Skip to content
Roadside Japan
🎲
Kanmangafuchi Abyss
🏞️ Scenic

Kanmangafuchi Abyss

📍 Tochigi, Nikko

A short, mossy gorge walk in Nikko lined with a row of stone Jizo statues in red bibs — the 'Bake Jizo,' famous for the local saying that you can never count them and get the same number twice.

Away from Nikko’s grand shrines, a quiet path follows the Daiya River into a small basalt gorge formed by an old lava flow. This is the Kanmangafuchi Abyss, and its real draw stands in a long, silent row along the bank.

Why It’s Interesting

Dozens of weathered stone Jizo statues — guardians of travelers and children — sit shoulder to shoulder in faded red bibs and caps, mossed over and watching the water. They’re nicknamed the Bake Jizo (“ghost Jizo”) because of a gentle local legend: count them on your way in and again on your way out, and you’ll never arrive at the same number. True or not, it makes the walk quietly magical, especially with the river rushing and maples flaming overhead.

Best Time to Visit

Year-round, but November frames the statues in red autumn leaves; early mornings are hushed and empty.

Getting There

A bus or a lovely 25-minute walk from the Nikko stations — a peaceful counterpoint to the area’s busier sights.

📸 Mon-chan's camera roll

Snapshots from our very good boy on the road.

A row of mossy red-bibbed stone Jizo statues along a forested river gorge
A line of mossy Jizo by a rushing river. Count them — you never get the same number.
Mon-chan and Cinnamon the squirrel quietly passing the row of red-bibbed Jizo by the river
We counted the little guardians — a different number each time. Cinnamon found acorns. 🍁

Where it is

You might also like

Nearby discoveries

Comments

  • No comments yet — be the first to share a tip.

Leave a comment

Share a tip, a correction, or what you saw. Comments are reviewed before they appear — no account needed.