Suijin, Yokai

Kappa(かっぱ)

Have you ever wondered why the cucumber sushi roll is called kappa-maki? It is named after a popular yokai, not just famous in japan, but known around the world. Although it is a common japanese pop-culture, til today, parents still warn their children to be wary against these river yokai.


Kappa is believed to be one of the many Suijin (水神), i.e. water deities that are found in lakes, ponds, springs and wells. The yokai’s lore is indigenous  to Japan and its knowledge has been dated back as early as the 1st century AD.

Most ancient documents described Kappa as a reptilian anthropomorphic yokai that usually lives near flowing rivers. The aquatic creatures have webbed feet and hands that are excellent for swimming, has a hooked beak instead of a mouth and carries a shell on its back like a turtle.

The impish yokai are usually described as mean spirited and attacks any prey near the river, such as horses, cattle and humans. Kappa drag their victims into the water and hold them down to drown them. The river yokai are very strong and can easily wrestle down a bear in the waters. These creatures will eat almost anything they can catch, but they are especially fond of raw innards, human anuses and cucumbers (go figure!)

Impish Behaviours

Some parts of Japan have described kappa as having mischievous behaviours such as peeping at woman who pees by the river and farting great farts at unwary people . Another region portrays more nefarious behaviour such as theft, looting and, even, raping women. I suspect that these “kappa” could be a different species type, as the activities seem to occur further inland.

There is a belief that if you manage to wrestle and capture a kappa, it will fulfill your one request for its release. The trick to defeating the yokai is know the origin for its super strength. On the kappa‘s head is an bowl-like indentation which holds some water. The yokai’s strength is proportional to the water in this bowl. When there is no more water, the kappa is only as strong as a small child.

So if you have a wish that you want fulfilled, maybe you could hunt down a kappa. You never know, you can offer a cucumber for a match on land and trick him into bowing before the match starts.

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Yokai Details

  • name: kappa (kap-pa)
  • kanji: 河童 (かっぱ)
  • meaning: river child
  • aka:
    • kawataro (川太郎 )
    • kawako (川子)
  • abilities:
    • amphibious — can remain underwater or on land without suffering and ill effects
    • superhuman strength — strong enough to hold down a sumo wrestler underwater
    • superswimmer — able to swim well, even in very strong river currents
Josei, Yokai

Ushionna (牛女)

In Hyogo Prefecture, near the Rokko mountain range, there is an urban legend about yokai that chases after loud and noisy vehicles. A police report of a speeder claims that he was speeding because he was pursued by such a creature. The dispatch rider describes the yokai as a female minotaur wearing a kimono. Did he come up with such a lame lie or was he just really drunk?


Ushi-onna is a very obscure yokai describe as a female with a cow’s face, or sometimes cow’s head. It is usually described as wearing a kimono and dressed obscenely like a yakuza. Interestingly enough, no male version of a cow-headed yokai has been recorded in Japan.

Reported Incidents

Most reports show that ushi-onna appears suddenly after a vehicle made a loud noise such as screeching. The yokai will run after the vehicle, as if trying to ram it down. A taxi driver claims that the ushi-onna was matching his speed even at 100 kph. Based on the facts that was available, I believe that the female yokai’s charge is an act of protecting its young. This is very similar to wild boars and rhinoceroses.

There are post-war stories of a single mother who gave birth to a baby girl with a cattle-like face. Such accounts were only heard in Kobe and Nishinomiya, both of Hyogo Prefecture. Could this be the origin story of ushionna, a by-product of the bombing raids of World War 2?

Nonetheless, be respectful of the mountainous regions of Japan and drive carefully. Do not make speed over the road limits and honk unnecessary. Unless, of course, if you want to personally meet the ushionna.

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Yokai Details

  • name: ushi-onna (oo-she-on-nah)
  • kanji: 牛女 (うしおんな)
  • meaning: cow woman
  • abilities:
    • unnatural speed — able to move and react very fast

Tsukumogami, Yokai

Shamichoro (三味長老)

Some years ago, I spent the night in a remote ryokan (旅館)  after a long trek through the mountains. As I was soaking in the bath tub, I heard someone playing the shamisen ( 三味線), a traditional Japanese 3-string lute. The forlorn melody filled me with memories of heartbreak for hours on end. 


The next day, I ask the landlord about the music and requested to meet the musician. But she said that there wasn’t any performance and that I was the only visitor for the night. Wide-eyed, I hurried my check-out and left the ryokan, never to return .

Origins Story

Shamichoro is a tsukumogami yokai-type that evolves from an abandoned musical instrument known as the shamisen. As this yokai is usually heard, and rarely seen,  there are very few accounts that chronicles its existence, and even less records about its behaviour and origins.

Many experts agree that shamichoro emerges from a prized shamisen that once belonged to a virtuoso. Some believed that the musician’s sudden death, fills the lute with extreme sadness. Others share that the shamisen was rejected for a newer or more exquisite model. But everyone agrees that the continual negligence and ignorance, over a hundred years, is the key for a shamichoro‘s evolution.

The yokai is essentially benign and does not cause direct harm towards human. It’s melody, usually, just reminds you of your saddest memories. But if you are feeling really low and suicidal, the song of the shamichoro may just be enough to push you over to the other side.

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Yokai Details

  • name: shamichoro (sha-mee-cho-roh)
  • kanji: 三味長老 (しゃみちょうろう)
  • meaning: senior shamisen
  • abilities:
    1. sonic flight — uses music and sound to levitate
    2. emotion control — able to make one extremely sad and emotional
Josei, Warai-onago, Yokai

Harionago (針女子)

On the islands of Shikoku, there is a species of yokai that thirsts for single, young man. The female stalker roams the street of Ehime Prefecture, waiting patiently for the right one. Once Hari-onago has her sights on you, her bewitching smile will put you in a very hairy situation


Hari-onago (also known as Hari-onna) is a frightening female yokai that targets mainly young man. She is usually described as an ordinary woman wearing ordinary clothes that wanders the streets of Ehime. Although, the yokai has a distinguishing feature, her long, unkempt, messy hair. And, if you are ever close enough, you can see that locks of Hari-onago are barb-like.

Various Accounts

The many stories that were shared indicates that the femme fatale only emerges from dusk to dawn. She stalks the alleys night after night until Hari-onago meets Mister Right. She will bashfully smile at him and demurely wait for a response. Interestingly, her stalking behaviour is not unlike the Nure-onago.

If the young man looks and return with a smile, Hari-onago releases her hair and hooks him with her barbed locks. She binds him tight, squeezing the life out of him and then slowly feeds on her prey. After which she will disappear for months on end.

An escaped victim of Hari-onago claimed that, he managed to outrun the female predator and her strangling hair. He reached home, closed the door behind him and hid in his closet. That morning, he found numerous gashes and scratches on his house door. The day after, there were reports of a young man found dead in a ditch.

So, if you do happen travel to Ehime, please avoid smiling to any woman in the dead of night. You never know who or what will catch hold of you.

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Yokai Details

  • name: hari-onago (hah-ree-oh-nah-goh)
  • kanji: 針女子 (はりおなご)
  • aka: hari-onna (hah-ree-oh-nah)  針女 (はりおな)
  • meaning: hook woman
  • abilities:
    • hair manipulation — the ability to control and use her hair as extra limbs
    • hair tactile  — able to sense an individual when touching with hair
Mamono, Yokai

Katakirauwa (片耳豚)

Last I travelled around Kagoshima (鹿児島市), an gentle old lady shared a tale of how a young man who lost his soul. Apparently, a salaryman got his first pay and partied all night. As he was wandering home alone, drunk and all, he was met with a demon pig near Nagata River. Suddenly, the black fiend charged towards the salaryman. As it ran through his legs, the young man’s soul was taken. That’s how the story goes.


Katakirauwa is a dangerous and malicious yokai that can drain a person’s life force and, even, his soul. It takes the form of a single-eyed and one-eared  adult swine but the yokai is sometimes in a young piglet form. Katakirauwa has been seen with different coat colours where the most common is described as dark black as the moonless night. Often a strong coal tar smell accompanies the pig yokai.

The demonic swine is very aggressive towards humans, especially individuals who is caught all alone. It attacks by charging towards your legs. If you instinctively widen your legs and let katakirauwa run between them, then you soul will be instantly drain via your genitals.

Katakirauwa has been observed day and night, through all the seasons and both in the country side and city. If, by happenstance, you see a pig in the middle of a path and you cannot discern its features, one tell-tale sign is that the yokai does not cast any shadow on the ground. My best recommendation is to cross your leg, run away from the katakirauwa and cover your private parts.

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Yokai Details

  • name: katakirauwa (kah-tah-kee-rah-oo-wah)
  • kanji: 片耳豚 (かたきらうわ)
  • meaning: one-eared pig
  • abilities:
    1. life drain — ability to absorb a human soul within range
    2. hyper speed — able to move at very high speed
    3. hyper senses — possess acute sense of smell and hearing