This article is about the town in Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan. For the former town which merged with Yanagida to form the subject of this article, see Noto, Ishikawa (Fugeshi).
Noto occupies the northeastern coastline of Noto Peninsula, facing the Sea of Japan on the east and south. Noto has a humid continental climate (Köppen Cfa) characterized by mild summers and cold winters with heavy snowfall. The average annual temperature in Noto is 12.8 °C. The average annual rainfall is 2282 mm with September as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in August, at around 25.2 °C, and lowest in January, at around 2.1 °C.[3]
On March 1, 2005 the town of Noto and the village of Yanagida, both formerly from Fugeshi District, merged with the town of Uchiura, formerly from Suzu District, to form the new town of Noto. Also on this date, Fugeshi District merged with Suzu District to become the newly created Hōsu District. The kanji of the name was changed from 能都 to 能登 after the merger, but the pronunciation remains the same.
Economy
The economy of Noto was traditionally heavily dependent on commercial fishing and agriculture.
Kanburi (adult yellowtail fish captured in winter)
Strawberries of Akasaki
Blueberry Jam/Vine of Yanagida
Education
Noto has six public elementary schools and four public middle schools operated by the town government, and one public high school operated by the Ishikawa Prefectural Board of Education.
Transportation
Railway
The town has no passenger railway service since the closure of the Noto Line on April 1, 2005.
A statue of a giant squid. The statue caused controversy after the town's administrators used ¥25m of COVID-19 emergency funding to build it.[6]
Mascot
Noto's mascot is Notorin (のっとりん), a fairy of the Satoyama-Satoumi sea. Her name comes from the Noto dialect meaning "momentous". Her body is made up of "no" hiragana letter. She is green (to represent Satoyama and Satoumi) and blue (to represent the sea). Her body contains a wave pattern as well. Her feet are coloured purple to symbolize blueberries. She wears a rhododendron obtusum flower on her head. She is designed by Fujio Kuroda from Shizuoka Prefecture.[7]