The 24 Sekki: Reading Japan's Micro-Seasons
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The 24 Sekki: Reading Japan's Micro-Seasons

general By Shiki Editors June 14, 2026

Four seasons already feels like plenty to plan a trip around. Traditional Japan thought four was laughably crude. The old calendar carves the year into twenty-four sekki — solar terms — and then slices each of those into three, giving seventy-two , or micro-seasons, of about five days apiece. Learn that they exist and something shifts: you stop seeing the year as four big blocks and start seeing it the way the calendar does — as a slow, continuous, finely graded change, never holding still.

What the sekki are

The twenty-four sekki are evenly spaced markers through the solar year, each naming a turning point in the natural world and landing on roughly the same date every year. A handful you’ll actually bump into:

You meet the sekki in daily life without noticing: the equinoxes, Shunbun and Shūbun, are national holidays, and shops switch their seasonal greeting cards the day the calendar says summer has officially “begun.”

The seventy-two micro-seasons

Split each sekki into three and you get the — and this is where a calendar turns into poetry. The names read like a diary kept by someone watching very closely out the window:

There are seventy-two of them, each lasting about five days before handing off to the next. The system came from China, but in 1685 the court astronomer Shibukawa Shunkai rewrote the names to fit Japan’s own climate and wildlife — which is why they speak of Japanese plums and bush warblers rather than continental weather.

Why it still matters to a traveller

This is no museum piece. The sekki sensibility threads through modern Japanese life, and tuning into it makes a trip deeper.

Travelling by the micro-seasons

You don’t need to memorise seventy-two names to feel the benefit. A lighter touch works:

Seeing the year as the calendar does

The real gift of the sekki is what they do to your attention. A four-season calendar tells you spring has arrived. The micro-seasons tell you that this week the east wind is melting the ice and the bush warbler is back — and that next week it’ll be something else entirely. It’s the same instinct beneath so much of Japanese aesthetics: the love of transience, the conviction that a passing moment is precious precisely because it passes. You can travel Japan perfectly happily on four seasons. But start counting in twenty-four, or seventy-two, and the whole country begins quietly changing under your feet — because, of course, it always was.

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