
On the 3rd November, which was a substitute holiday, I watched a bunch of videos I had recorded at home for the first time in a while. Among them, I found a re-run of "Cambrian Palace" on TV Tokyo that really caught my attention.

One such roadside station (Fresh Park "Karari"), which was started by housewives in Uchiko, a farming village in Ehime Prefecture, originally grew tobacco leaves.
As tobacco consumption declined, they were forced to stop growing tobacco leaves, and so they started a direct sales store as a measure to protect the survival of the town.

Until then, the crops they had grown themselves had been sold via the agricultural cooperative, and it was taken for granted that they only produced the crops themselves, and had no idea what would happen next. Selling them themselves would entail great risks, and her husbands were opposed to the idea, saying, "Don't do something that won't bring in any money." However, she pushed through, or even without her husband's knowledge, and took the crops to the direct sales store, where they were picked up by consumers and sold, and saw them, which gave her a realization of the joy of farming like she had never experienced before.

The wives of these farmers have developed new products one after another, and for the past 20 years, the station has continued to develop as a roadside station. I was born in the mountainous area of Fukushima Prefecture and grew up on a farm that earned cash income from tobacco cultivation, so I think I understand the hardships and gratitude of tobacco leaf production.

However, tobacco leaf cultivation has now drastically decreased across Japan, and not much is known about what kind of lives the farmers who used to grow tobacco leaves are now living.

I was deeply moved by learning about Uchiko's example on this episode of "Cambrian Palace" (from farming that was merely beneficial to her husband to becoming independent and inspiring).

I was also very nostalgic when I saw that a farm tool called an "oshikiri" was still being used.