Senjojiki & Sandanbeki Cliffs — Dramatic Coastal Formations
Senjojiki (千畳敷, 'thousand tatami mats') is a massive wave-cut limestone platform extending into the Pacific Ocean, its surface eroded into patterns resembling stacked tatami mats. The white rock contrasts starkly with turquoise waves crashing against the formation, creating dramatic seascapes. The platform is accessible on foot, allowing visitors to walk across the weathered stone and peer into tidal pools while waves surge through channels carved over millennia.
Nearby Sandanbeki Cliff (三段壁) is a 50-meter vertical sea cliff stretching 2 kilometers along the coast, its base hollowed into sea caves accessible by elevator (36 meters descent, ¥1,300 entry). The caves were historically used by Kumano pirates (Kumano suigun, 熊野水軍) as hideouts and remain atmospheric — dim lighting, the thunderous sound of waves echoing through chambers, and subterranean shrines dedicated to the pirate clan. The elevator emerges in a cavern with viewing platforms overlooking the churning sea where waves enter the cave mouth. Above ground, the cliff-top walking path offers panoramic ocean views, especially dramatic during winter storms when waves crash against the cliff face with explosive force. The area exemplifies Wakayama's rugged coastline — volcanic geology sculpted by Pacific storms into formations both beautiful and forbidding.
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