Wakimachi
Located on a calm, flat stretch of the Yoshino River, the charming town of Wakimachi was a centre for indigo dyeing during the Edo and Meiji periods.
Located on a calm, flat stretch of the Yoshino River, the charming town of Wakimachi was a centre for indigo dyeing during the Edo and Meiji periods.
Learn how to make tasty soba noodles in the depths of Iya Valley.
A village in Iya with a historic past and agricultural present.
Capital of Tokushima Prefecture, best known as the home of the Awa Odori dance festival.
The German House, built in 1972, houses a museum about the POWs, with photographs and models.
A small island off Tokushima Prefecture where time stopped in the Showa period.
The name of this place means ‘bamboo island’. It’s located on the border between Tokushima and Kochi, on a long and interesting stretch of coast.
Sarukai Village is one of the communities in the Iya region built on extremely steep slopes where special agricultural techniques are used.
Sadamitsu is known for its streets of old buildings ornamented with a flamboyance called ‘udatsu’.
Craft beer brewery and wild game meat store housed in an architecturally striking building.