Most countries build hot springs.
Japan builds something else.
Deep in the mountains of Gunma, Takaragawa Onsen has four open-air baths along a mountain river.
The biggest bath holds 200 people at once.
The total bathing area is 470 tatami mats — basically the size of a small lake.
No roof. No walls.
In winter, you sit in 40°C water while snow falls on your shoulders.
In summer, fireflies drift over the steam.
Hot water flows straight from the mountain at 1,800 liters per minute. It has done this for centuries.
Men and women bathe together in the same water, wearing a thin white gown called a yu-amigi.
It is the quietest, most powerful thing Japan does:
turn nature into a room.
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