23 May 2026
Visiting Hokkaido in the last week of May meant that we missed seeing the cherry blossoms that blooms every spring in late April and early May. However, Hokkaido features many other flowers that are best viewed in late May and early June.
One such flower is the canola. The canola flower fields of Takikawa City boast one of the largest cultivation areas in Japan. From mid-May to early June, these blooming flowers stretch to the very edge of the horizon and filling our field of vision with brilliant yellow color. These are sights that city dwellers like me dream of seeing.
I had read that access to the flower fields in Takikawa is prohibited to protect farmers' livelihoods, prevent the spread of soil pathogens, and avoid accidental property damage. So, we could only view the flower fields from the windows of our cars because the narrow country roads do not have parking lots near the canola flower fields.
This is a bummer! However, there is a way to get up close to the flower fields, which is during the annual Nanohana Festival.
Takikawa Nanohana Festival 2026
The Takikawa Nanohana Festival started back in 2000 and has become the city's largest annual event, with crowds of around 100,000 people longing to appreciate the beauty of these vibrant yellow flowers.
The Takikawa Nanohana Festival for 2026 will be held from May 16 to May 24 (10 AM to 4 PM) which is during the best viewing period. During weekends, visitors to the festival are granted rare access to a specific canola flower field that is selected for the event. This would provide visitors with a magical experience of being surrounded 360 degrees by yellow flowers.
Our day of arrival to Hokkaido on May 23, 2026 was on the last Saturday of the festival. This offered us an opportunity that we just could not miss.
Getting to the Takikawa Nanohana Festival
The 2026 festival is located at the Michi-no-Eki (Roadside Rest Area) Takikawa for this year and also in the preceding years. Google Map location here. The nearest JR train station is Ebeotsu Station and there are shuttle buses linking the station to the event venue during the festival.
Since we are on a road trip, we will be going by rental car.
We collected our rental car from the Toyota Rent-a-Car office located next to Chitose International Airport at about 10 AM. From there, it was a 110 km drive to Takikawa via a combination of scenic rural roads, national routes and E5 expressway (toll-road) that took slightly over 1.5 hours.
Takikawa Nanohana Festival Event Area
Michi-no-Eki Takikawa transforms into an event area during the festival. There are ample parking spaces to cater to the visitors.
Takikawa Nanohana Festival Event Area
By the time we arrived, the event venue was already quite packed with both Japanese and foreign tourists, all keen to experience Hokkaido’s special flower fields.
We went to the temporary tourist information booth to get Canola Flower Festival information and pamphlet. In particular, we need to find out how to get to the Canola Flower Field Special Venue to see the flower fields.
There is a Gourmet Fiesta with stalls selling food, snacks and local products, including canola based products. The food stalls offers food like grilled meat, noodles (udon and ramen), rice bowls, gyoza and desserts.
There is also a Kitchencar Festival featuring some of the best local food trucks selling delicious looking food.
We were feeling a bit hungry and tired from our overnight flight and morning drive, so the first things we did was to grab something to eat before heading out to the flower fields.We ate a one-hand pizza from a food truck that is quite good.
This Zangi (Hokkaido’s signature fried chicken) was super good. Crispy skin on the outside and moist chicken inside.
Getting to the Canola Flower Field Special Venue
Visitors to the Canola Flower Field Special Venue, has to take a Flower Bus (1000 yen which includes the 500 Yen admission to the flower field). This event bus only operates on weekends.
Note: There is also Canola Flower Taxi (fare required) operating out of Roadside Rest Area Takikawa to the site which cost 1000 yen per person but do not include the admission to the flower fields. After departing from Roadside Rest Area Takikawa, taxis will drive through the most beautiful flower fields on that given day and also stop by the Canola Flower Field Special Venue on Saturdays and Sundays throughout the festival period.
We bought the tickets for the bus and were given yellow-coloured identification wrist tags. The bus operates every 15 minutes but was packed like sardines when we took it. Fortunately we queued early for the bus and got seats for the 10 minutes ride.
Booth selling the shuttle bus tickets that runs between Roadside Rest Area Takikawa and the Canola Flower Field Special Venue.
First view of the expansive yellow canola flower fields from the bus.
What are canolas cultivated for?
I am familiar with canola oil as I used bottles of them for cooking. Canola oil is not extracted directly from the flowers, but rather from the tiny black seeds that develop inside the pods left behind after the canola flowers bloom. In Takikawa, local farmers harvest these seeds and use traditional, natural pressing methods to produce high-quality cooking oils. The resulting "nanohana oil" is prized for its fresh, slightly nutty flavor and is celebrated at the annual Takikawa Canola Flower Festival.
There are two main types of nanohana cultivated in Takikawa – the Kizaki no Natane variety which is primarily used to make rapeseed oil, and the Haru no Kagayaki variety which is typically used as a food source.
Walking amongst the Canola Flowers!
Once we alighted from the bus, we were provided with plastic shoe covers that are to be worn over our shoes. This is to prevent the spread of pathogens onto the fields.
Then we are free to wander onto the fields!
It was a sight to behold. It was mesmerising feeling, to stand amongst the blooms and watching the wind ripple through fields of flowers.
There were props set up deliberately to satisfy the instagrammers and photographers. This included a haystack and a pink coloured “door-to- nowhere”. There was even a classic straw broomstick with a small black cat (Studio Ghibli's character Kiki), for visitors to recreate the flying witch look made famous by the anime Kiki's Delivery Service.
Friendly staffs were stationed near each prop to help visitors to take couple or group photos when needed.
The “door to nowhere”. The first of many that we would see during this trip.
Haystack prop that is specially brought onto the site for photographers.
The “star” of the event. Not the couple but the vast yellow flower fields behind us.
We all have some little “souvenirs” after venturing onto the fields.
Pollen grains!
Our clothes were coated with tiny specks of the yellow dust. Fortunately, they were easy to brush off and did not stain our dark coloured clothes.
Overall, it had been an amazing experience participating in the Takikawa Nanohana Festival. A good start to our 10 day road trip.
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