Cycling around Mie’s Historic Town: Meiwacho
For my first day in Mie, I visited the historic town of Meiwacho!
For a small town overshadowed between 2 big cities: Matsusaka and Ise, Meiwacho had so much to offer and played an incredibly important role in Japan’s history.
We rented some electric bicycles to explore the town and stopped by many different places. We started off the day with stretches at a historic gazebo, tried out the local specialties, visited a shrine and tried out some of its experiences, learned about Meiwacho’s past at the historical museum, and finally took a tour around a sake brewery and attempted a taste testing game with 3 of their finest produces.
We have a long day ahead of us so let’s get started!
The Best Way to Explore Meiwacho
Since I’m in the middle of cycling across Japan, I’ve spent many hours on a bicycle, but I’ve never tried an electric bicycle so I was excited to see how it feels.
We hopped on our E-bikes and made our way to explore the town.
First Stop, Heian no Mori
There are 3 structures in total.
Besides the restored Govemment office, you are allowed to enter the other 2 and they even offer a VR or tablet tour that lets you relive the 9th century at this location. However, we didn’t come to learn about the Heian period or try the VR tour.
Oddly enough, we came here to do some morning stretches.
To be honest, it felt a bit out of place to be doing stretches at a historic site at first, but it was actually the perfect spot.
I mean how often do you get the opportunity to exercise at a 1000-year-old site? Perhaps this is how people exercised back in the day (minus the yoga mats).
The Local Specialty of Meiwacho
After our morning stretch, we headed over to Penguin Cafe to replenish our body’s nutrients.
Hijiki is a specialty of Ise, the neighboring city, and it’s a type of seaweed that’s typically served in side dishes and filled with minerals and nutrients.
This was my first time seeing it used in a meal, so I was quite curious how it would taste.
And needless to say, the coffee was delicious as well.
Thoughts on the E-Bike
Different from other electric vehicles, the electricity is there to only assist the pedaling and it can’t accelerate on its own. This particular one had 5 different levels you can choose from and even the lowest power mode was enough to clear slopes without breaking a sweat.
For fun, I tried setting the power output to maximum and it was so powerful that even slightly touching the pedal shot the bicycle forward.
Saiku Historical Museum
To be honest, I haven’t visited too many museums in Japan, the reason being the language barrier. Despite my Japanese being fluent enough for everyday life, reading unfamiliar Kanji is a slow process and can take away from the museum experience if there’s no English assistance.
Not only did the Saiku Historical Museum have English descriptions, but they also had an app that made the visiting experience much smoother.
With the app open, you use Bluetooth to connect with the nearby exhibitions and you can learn about the exhibit in the video, audio, or written format. On top of that, the app has a map of the museum and provides various courses to choose from, such as the quick course, full course, and different courses based on the topic.
Since we were a bit tight on schedule, we tried out the quick course to get a quick summary of the Saiku history. In the hour that we were there, I thoroughly enjoyed the museum and was surprised by how much I had learned in the short amount of time.
A Quick History Lesson
During this period, there was the Saio; Young, unmarried princesses that played an important role in worshiping the god and dedicated their lives to the Amaterasu-Omikami god.
The present-day Meiwacho was built at the exact site where the Saiku palace was, where the Saio princesses lived. While the Saiku palace didn’t stand against the test of time, many of the remains and traditions from that time period are well preserved and spread out across Meiwacho.
It’s interesting to see how such a small town played such a big role in Japanese history!
Visiting the Take Shrine
We started off with learning the proper Shinto shrine etiquettes. I’ve visited many shrines while traveling around Japan but never learned the proper way to visit the shrine so this was perfect timing.
They walked me through every process, starting with walking through the Chinowa ring, etiquettes when entering the shrine, and finally the proper way to pray at the shrine.
Full Moon Festival
Before the festival, they allow visitors to arrange flower bowls and assist the bamboo lantern-making process and I got to try both.
The flowers are all harvested locally to support the Meiwacho citizens. My decoration skills aren’t the best, but I managed to create something simple and clean!
Next was the bamboo lantern making.
I can’t wait to come back to the shrine during the festival!