Lucky Foxes on the March: Akita Festivals Gathers About 100 Participants in Masks and Makeup
Participants in fox masks and makeup march along a shopping street in Akita City on Oct. 11.
15:37 JST, October 30, 2025
AKITA — An event in which people disguised themselves as foxes using masks or makeup and marched through town was held on Oct. 11 along the Torimachi shopping street in Akita City. The festival, called Shofuku-gitsune no Gyoretsu (March of foxes inviting luck), is meant to bring luck.
The festival was first held in 2002 as a way to liven up the shopping street, and this year’s was the 24th edition. This time, about 100 ‘foxes’ participated, including some locals.
The participants departed Shofuku Inari Shrine, which is located in the shopping street, and marched along a roughly 1-kilometer course. As they marched, they distributed rice stalks and red-and-white daifuku rice cakes to spectators along the course.
Each time the march passed in front of a store in the shopping street, the participants, as one, shouted, “Shobai hanjo, kon, kon, kon.” The first phrase expresses hope for the business to be prosperous, and “kon” is meant to imitate a fox’s cry.
A second-year graduate student, 24, at Akita International University participated in the event for the first time this year. “We all had fun putting on makeup. The whole community got excited, so it’s a good memory for me,” she said.
"Features" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
Autumn Foliage Reaches Peak Season at Korankei in Aichi Prefecture
-
Legendary Sushi Chef Jiro Ono Turns 100: ‘I Have No Regrets’
-
Autumn Foliage Surrounds Visitors to Tokyo’s Showa Kinen Park
-
Kurobe Gorge Covered in Autumn Foliage in Japan’s Toyama Prefecture
-
Light Up the Dark; Golden Leaves of National Natural Monument Great Ginkgo of Kitakanegasawa Illuminated for Fall
JN ACCESS RANKING
-
Govt Plans to Urge Municipalities to Help Residents Cope with Rising Prices
-
Essential Services Shortage to Hit Japan’s GDP By Up to ¥76 Tril. By 2040
-
Japan Prime Minister Takaichi Vows to Have Country Exit Deflation, Closely Monitor Economic Indicators
-
Japan to Charge Foreigners More for Residence Permits, Looking to Align with Western Countries
-
Japan GDP Down Annualized 1.8% in July-Sept.

