footbridge hand-woven from living mountain vines, deep in the Iya Valley.

No. 03

Awa Odori

阿波おどり · Tokushima City

Japan's biggest dance festival. Four nights of straw hats, taiko, and a million spectators.

No. 04

Mt. Tsurugi

剣山 · Miyoshi / Mima

A grassy summit ridge at nearly 2,000 m, reachable by chairlift and a gentle trail.

No. 05

Ryozen-ji

霊山寺 · Naruto

Temple One of the 88-temple Shikoku pilgrimage. Where white-robed pilgrims begin.

No. 06

Awa Indigo

阿波藍 · Aizumi

Japan's historic indigo heartland. Dip a cloth and watch it turn brilliant blue in the air.

No. 07

Otsuka Museum

大塚国際美術館 · Naruto

A thousand full-size ceramic copies of the world's masterpieces — under one roof.

More, soon.

Trip plans, transit notes, season-by-season picks, and a long list of small towns worth a stop. This site is a work in progress — written from the road.