Aomori (prefecture)



Aomori Prefecture (青森県 Aomori-ken) is the northernmost prefecture on the island of Honshu, Japan.

Tourist information site
Amazing Aomori is the prefecture's official English guide site.

Regions
Aomori is divided into three main regions, each with its own dialect.

Cities

 * — the capital
 * — scenic coastal areas
 * — the "Kyoto of the North", former capital of the Tsugaru clan
 * — home of the International Chapel, and a church service in English
 * — a beautiful city by the sea
 * — the administrative hub of the Shimokita Peninsula
 * — home of the impressive Tachinebuta Festival

Other destinations

 * — beautiful caldera lake
 * — famed for its scenic beauty
 * — small town featuring the final resting place of Christ as well as Aomori's pyramids
 * — World Heritage Site for its undisturbed beech forests, famous for the Anmon-no-Taki Waterfall
 * — town with the longest wooden bridge in Japan

Talk
Aomori has several varieties of the northern Tohoku dialect, considered quite a rural dialect by Japanese. The Tsugaru dialect (津軽弁 Tsugaru-ben) uses some different vocabulary, and can be difficult to understand even for speakers of other dialects within Aomori, let alone those who only understand Standard Japanese. The Nanbu dialect is not as extreme, and Shimokita dialect is something of a hybrid between the two.

By plane
Aomori and Misawa  have domestic airports with flights from Tokyo.

By train
Aomori is the northernmost terminus of the Shinkansen (bullet train). Local and express trains also run throughout the prefecture.

The second longest train tunnel in the world, the Seikan tunnel, runs between Aomori and the northern island of Hokkaido, connecting to Hakodate and onward to Sapporo.

By bus
JR and various local carriers offer numerous buses to, from, and throughout the prefecture.

By ferry
Ferries in Aomori, Hachinohe and Ōma (at the tip of the Shimokita Peninsula) offer services to and from various destinations, including Hokkaido.

Get around
JR East, the Aoimori Railway, and the Tsugaru Railway serve most of the major towns, but some destinations will require a car. Municipal and private bus companies go to many of the popular tourist sites.

See
In spring, see the cherry blossom festival and fireworks in Kanagi and the rapeseed blossoms in Shimokita's Yokohama Town. In summer, see towering lanterns pulled through the streets at Goshogawara's Tachi-Nebuta festival, and elaborate expanding floats at Hachinohe's Sansha Taisai. See the rice art in Inakadate Village on the Tsugaru Peninsula. In the fall, see the maple leaves in Kuroishi. In the winter, see the "snow monsters" made by frozen trees in the Hakkoda mountains in Towada-Hachimantai National Park.

Do
In August, rent a haneto costume and participate in Aomori's exciting Nebuta festival. In the fall, hike among the waterfalls and autumn foliage at Oirase Gorge in Towada-Hachimantai National Park. In the winter, there is excellent skiing and snowboarding in Ajigasawa and Mt. Hakkoda. In spring, picnic at Hirosaki Castle, one of the most famous cherry blossom viewing sites in Japan.

Eat
Besides the obvious seafood (especially scallops and Tuna), Aomori is famous for its apples.

Drink
Aomori has local sake (Denshu 田酒, Momokawa 桃川), wine (Shimokita Wine), and beer (Tazawako Beer).

Go next

 * Hokkaido
 * Iwate Prefecture
 * Akita Prefecture