Reaching Fukuroda Falls (袋田の滝) was itself an adventure. The journey demanded patience: hours spent threading through Tokyo's intricate railway network, changing trains, boarding local buses, and finally relying on the guidance of a local guide who knew the winding roads and hidden corners of northern Ibaraki. By the time the waterfall revealed itself, the pilgrimage felt entirely justified.
I had forgotten to bring a tripod, a photographer's trusted companion for moving water. Yet sometimes limitations offer their own gifts. The falls thundered down the dark rock face with such force that the fast shutter speeds froze every surge and splash into crystalline detail. Later, when converted into black and white, the images seemed less like photographs and more like old engravings, capturing the raw architecture of water itself.
Known as one of Japan's Three Great Waterfalls, Fukuroda Falls plunges some 120 metres in height and 73 metres in width over four distinct tiers. For centuries, poets, monks, and travellers have stood before its immense curtain of water, awed by its changing moods through the seasons. In spring, fresh green leaves soften the surrounding gorge. Summer brings cool mist that drifts through the valley. Autumn sets the hills ablaze with crimson and gold maples, while winter transforms the cascade into a frozen cathedral of ice.
Long before tourists arrived with cameras and guidebooks, these valleys were home to communities who lived alongside the Kuji River and the forested mountains that cradle the falls. The surrounding region has sustained generations through forestry, agriculture, and fishing, while mountain ascetics once ventured into these remote landscapes seeking spiritual enlightenment amid the sound of rushing water. The waterfall itself became a place of contemplation, where the immense force of nature encouraged reflection on life's impermanence.
Standing before Fukuroda Falls, one senses both geological and human time. The water has carved its path through ancient rock for millennia, indifferent to the passing centuries. Around it, generations of travellers have come and gone, leaving behind only memories, sketches, poems, and photographs. My own images, rendered in monochrome, seem to belong to that tradition. Stripped of colour, they reveal the waterfall's timeless character: water, stone, mist, and gravity locked in an endless conversation that began long before any road, railway, or camera existed.
Panasonic G9
Leica 12-60mm f2.8-4
Linking Black and white community

Pues gracias a la ausencia del trípode, la foto es una verdadera maravilla tal y como te ha quedado. Tal vez no se aprecie a la primera que es una catarata, pero da igual, el efecto visual no es mejor por reconocer lo que se tiene delante. Lo importante es lo que el espectador siente al ver por vez primera la foto y en este caso, yo me he llevado una sorpresa ante la duda, en un primer momento para luego simplemente disfrutar de lo que tenia delante de los ojos.
ReplyDeletePreciosa, de verdad.
Abrazo
Appreciated your comment truly. I turned into thinking no longer expoure means no art
DeleteFantastic image.
ReplyDeleteYou've replaced the silkiness (photo taken with a tripod) with the freezing effect of the water as it falls down the waterfall.
I had no choice but snap a high-speed shutter photo
DeleteAn amazing photograph that plays tricks on the mind! I see a mountain with etchings on it. It is water art!
ReplyDeleteYour words are truly appreciated
Delete...a work of art!
ReplyDeleteEt pren l'alè.
ReplyDeleteSalutacions.
Una bella catarata y en blanco y negro le da una atmósfera de subjetividad.
ReplyDeleteThe falls are spectacular, and when enlarged have a really cool textural appearance.
ReplyDeleteThe shot really turned out to be something
DeleteThis is a most dramatic photo with all that water flying free over the edge of this falls. It is a perfect subject of a b&w photo. I didn't realize how large the falls is until I read your description.
ReplyDeleteA piece is a reflective travel essay describing a visit to Fukuroda Falls in Japan with a strong emphasis on atmosphere and photography. My wife has returned from her 6-day school visit in JAPAN last year by the way
ReplyDeleteYou caught wonderful patterns in the water!
ReplyDeleteMust have been good to stand there and listen to the water falling - it's a nice one.
ReplyDeleteTal como nos dices mas parece uno de esos dibujos antiguos que una foto. En cuanto a la falta de trípode creo que en ocasiones debemos dejar en el coche aquello que nos puede hacer peligroso el camino, ya que según nos dices es un camino tortuoso.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
This is wonderful.
ReplyDeleteAn interesting photo. If you were to have toldl me they were unique striations in the rock I would not have disbelieved you.
ReplyDeleteWhat an amazing photograph ...
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
This is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteA wonderful capture!
ReplyDelete..."water, stone, mist, and gravity locked in an endless conversation." Your words are as beautiful as the waterfall, Roentare!
ReplyDeleteWell worth the time it took you to get there. I don't even own a tripod these days.
ReplyDeleteEs bonita. Besos.
ReplyDelete