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Two days in Yamagata Prefecture. The targets: Zao's Okama crater lake and Ginzan Onsen. Both had been on the "someday" list for years; this trip was finally the year.

Zao Onsen — the big open-air bath

Entrance to the Zao Open-Air Bath
The entrance to the famous "Zao Onsen Daïrotenburo" — set deep in the woods.

Day one started at the Daïrotenburo (large open-air bath) at Zao Onsen. Zao is a strongly acidic sulfur spring, and the bath uses the source water as it comes out. Stone tubs sit in the middle of the forest, filled with cloudy white water. Soaking in it and looking up at the sky between the trees doesn't feel like a day-trip onsen at all.

Zao's water is around pH 1 — strongly acidic, so much so that there's a faint sting on the skin. It's known as "the bath that makes you beautiful" because the acidity is hostile to bacteria. Skin felt notably smoother afterwards.

Zao Okama — the eerie crater lake

Zao Okama, the emerald-green crater lake
The Zao Okama. An emerald-green crater lake ringed by the peaks of Karita-dake, Kumano-dake, and Goshiki-dake.

The next morning, up the Zao Echo Line to the Okama — a crater lake encircled by Karita-dake, Kumano-dake, and Goshiki-dake. Emerald-green water fills the basin. It's also called "Goshikinuma" ("five-color lake") because the color shifts with weather and light.

The day I visited was clear, with snow still in patches on the slopes. The green lake spreading out beyond the crater wall has the kind of color that registers as "this is real" the moment you see it. With acidity around pH 3.5, almost nothing lives in it — and that strangeness, oddly, is part of why the sight is so striking.

To Ginzan Onsen

Sign at the entrance to Ginzan Onsen
"Welcome to Ginzan Onsen." Beyond this sign, only permitted vehicles can pass — the rest is on foot.

About an hour and a half by car from Okama, I arrived at Ginzan Onsen. It's a hot-spring town in Obanazawa, Yamagata, famous for the row of multi-story wooden inns from the Taishō era (1912–1926) that line both sides of the Ginzan River. To preserve the look, regular cars stop at the entrance and walk in along the river.

Waterfall near Ginzan Onsen
The waterfall at the back of the town. The new green and the spray together feel cool, even close to the springs.
Free foot bath in Ginzan
A free foot bath along the river — exactly what feet need after walking the town.

At the back of the onsen street, you reach Shirogane Falls. The waterfall thunders out of the new spring greenery, throwing off enough mist to take the heat off the springs for a moment. There's a free foot bath along the river too, and that's where I rested up my legs after walking the town.

Ginzan Onsen at night

Ginzan Onsen lit up at night
Ginzan Onsen at night. Gas-lamp-style orange lights line the river, and the whole street feels dropped in from the Taishō era.

Ginzan really comes alive at night. Once the sun drops, the lamps come on and the orange glow reflects off the river. Walking past those Taishō-era wooden inns, both sides of the river, feels like stepping into the set of a film or novel. As night falls, more visitors with cameras gather, each looking for their own angle.

I'd come in expecting "probably crowded," but the night view erased that thought. The crater lake at Zao, and this hot-spring street after dark — Yamagata is a good place.

Places I stopped

1
Zao Onsen Daïrotenburo (large open-air bath)
Zao Onsen, Yamagata City, Yamagata / Strongly acidic source-water onsen, open-air. Day-use available. Operates roughly early summer through autumn.
2
Zao Okama (crater lake)
Zao mountain range, on the Yamagata–Miyagi border / Drive up the Zao Echo Line to the Karita-dake parking, then a few minutes on foot to the lookout.
3
Ginzan Onsen
Ginzan Shinhata, Obanazawa, Yamagata / A hot-spring town lined with Taishō-era wooden inns along the river. Especially beautiful when lit up at night. About 10 min on foot from the free parking at the entrance.