Treasure Box Japan - Season 3

Season 3
Episodes

Shimane― Embroidered in Tradition
Based on Japanese mythology, Iwami Kagura dances feature lively music, gorgeous costumes and expressive masks. A dedicated artisan, making costumes for over 60 years, helps keep it alive.

Shimane― Living Myth: Morotabune Ritual
At Miho Shrine in Mihonoseki, myths live on. A Shinto ritual featuring two long oared boats, also known as the splashing festival, is held there on December 3 each year.

Shimane― The Echoes of History: Gesshoji Temple
In June, the hydrangeas bloom at Gesshoji Temple. A grave site for feudal lords since the 17th century, it's a national historic site, a place to hear the echoes of history.

Shimane― Rice Farming Ritual: Nisa Shrine
Nisa Shrine has long been home to the Shinto gods. Each year on January 6, a ritual enacting the process of planting and harvesting of rice is held to pray for a bountiful harvest.
Recently Updated Shows

Murder in a Small Town
Karl Alberg moves to a quiet coastal town to soothe a psyche that has been battered by big-city police work. But this gentle paradise has more than its share of secrets, and Karl will need to call upon all the skills that made him a world-class detective in solving the murders that, even in this seemingly idyllic setting, continue to wash up on his shore.

Sheriff Country
Sheriff Country focuses on straight-shooting sheriff Mickey Fox, the stepsister of Cal Fire's division chief Sharon Leone, who investigates criminal activity as she patrols the streets of small-town Edgewater while contending with her ex-con father, Wes, who is an off-the-grid marijuana grower, and a mysterious incident involving her wayward daughter.

The Last Woodsmen
The Last Woodsmen takes us deep into the secluded wilderness with these courageous and highly skilled loggers as they literally risk their lives. It's a rarely explored, dangerous business which translates to incredibly engrossing television.
On a floating barge hundreds of miles from civilization, veteran logger Jared Douglas puts everything on the line to harvest the largest timber in the world. One misstep in this high-risk industry could cost tens of thousands of dollars, or even a life. Joining him at the edge of the world is a tight-knit crew of lumbermen who, with only axes and hand-held power saws, take down massive, highly valuable trees that can be worth up to $70K each.

