A land
for the bees.

This is
Uenohara.

West of Tokyo, east of Yamanashi's heart.
At the foot of the hills in a small border town,
there is a single apiary.
The Katsura River flows by, lined with cherry trees,
and forests reaching toward Mt. Takao quietly enclose the town.

Four Views

The land called Uenohara.

Cherry trees and mountains of Uenohara
01

The Katsura River,
and spring's avenue.

Through the heart of town,
the Katsura River flows quietly.
In spring, cherry blossoms stretch on and on;
in summer, white clusters of acacia sway.
All around town there are flowers for the bees to visit.
Here, the turning of the seasons carries
straight through into the taste of the honey.

Chemical-light fields at the foot of the hills
02

Where there is no
large-scale farming.

Uenohara has little large-scale farmland,
and very few agricultural chemicals are used.
Flowers the bees can visit with ease
remain scattered along the foot of the hills.
A land with few chemicals —
above all, a kind home for the bees.
The honey gathered here is clear
thanks to that quietness.

A hive surrounded by nectar plants
03

Cherry, wisteria, acacia,
chestnut, yabukarashi.

Each time the season turns,
the flowers in bloom change with it.
Cherry, wisteria, acacia, chestnut,
and the yabukarashi that blooms at summer's end.
The bees trace the town's passing hours
with the hum of their wings.
This diversity of nectar is the source
of each honey's distinct character.

An aerial view of hives on the hillside
04

A quiet place,
for the bees.

Few people, and little traffic.
For the bees, it is a home with little stress.
A quiet land, and careful handwork.
Only when these two come together
is honey born that needs nothing added to it.

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