Nagoya Nights and the Mystery of the Floating Lantern Festival
so there i was, standing in the middle of sakae district, wondering if my phone’s weather app was broken. it said 15.83°c and 90% humidity, but it felt like someone had wrapped me in a damp towel and left me in a sauna. i’d just come from a late-night ramen joint where the chef’s hands moved like a magician’s, and now i was chasing whispers of a floating lantern festival that might not even exist.
"you’ll never find it unless you ask the old man by the river,"
said a drunk salaryman outside a 7/11. i didn’t know if he was serious, but i’d learned to trust drunk advice in this city.
the streets were alive with neon and the smell of yakitori. i passed a group of teenagers practicing dance moves under a vending machine’s glow. they looked at me like i was the tourist, not them. i pulled up a map on my cracked phone screen, but the festival location kept shifting like a mirage.
i wandered toward the Hisaya-odori Park, hoping the trees would whisper directions. instead, i found a couple setting up a tripod for a wedding shoot. the bride’s dress was so white it almost glowed in the dusk. i asked if they’d heard of the lanterns. they hadn’t, but they offered me a rice ball from their picnic basket. it tasted like home, even though i’d never been here before.
"the lanterns are just a rumor,"
said a woman selling taiyaki near Osu Kannon.
"but the real magic is in the temples at dawn."
i almost believed her until i saw a flicker of light on the water near Nagoya Castle.
the lanterns were real. they bobbed like jellyfish in the moat, casting golden reflections on the stone walls. i sat on the grass and watched them drift, each one carrying a wish i couldn’t read. someone had told me nagoya was boring compared to tokyo or osaka, but right then, it felt like the center of the universe.
if you get bored, *tokyo and kyoto are just a short shinkansen ride away. but don’t skip nagoya-it’s got secrets that don’t make it into guidebooks. i just checked and it’s still 15.83°c there right now, hope you like that kind of thing.
i stumbled back to my capsule hotel, my shoes sticky with river mist. the lanterns had vanished by the time i looked back, but i knew they were still out there, floating toward some unknown shore.
for more on nagoya’s hidden gems, check out this tripadvisor guide or read about the best local ramen spots* on yelp.
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