The festival of fireflies has begun in a nearby town. Yugawara is a faded hot spring resort, mentioned in a 7th Century poetry collection ("Yugawara's seething springs surge upward day and night") and which became a thriving destination at the end of the 1800s. It is situated on the coast and across the mountains from Hakone, another resort that has better managed to revive its century-old cache. Yugawara is still a backwater, its old wooden ryokans closing one by one; its 20th Century concrete hotels replaced by weed-filled lots. What remains is, to me, an intensely attractive Taisho time warp.
At the top of the town, the Fudo-taki waterfall is mostly forgotten. It used to be a place to view fireflies, but, deprived of their food source because of pollution, they have long since disappeared. Luckily, we can still experience this natural wonder thanks to artificial breeding. A short walk down from the waterfall brought us to Manyo Park, where fireflies are released in early summer. As night fell, a frog croaked as the tiny lights floated through the air, pulsing on and off in unison. There was a Japanese belief that the lights of fireflies were the souls of the dead, and we can feel why as we watch the silent spectacle.
Because the firefly festival was in Yugawara, it wasn't unduly crowded, and had the relaxed, informal atmosphere of the countryside. Beside the road below the park, a few stalls served beer and festival food like yakitori grilled chicken and yakisoba noodles. There was plenty of seating at trestle tables, and we ate and drank listening to a local flutist, followed by a tape of a haunting enka song that played over and over:
Ho, ho, hotaru, ho (Come fireflies, come)
Kochi no mizu wa umai zo (The water here is pure and sweet)
By nine, the fireflies had stopped flashing, the stalls closed up and we walked the almost deserted street toward the station. The misty halo of the full moon above was echoed in the summer lanterns that lined the route. A handful of taverns remained open for those not satisfied by festival food. Yugawara might have seen better days, but for me it's at the height of its charm.
--Julian
Yugawara is on the JR Tokaido Line between Odawara and Atami. The firefly festival is every evening until June 21 from 7:30 to 9PM in Manyo-koen Park. From No. 2 stop outside Yugawara Station, take a bus to Fudotaki or Oku-yugawara and get off at Ochiaibashi (Manyo-koen is also mentioned in the announcement).
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