Wajima Morning Market — 1,000-Year-Old Coastal Market
Wajima Morning Market (輪島朝市, Wajima Asaichi) is one of Japan's three great morning markets (alongside Takayama and Katsuura), operating for over 1,000 years along a 360-meter street in central Wajima. The market opens before dawn as fishermen's wives and local farmers set up stalls selling ultra-fresh seafood, dried fish, pickles, local vegetables, handmade crafts, and prepared foods. The market peaks 8:00–10:00 when locals and visitors haggle over the day's catch — Noto Peninsula's abundant waters provide squid, mackerel, seaweed, and seasonal shellfish.
The market's charm lies in direct interaction with vendors — mostly elderly women who have sold here for decades, offering tastes, advice, and stories. The tradition of 'kaimono-gatari' (買い物語り, 'shopping conversation') makes purchasing secondary to the social exchange. Visitors can sample grilled fish, buy lacquerware chopsticks, taste local pickles, or purchase dried fish snacks. The market sells Wajima lacquerware at all price points (¥1,000–50,000+), often below shop prices as vendors are the artisans' family members. The market embodies Noto's community-oriented culture where commerce and social bonds intertwine.
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