Showing posts with label 3000 meters+. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3000 meters+. Show all posts

Coming to Mt. Fuji Day, 2022

 Coming of Age to Fuji Day, 2022



January on Mt. Fuji 一月の富士山

New video!!!



Yesterday was the Coming of Age holiday here in Japan.  Coming of Age Day is to commemorate Japanese people who've reached majority (now 20 years old) in the past year.  Young people return to their hometowns and attend ceremonies.  The girls wear kimonos and the boys wear suits so it is a great day for people-watching.

I'm neither Japanese nor 20 so I decided to celebrate the day off in my own way.  I went to Mt. Fuji.  

My goal wasn't to get to the top--just halfway.  I've climbed to the top from the 5th Station before but have never actually climbed up to that point.  Doing this enabled me to connect the dots as it were of the paths I have trodden.  Completing this task yesterday was the last stretch of un-hiked road between my home and the top of Fuji.  

I left home early and caught the Fujikyu train in Otsuki.  Isn't it cute?




This is the view that greeted me when I alighted at Shimoyoshida Station about an hour later.  I really wish the telephone lines didn't obstruct the view.



First, I walked through the city for a few miles.  This torii (pronounced toe ree) gate has a sign that says "Mt. Fuji".



Getting closer to the trail that will head up the mountain, I passed through the Kitaguchi Hongu Fuji Sengen Shrine (北口本宮冨士浅間神社).  I took several pictures.



Starting out January on Mt. Fuji 一月の富士山へ出発!




Shortly after passing through that shrine, I stepped onto the Fujiyoshida Yuhodo (富士吉田遊歩道)--the excursion trail.  It was like this for a few miles, rising steadily but not steeply, and not turning much to left or right.



It was about here that I bumped into hikers for the first time.  I met two guys in succession who evidently had summited the mountain.  They were all kitted out with giant packs, pickaxes and the like.  I don't think they were together.

A little later, I came across a group of about ten middle-aged women being led by two male guides.  I don't think they had summited.  I think they probably were just hiking below the 5th Station as I was.

They were the only hikers I saw.  I did see two other guys on the mountain who were driving a tracked snow vehicle but it was a pretty solitary day.


Several miles later, long after the pavement ran out, I hit the first snow around the 2nd Station and donned my crampons.  

This post (二合目) denotes the 2nd Station.  There are 9 stations on Mt. Fuji.  I don't know exactly how they determined where the stations should be but it seems to be according to where rest stops are or were in the past.



Early in the morning, the sky was beautiful.  The main reason I chose that day for Fuji was that the forecast was for clear skies.   

This is a scenic overlook.  Isn't it great?  (grrrr)




Further along the trail, I came to another overlook.  Breathtaking, I'm sure.



Thankfully, the weather wasn't that bad.  I forgot my thermometer that day but imagine the coldest it got was in the mid-20s (Fahrenheit) (-4 or -5 Celsius).

The amount and type of snow were agreeable, too.   For the most part, the snow was hard and crusty.  Only 2 or 3 times did my feet sink below the surface.  Even then, it was only knee-deep.   

January on Mt. Fuji 一月の富士山2



The sun made an appearance right around lunchtime and I started snapping away.



One nice thing about hiking in an area with lots of untrodden snow was the plethora of animal tracks.  



Fuji is closed above the 5th Station but I snuck up just a little further to the 6th because there is a mountain on my map near there that I wanted to cross off my bucket list.  When I got there I was disappointed because there is no marker on the ground.  I have no idea how it rates as being a mountain.  It's barely a hill.  It's not even a pimple on the gargantuan protuberance of Fuji.







January on Mt. Fuji 一月の富士山 3


If you have been up the Yoshida Trail, you should recognize this spot.


January on Mt. Fuji 一月の富士山 5合目


This is the 5th Station on the Subaru Line.  During hiking season, people arrive and depart the mountain at a bus stop here.



January on Mt. Fuji 一月の富士山 5合目 2



I had planned on descending on a trail but got a bit worried about time.  I arrived here about 2:15 in the afternoon and was concerned about the possibility of getting lost on a trail after dark.  I was 99% sure I could get back down the trail I'd come.  The trail wasn't hard and I thought the chance of getting lost was slim even in the dark.  What if I slipped and broke a leg?  There is another trail near this spot I considered but didn't want to try something unknown if there was the chance of being caught in the dark.  I decided the most prudent thing would be to follow the bus route down to the bottom.  Doing this would add about 20 km to my hike.  Doing that meant it was sure I wouldn't make down it before the sunset but I felt safer being on a roadway than on a trail.  

This is what the street looked like as I started.



Along the way, the sun came out a few times and I got some nice views.  


January on Mt. Fuji 一月の富士山 4



That is the street I was walking on.  Depending on how much sun the street got the conditions varied from bare pavement to ice to crusty snow to about a foot of powder.  I am really, really glad there wasn't much snow.  (I wouldn't have made this hike if there was a lot of snow, though.)

January on Mt. Fuji 一月の富士山 5


January on Mt. Fuji 一月の富士山 6

As the sun went down I got some great glimpses of the mountaintop.  




Thanks to the half-moon last night I didn't need to wear a headlamp to see the road.  



The woods were really dark, however, and I could not see far into them.  I nearly jumped out of my skin when I first heard an animal I had startled.  It was probably my imagination, but I thought it was a bear.  I also thought it was big.  Maybe it was.  I don't know.  It probably was a bunny rabbit.  Whatever it was, I am glad it ran away from me and not toward me.  

Soon after that, I startled some monkeys.  That made me feel like I had wandered onto the planet of the apes.  

Those experiences creeped me out.


I've never liked or sported bear bells.  I usually listen to something on my iphone if I hike during early morning or twilight to try and warn the bears I'm coming.  After these two experiences last night, I also started to sing, talk and shout as I walked along.



I don't know what time they locked this gate, but I must have still been on the mountain when they did it.  Oops.


About 13 hours after I started, I got to the station.  Hooray!
This was my longest hike ever.  48km.





These videos of the avatar hiking are always 30 seconds long.  This one makes me laugh because the little hiker has to fly along to get from start to finish within the time limit.


That's all for today.  Have a great day.









Japan's second and fourth highest mountains. Kitadake and Ainodake. October 3 and 4, 2021

Here comes the sun!  I was so happy to be blessed with nice weather for a camping trip up in the higher elevations.  It really has seemed like forever since I had a clear day to enjoy the views.  Thankfully, my patience (and a lot of hard work on this trip) was rewarded with some stunning sights.


See, it really was gorgeous.






This trip was a bit farther than I usually go and incorporated mountains I usually only glimpse from a distance.  Usually, I travel within a radius that I can get to on my scooter or bicycle for a day trip.  I wanted to go somewhere higher for this overnight so headed out to the Minami (Southern) Alps.  My goals were to climb the 2nd and the 4th highest mountains in Japan; Mt. Kitadake and Mt. Ainodake.  

This entailed taking a train (the Azusa Express on the Chuo Line) from Tachikawa to Kofu and from there a two-hour bus ride up to the Hirogawahara Sanso where the trail starts.  I left my home about 7 am and was at the trailhead about 11.  The Hirogawahara trailhead is at the top of this map.

Kitadake trip map 北岳と間ノ岳地図


It was a day of new beginnings.  My faithful and trusty boots started to show some wear and tear over the late summer.  I bought a replacement pair in August but determined to wear the old ones until my feet bled.  On my last hike, though, a big rip appeared in one of the seams and, rather than getting them repaired (again), I decided to use the new ones.  

Hail and farewell.


This was a steep hike.  It's an ascent of about 1,700 meters from Hirogawara to the top of Kitadake.  That's more than a mile for any Americans who are wondering.  And that is not taking into account any of the up and down portions along the way.  After hiking for about an hour, for some reason, the thought occurred to me that the highest point in Tokyo is 2,017 meters and I wondered how high I was at that point in time.  When I checked my map, I happened to be at an elevation of 2,018 meters.  That seemed kind of cool to me.  



I noticed that the leaves had started to change colors around 2,200 meters up.  Getting higher, I was getting treated to lots of great scenery.



One thing that made this hike challenging was that there were no breaks in the climbing.  Usually, when you get up to a ridge, you get some rest and things flatten out in places.  Not here.  The boulders keep you on your toes.






Between the starting point at Hirogawara and the furthest point, Ainodake, there were two places that I considered for pitching my tent.  The first is a place called Katakoya (肩小屋), which is before Mt. Kitadake.  The second place is on the far side of Mt. Kitadake, called Kitadake Sanso (北岳山荘).  Tentatively I planned on making Kitadake Sanso on day 1.  I was thinking of getting up before sunrise on day 2 and heading up to Ainodake for sunrise before returning to retrieve my tent on the way back down to the bus.

But . . . I got a little worried when I realized I wasn't going to be able to start until 11 on day 1.  Also, the time estimates on different maps varied widely and if some of them were to be believed, I wouldn't have gotten there until long after dark.  Usually, I'm faster than those estimates but sometimes they are spot on.

I reached the first option, the Katakoya, around 3 after 4 long, hard hours of work and decided I'd had enough for the day.  This hike, from beginning to end, was a bear.  Most of it is steep and a lot of it is hand over hand.  I was averaging about 1 km/hour.  Walking on flat ground, I walk 1 km in about 12 minutes.  Hiking in hills, I usually do a km in about 20 minutes.

Anyway, fatigue got the better of me and I stayed there at the first place.  Looking back, I probably could have made the second place but I think I did make the right decision.  Prudence is the better part of valor.  


This is me ringing the bell announcing my arrival at the Katakoya.  :-)



Here's my tent.

The rock was to keep it from blowing away until I got it set up and put my junk inside.  It was windy.








Tenting here is ¥1,000.  Staying inside the lodge is (I think) ¥9,500.  They have food.  It's pricey as you would expect since all the supplies are brought by helicopter.  Bottled drinks are ¥600.  Chips, too.  I think a bottle of wine was ¥2,800.  I'm glad I don't drink!  They will let you refill your own water containers for ¥100/liter.  That's a bargain.

I got my tent set up and choked down some chili for dinner.  I was surprised to not be very hungry.  I was starting to feel like I had a cold.  I had, basically, a miserable night.  My head was pounding.  I was sneezing.  I couldn't sleep.  Every time the breeze tickled the flaps on my tent, I thought it was a raccoon after my trail mix.  

As sometimes happens in my tent at night I began wondering about some life decisions.  "Is this really fun?  Do I really want to go all the way to Ainodake tomorrow?  I'm only 1/3 of the way through this trip and I'm this beat.  What if these symptoms are COVID?  Are they going to let me on the bus back to Hirogawahara?  That's the only way to civilization..."

Sunrise was at 5:42 so I set my alarm for 5:30.  I didn't need any alarm.  I gave up any pretense of trying to sleep and opened my tent flap at 5 to see this.

sunrise from Kitadake 北岳の夜明け

And everything was right in the world again.  I was so happy I was on this trip.






I took far more pictures of the sunrise than you are interested in seeing, but it was spectacular.  And worth all my murmuring to myself overnight.  Here are just a few.



北岳 Kitadake Sunrise



This video is long.  I don't even have the patience to watch the whole thing.




After breakfast and tearing down the tent, I started off at about 6 or 6:30.  I was at the top of Kitadake after 7.




Mt. Kitadake



Then I trucked on down to the Kitadake Sanso and up to an interim peak, Mt. Nakashirane, before heading on to Ainodake.








The Kitadake Sanso is about halfway up the first hill a bit to the left of the ridge in this picture.  That first hill is Mt. Nakashirane and the taller one beyond that one is Ainodake.








This is from Mt. Nakashirane.  So many mountains are on my bucket list now.








This is Mt. Ainodake.

Mt. Ainodake 間ノ岳





Panorama from Mt. Ainodake








This was taken from the Kitadake Sanso.  Those mountains notated on the right side are my usual stomping ground; 30-40 miles to the east.

Kitadake Sanso 北岳山荘




No rest for the weary.  Going down was a challenge, too.  LOTS of steep stairs.  Lots and lots of scree.   That makes for frustratingly slow-going and is a bit treacherous.  


























You know, one thing struck me about the beauty and awesomeness of nature on this trip.  That is that the same Creator that made all of this beautiful stuff also made you and me--and how amazing it is that you and I are more valuable and beautiful even than all the most wondrous things in nature.

And we will outlast them.

Psalm 46





Come back to the cave again sometime.


Here's one last video--an animation of the route--if you're interested.





  





Caveman out