Snowshoeing high peaks in Nagano. Mt. Takamine and Mt. Mizunoto in February. Brrr

 

Takamine


. . . about the mountains on either side of the Kurumasaka Pass

The Kurumasaka Pass is on the prefectural border between Nagano in the south and Gunma in the north.  To the east of the pass lie Mt. Kuruma, Kurofu and Mt. Asama beyond.  To the west there is a line of mountains which gradually decrease in elevation until they end in the river valley that runs through Ueda City about 15 miles to the west.  On the Gunma side of the pass is a ski area called Asama 2000 Park.

 

Area:

Location:

Map:  ***If you want a link to the latest Yama to Kogen map, comment and I'll get you a link.  This link is to a printable topo map

Starting and stopping point: Takamine Kogen Visitor Center Parking Lot

Peaks bagged: Mt. Takamine (高峯) ~ Mt. Mizunoto (水ノ塔山)

(First-time) peaks # ーー


Getting there/getting around:  

There is lots of parking at the Takamine Kogen Visitors Center.

There is a bus stop at the Kurumasaka Pass serviced by JR Bus.  You can get a bus there from Komoro Station or Sakudaira Station if you are already in Nagano.  There is even bus service to that bus stop from the Busta Terminal at Shinjuku Station.

If you can read Japanese, the Takamine Onsen's website has the best detailed information for transportation.  It's possible to get there via shinkansen and bus in 2.5 hours from Tokyo.


Helpful Info

Weather Information: Mt. Mizunoto Weather (Japanese)

Time and distance

Total Time: 4:20 hours  Break time: :30  Distance:  7.1 km
Elevation:  Lowest: 1,941 m Highest: 2,202 m Total Ascent: 604 m  Total Descent: 604 m

Technical considerations/difficulty:  

Since this is a winter hike, it should go without saying that you need the proper dress and equipment.  Snowshoes or wakan are a very good idea.  At a minimum. you need spikes on your feet.  The snow is quite deep so be prepared to fall in up to your waist.   None of the trails on this hike have chains or ladders but there are some boulders at the top of Takamine and on the approach to the top of Mizunoto.

Most of the hike goes by areas with a fair amount of people.  About midway through the hike, you start to pass by a few chair lifts.  I was just starting to feel serene in the snow and paused to listen to the winter silence when what should I hear but Ann Wilson screaming she was going to go crazy on me from a speaker on the nearby chairlift.  The idea of Ann Wilson doing that 50 years is intriguing.  Now, not so much.  I guess classic rock is all the rage at that ski area.  But I digress.

Anyway, there is a ski area and a mountain lodge/onsen that you pass on the way.  The lodge gives classes on snowshoeing so you see some people doing that.  Beyond that lodge and the last ski lift it gets a bit more solitary on the way up to Mizunoto.  Basically what I'm saying is that this is a fairly risk-free endeavor for most of the way.  The ski areas blaring the hits of the 70s and the lines of old ladies walking like ducks through the snow would make it hard to get lost for most of the time in this area.  

Facilities:  

Takamine Kogen Visitor Center  The parking lot is here.  Public restrooms.  Restaurant.  Educational displays.  Hiking goods (including everything for snowshoeing) for sale.  The equipment and prices weren't bad.  Snowshoes and equipment for rent.

Takamine Kogen Hotel  Hotel right at the Kurumasaka Pass.   The trailheads for Mt. Kurofu to the east and Mt. Takamine to the west are here.  Fun fact.  At night I can see their lights from where I live 12 miles away.  The first time I spotted the little speck of light I though it was a UFO.

高峯温泉 日本語版 Takamine Onsen (English)  (The "English" link is quirky.  Half of the page is translated into English, another half of the page is in Chinese.)  This lodge is at the trailhead to Mizunoto, about halfway through the hike I record in this post.  A ski slope passes in front of it and there are benches to catch the view from there.  It's pretty year round.  There is an onsen.  They offer free training in snowshoeing.  I've never been inside, but I have walked by it several times.  It is possible to drive there in the summer on the very bumpy forestry road.  During the winter only snow vehicles can get there.  Their website has a schedule for that service.  Click on the アクセス link on the left side of the page and then scroll down the page to 雪上車運行時間.


Thoughts/observations/etc.:  

I've had precious few days to get into the mountains this month.  My last hike was on Mt. Kenashi down near Mt. Fuji on the first day of the month.  That was nice--but there wasn't much snow.  I have sorely wanted to get out on into the snow while the winter is still here.

This weekend was my first chance to get out and I decided to stay in my backyard as it were.  I can see Mt. Asama and its neighbors from my home and was looking up at them longingly for the past several days.  Every day had been characterized by blue skies and the rugged snow-capped peaks were calling me.

When I finally got the chance to go, the sky was cloudy.  All the mountains I'd been looking at were hiding from me as I drove steadily up from Saku City into Komoro City and into the hills.  It's a chore for my little car's little engine to chug it's way from and elevation of 675 m to almost 2,000 m.   At one point I was going 20km/h despite putting the pedal to the metal.

It was nice to get into the snow.  On this day, I was wearing a new pair of wakan (snowshoes) and was excited to try them out.  (They are great, by the way!)

Unfortunately, it was cloudy until I got to the first peak.  Then my iphone stopped responding and I couldn't take any pictures.  It did clear up and become beautiful👍 but I got no pictures👎.  Also, my GPS stats were lost.  That was frustrating.  The snow was so beautiful that if reminded me of a marshmallow world.  I wish I could share pictures of it with you.  I'll share pictures I took in the area in the summer to give you some idea.

My smartphone's becoming unresponsive made making this map difficult.  Reading it is probably even more difficult than it was to make.

Let's be honest, though.  Do I have any reason to think any of you is going to try and puzzle your way through my ADHD-addled scribbles?




Here's a video of the day:




My new toys!  These are called wakan or kanjiki in Japanese.  This type of snowshoe is more adapted to climbing slopes than traditional snowshoes.  These don't have the buoyancy of regular snowshoes so you will sink deeper if you break the surface.  They are easier to pull out of the snow than snowshoes, though.  There are lots of tradeoffs and opportunity costs to either type of shoe you choose.
These cost me ¥9,900 at Montbel and I really am glad I got them.



The Takamine Hotel, by the Kurumasaka Pass.


This torii is probably 12-14 feet high.


This is what it looks like with less snow.

Torii



Great temperature for hiking in the snow.  If it gets too warm, the ice melts and refreezes in your footgear  and you can encounter mud which is also an inconvenient mess.  It's much better if you are below freezing all the time.





The top of Takamine.  Takamine means tall peak.


Here's me handsome mug at the shrine on top of Takamine


This is where I was.  I took this picture from my neighborhood.


Soon after I left the top of Takamine--and just before the sky cleared up--my smartphone stopped working.  So I was unable to take any pictures for most of the hike.  Mt. Mizunoto is higher and had great snow scenes.
  
Sigh.


To supplement what I missed, I'll put some pictures I took of the same area in the summer.


This is the trailhead to Mt. Mizunoto, just in front of the Takamine Onsen.  The clearing to the right is a ski slope.


On the way up . . . 


The top of Mt. Mizunoto
"Mizu" is water and "toe" is pagoda or tower.
This sign was mostly buried when I was there this past weekend.


There are some beautiful flowers in the area.  Especially just behind the parking lot at the visitor center.


I'll end with a few long shots I took from Takamine on that summer day.

fuji



That's all for today.

I still haven't gone to the mountain I am planning on for my 1,000th peak.  I wanted to go earlier this month but that mountain has been getting absolutely walloped with snow.  Hopefully I can get there next weekend.  Even if I go there, I am not sure it will be hikeable.  It's quite far away and although I am communicating with a few locals, I really won't know what the conditions are until I see them for myself.  This will be my second attempt at this mountain.  The first time I turned back.  If I have to turn back again, I will . . . but I will bag this peak sometime.  If if has to wait until summer, I'll go back again.

Take a look at these posts if you want to see more of this area:




CaveSnowman Out














Mts. Kenashi, Kayama and Yukimidake. Gazing at Fuji.

 




. . . about these peaks in the Tenshisanchi Range (天子山地).

These are a collection of mountains straddling the prefectural boundaries of Shizuoka and Yamanashi.  The range runs from north to south with the east side facing Mt. Fuji across a wide flat plain.  To the west, numerous ranges including the Southern Alps are visible.  Tenshi means emperor.  Literally it means child of heaven.  The range starts in the north next to Lake Motosu, the westernmost of Fuji's Five Lakes at the popular (Mt.)  Ryugatake.  Other mountains in the range include Amagatake, Kenashi and Yukimitake. The highest point I went to on this day is Kenashi.  It was my second time on it and it has a truly wonderful view of Mt. Fuji.  At least that's what they tell me.  Both times I've been there it was cloudy and I was denied the view.  I will put links at the end of this post to my other hikes in the Tenshisanchi Range.

Area: 

Location:

Map:  ***If you want a link to the latest Yama to Kogen map, comment and I'll get you a link.  This link is to a printable topo map of the area.

Starting and stopping point: Kenashisan Parking Lot

Peaks bagged: Kenashi Triangulation Point (毛無山三角点) 〜 Kanayama (金山) 〜 Yukimidake

 (雪見岳)

(First-time) peaks # 997~998  (or 999 to 1,000?)


Getting there/getting around:  

Parking at the Kenashiyamatozanshayuryo Parking Lot 170 Fumoto, Fujinomiya, Shizuoka 418-0109 costs ¥500.  You leave the money in a box and there is no change.  There's no public transportation nearby.


Helpful Info

Weather Information:

Weather for Mt. Kenashi 

English forecast for Mt. Kenashi


Time and distance

Total Time:  6:52 Break time: :55   Distance:  10.9 km
Elevation:  Lowest: 865 m Highest: 1,945 m Total Ascent: 1,459 m  Total Descent: 1,459 m

Technical considerations/difficulty:  

This is a fairly challenging hike.  

The route I chose went counter-clockwise.  

The ascent is steep and there are really no level areas to speak of until you are near the top of Kenashi.  It's 2.7 km horizontally but 1.1 km vertically.  I failed geometry, but I am pretty sure that calculating that rise over run would make for a steep angle.  Hit the stairmaster before you go here. 

The trail from Kenashi to the lower two peaks I ascended to the south traverses the Jizo Pass so you have to go down a bit and then go up again.  Also, that portion of the hike, while much gentler than the ascent, poses some risk as much of the ridge is quite narrow and the sides are surprisingly steep.  It's below the treeline so it is easy to lose consciousness of just how far you would fall if you did stumble.  That's the scariest thing about hiking to me--not meeting a bear or anything sexy like an avalanche.  Just tripping over a rock and plummeting to an inglorious demise is what keeps me up at night.  I guess it's akin to being shot in the butt in combat.  

The trail I descended is prone to flash-flooding it seems.  There are signs cautioning not to use it on rainy days.  That trail offered some of the most interesting scenery as it parallels the Jinba River and it beautiful falls.  It's clear from walking along that gorge that the cautions about rainy days are warranted.  That part of the trail has several sections that have been washed away and there are a lot of ropes and chains for the rugged parts.  There are also a lot of loose rocks under fallen leaves so you have to watch your step descending this steep hill.

Facilities:  

Nothing.  There is a waterhole at the trailhead and you can get water from the Jinba River on that portion of the trail.


Thoughts/observations/recommendations:  

These are lovely mountains and somewhat neglected in comparison with the other mountains surrounding Mt. Fuji.  It's more than an hour by bus to the nearest bus stop at the Asagiri Michi no Eki.  And that is another hour's walk to the trailhead!  Not many people come here without a car.  The remoteness gives these mountains a different feel than the mountains around the Fuji Five Lakes area.  Near the trailhead I used is the Fumotoppara Campground.  That is about 15 minutes from the trailhead on foot.  It is a very wide, flat and open campground.  It doesn't seem like the kind of place I would like to camp at because there are no trees.  Its view of Fuji is pretty awesome, though.  I was surprised that it's open for business and there were people camping in this first week of February.  Most campgrounds are closed for the season.

This was my 5th or 6th time to the Tenshisanchi Range and my second time to climb Kenashi.  I'm batting less than .500 when it comes to weather in this area.  The view from Kenashi must be beautiful--but it's been cloudy each time I have been there.  I've attempted Ryugatake 3 times.  I gave up in the middle of my first attempt just because the weather was so bad and I really wanted to see something from the top on my first ascent.  Another time I got to the top and didn't see anything.  The one time I had clear skies made the other two trips worthwhile though.  Wow.  It was breathtaking.

On this particular trip, the skies were overcast almost all day except for a brief window when I got to the top of my last peak of the day, Mt. Yukimidake.  From there I had a fairly nice view of Fuji.

If you're an early riser, you can see the sunrise over Mt. Fuji with a diamond effect from some of these mountains at different times of the year.  Sorry this link for Diamond Fuji information is in Japanese. 

Let's look at some pictures.

This video is an animation of the hike.


This video is longer and more detailed...



I think I'd like to start with some longshots of the area.  I took these from the top of Mt. Fuji a few years ago.




How about that shadow cast by Mt. Fuji?  Cool.
I've always wondered if the shadow effects property values.


Before getting to the trailhead, I dropped by a Michi no Eki ("Road" "Station"--rest area/tourist spot.)


Still in the car.  This is looking back toward home.
Those are the Yatsugatake Mountains of Nagano.


The campground


Downright balmy





Put ¥500 in the box for parking.  You're supposed to put the money in an envelope and mark it with your license plate number.  I didn't realize that until later.  I had just put the money in.

The cops haven't come knocking at my door yet so maybe it's ok.




Evidently, there used to be a gold mine here.



Getting naked on the trail.  Shhh.
It was getting hot after about 30 minutes, so I took off my under layer.
In the winter, I typically wear these black long underwear and these red rain pants as an outer layer.  I find this is a great combination of layers in temps in the teens (-12 ~ -6C) and twenties (-6C ~ -1C).  Above 30 or so, though, two layers is too much for me when hiking.  I do also carry a set of warm pants with me in case I need to bivouac.


"Mt. Fuji Viewing Spot"
Let's see how Fuji looks.


. . . not so good.


It's quite steep up to the top of Kenashi.
This is my second time here.  I've been robbed of a view by the clouds both times.
Kenashi means hairless, by the way.



After Kenashi, I followed a ridge.  There was some pleasant walking for a while after the steep ascent up to Kenashi.


The sky started to clear around noon and
I almost got some nice views of the Southern Alps.





The top of Mt. Yukimi.
I was blessed with blue skies there and was finally able to see Mt. Fuji.



Yukimidake


There were paragliders up there!

I was surprised to see their starting point from my car on the way home.  They start flying at the base of the mountain!  I had thought they would have started high up and just floated down but they were able to ascend.  Cool.

paragliders


It's warmer in this area than in Nagano.  Almost no snow, too.

After climbing Yukimidake, I backtracked as far as the Jizo Pass and descended from there back to my car.  That trail goes along the Jinba River and is characterized by lots of ropes and chains.


I love running water.











H2O


And I was back at the bottom around 3 PM.  

That's the Fumotoppara Campground in the foreground.







Well, that's all for today.  My climbing app (YAMAP) counted this as my 1,000th peak but I'm going to choose to ignore that.  (I think it's wrong.  This should have brought me to 998!)  I had something special planned for 1,000 and am hoping to do it next week.  So stay tuned.  Same Cave Time, Same Cave Channel.

In the meantime, check out these other reports on the area:

Until then,
Caveman out.