In Japan, an Iceless Lake and an Absent God Sound an Ancient Warning

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Asia Pacific|In Japan, an Iceless Lake and an Absent God Sound an Ancient Warning

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/28/world/asia/japan-climate-lake.html

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For centuries, residents in central Japan have chronicled a mysterious natural phenomenon in winter. They see its disappearance as a bad omen.

A man dressed in what looks like a robe stands on a dirt bank next to a lake with mountains in the distance.
Kiyoshi Miyasaka, a Shinto priest, has been observing Lake Suwa every winter for decades.Credit...Noriko Hayashi for The New York Times

Martin FacklerHisako Ueno

March 28, 2025, 12:01 a.m. ET

For at least six centuries, residents along a lake in the mountains of central Japan have marked the depth of winter by celebrating the return of a natural phenomenon once revered as the trail of a wandering god.

It would only appear after days of frigid temperatures had frozen Lake Suwa into a sheet of solid white. First, people were awakened at night by a loud rumbling. Dawn broke to reveal its source: a long, narrow ridge of jagged ice that had mysteriously arisen across the lake’s surface, meandering like the spiked back of a twisting dragon.

This was the Miwatari, meaning the sacred crossing, which local belief held was left by a passing god of Japan’s native Shinto belief. Its appearance evoked feelings of awe but also reassurance among the residents, who ventured onto the ice to perform a ceremony honoring what they saw as a visitation from the supernatural. In the rare winters when the ice ridge did not appear, the god’s absence was viewed as a warning that the natural world was out of balance.

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Mr. Miyasaka leads parishioners from the Yatsurugi Shrine onto the frozen Lake Suwa in 2018, the last time the Miwatari formed.Credit...Suwa City

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A photograph of the Miwatari taken in January 2006 displayed at the Yatsurugi Shrine. In some years, the ice spikes were taller than local residents.Credit...Noriko Hayashi for The New York Times

So important was the Miwatari that residents recorded whether it appeared, the condition of the lake and what historical events accompanied it. They have loyally written these descriptions every winter since 1443, creating a remarkable archive that attests to centuries of monotonously cold winters.


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