The village of Nagoro in southern Japan was once home to
hundreds of families. Over time, most of its residents left to find
work in the cities. Just 35 people live there today, most of them
pensioners.
However, a visitor might, for a brief moment, be fooled into
thinking the village is still bustling. Brightly-dressed figures
can be seen outside the shops and waiting at the bus stop for a bus
that will never come.
But the figures aren't people – they're scarecrows.
Tsukimi Ayano made her first scarecrow 13 years ago to frighten
off birds pecking at seeds in her garden. She created a life-sized
straw doll that resembled her father, and was inspired to make
more. And more...
Today, the tiny village in is populated by 150 of Ayano's
hand-sewn creations.







Nagoro, like many villages in the Japanese countryside, was hit
hard by the migration of its younger residents to cities, leaving
the elderly behind. Its greying community is a microcosm of Japan;
the country's population has been falling for a decade and is
projected to drop from 127 million to 87 million by 2060.
At 65, Ayano is among the youngest residents of Nagoro. The
village school was shut in 2012 after its only two pupils
graduated. Scarecrow students now sit at the desks and loiter
silently in the corridors.



Since 2002, Ayano has made about 350 scarecrows, usually dressed
in hand-me-downs. Sometimes she makes scarecrows in the likeness of
young people who have left Nagoro or residents who have died.
"They're created as requests for those who've lost their
grandfather or grandmother," Osamu Suzuki, a 68-year-old resident,
told Reuter. "So it's something to bring back memories."



Tourists have started to come too, drawn by the two lifeless
delegates guarding the road leading to the village, next to a board
identifying Nagoro as "Scarecrow Village".
Some may find the scarecrows sinister, but Ayano says she is
happy to show her work to visitors. On her daily rounds, she walks
around the village bidding her motionless creations a good morning
as she tends to their needs.

