Showing posts with label hikeling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hikeling. Show all posts

Low and local Hikeling to Mazukari and Komyo in Tokyo (Repost from March, 2021)

 (Blogger lost this so I'm reposting it.)


This day I wanted to take advantage of the warmer weather and ride my bike a bit as well as go hiking.  Over these past several months while snow has made bicycling less attractive, I've been going farther from home and taking much longer hikes in higher elevations.  This trek was a return to my roots in a way; combining riding and hiking in places closer to home.  It was a few years ago that I got really bitten by the mountain bug and it was making trips like I did today that hooked me.

I remember one day that was particularly pivotal.  Occasionally I used to go on what I used to think of as long bike rides (10 miles or so) to the local tourist area.  One day on one of these trips I made a split-second decision to turn onto a gravel road.  I didn't think it would be a big deal, but it turned out to be really something.  That road happened to follow a beautiful stream--and there was nobody around.  Eventually, the gravel road became a dirt trail.  That eventually became a footpath.  I got off the bike and followed the footpath.  Soon enough, I found myself on top of a mountain!  It was really a eureka moment.  That was the beginning of my discovery of the intertwining networks of maintenance roads, logging roads, bike trails, hiking trails and forest ranger roads of the Japanese forests.  I have loved these discoveries so much.  Since then I have been on a kind of mission to hike or bike every trail, path, road or street.

There is so much beauty to be seen and shared and much, if not most, of what I've been blessed to see is not in the guidebooks.









Since I returned to the roots today and was biking before hiking, I thought I would show a picture from my apartment before getting on the bike.  (I love the views from our place.  Not only are the mountains beautiful, but when I see the mountains in profile, I am reminded of so many good times with my family or friends on particular mountains we've been together.)

mazukari and komyo from Akishima



This picture is from later in the morning from a spot between the two peaks I visited.  The low visibility is a bummer.  I've seen as far as Izu Peninsula from this spot.


 



This is the bike portion.  My place is on the east.  The mountains are to the west.  That long, brown patch to the north northwest of our place is Yokota USAF Base.
Akishima Mitake Otake map



This is on the way.  I didn't  bother taking pictures on the way, but much of the trip is along the Tama River which is lined with cherry trees.  Absolutely beautiful at this time of year.  The lighting yesterday just wasn't good enough to get pictures that did them justice though.

This is a recreational business on the Akigawa River called Jurigi Land.  You can rent a spot for the day to have a cookout.  I took the picture just because I like the Easter Island figure.  It weighs 6 tons.   (https://10-rigiland.tokyo/  Opens on April 2.  Nearest station is Musashi Itsukaichi.)




This is the hike for the day.





My bike is parked on the bottom left of the screen next to the Yozawa River.  It's a popular place for fly fishing trout.  The building with the green roof used to be an elementary school.  Like many other schools, it's fallen into disuse because there aren't enough kids.  :-(  Now it is used as a kind of experiential nature museum.





Unfortunately, it was a hazy day.  This was my only view of Fuji all day.





Spring is springing.
















My last landmark before getting to the bicycle was the Seoto no Yu onsen.  Nice place.  http://www.seotonoyu.jp/

Seoto no yu after hiking 瀬音の湯

Feel free to use the footbath, but make sure to social distance!  







More soon, I hope.  Subscribe so you can be kept posted.  

Caveman out.

Caveman bikes and hikes. Golden Week 100 Meizan, Mt. Tateshina, Nagano




Location:  Mt. Tateshina, Nagano

Starting and stopping points:  Bicycle from Saku City to Ogawahara Pass.  Hiking started and finished there.

Peaks bagged: Maekake 前掛山 Tateshina 蓼科山 Futago 双子山

Getting there/getting around:  I used my bicycle to get to the trailhead via the Tateshina Skyline.  That road is still closed to cars due to snow.  I think it opens in mid-June.  Many people come to Tateshina from the western side where there is a gondola nearby.

Map:  Yama to Kogen Chizu 33 YATSUGA-TAKE TATESHINA・UTSUKUSHIGAHARA・KIRIGAMINE 八ヶ岳蓼科・美ヶ原・霧ヶ峰

山と高原地図 八ヶ岳 蓼科・美ヶ原・霧ヶ峰 2024 

**Please note that the publisher makes updated maps every year and therefore this link might become obsolete.  If you copy and paste the Japanese characters into Shobunsha's Mapple Siteyou should be able to find the latest version.

Weather Information: Mt. Tateshina weather

Total Time:   10:52 Break time: 1:18  Distance:  bicycle: 51km  hiking 10.3km  

Elevation:  Lowest: 672m Highest: 2530m 

Total ascent/descent 2,466m/2548

Ascent:  bicycle: 1,594m      hiking:    872m

Descent: bicycle: 1682m     hiking:      866m

Technical considerations/difficulty:  It's not a terrifically difficult hike.  Alltrails says that is moderately challenging.  I guess so.  The most taxing part of my day was the bike ride to the trailhead.  That was 25 km riding uphill.  On the hike, there are not many areas with chains or ropes.  There is still quite a bit of snow on the trail.  I probably should have brought my crampons.  I myself am not a fan of walking poles but I saw many people putting theirs to good use descending down the snowy trail.  Much of the hike is above the tree line and the ground surface is boulders or rocks.  Some of the rocks are loose and you really have to watch your footing.

Facilities:  There is parking and a public restroom at the pass but they aren't open for the season yet.  There are a few huts (hutte) on the way.  You can get a meal or some hiking stuff on the way.  There is a campground by the Futago Ponds (双子池).

Thoughts/observations/recommendations:  Wow.  What a great start to Golden Week for 2023.  I really enjoyed this trip.

I think I want to come back here in the winter some year.  There is such a great 360 degree panorama.  All the Alps are visible, as well as other prominent mountains.  I really would like to see that on a crystal clear day.

Here are some pictures:

The bike rides


The hike


I live in Saku City, Nagano.  I can see 3 of the 100 Famous Mountains from home; one of them is Mt. Tateshina.  For my first assault on Tateshina, I decided to take my bicycle to the trailhead on the Tateshina Skyline.  During Golden Week, there is a hot air balloon festival here in Saku and I was treated to views of the balloons from the moment I stepped out of my house.

Very cool!

balloons over Saku with Asama in background

balloons over Saku with Asama in background 2

Saku Balloon Festival  with Asama in background

The Tateshina Skyline is a really beautiful mountain road.  I didn't see more than a handful of cars.  There are a few farms along the way and many cottages/summer homes.

besso on Tateshina Skyline


It is a loooong, unrelenting uphill slope, though.  On flat ground, this ride would take me about 90 minutes.  This took me nearly four hours.

Tateshina Skyline 蓼科スカイライン

This was ominous.  It says "road closed ahead."  I didn't see anything about road closures in my research!  I decided to press on and just see what would happen.


The truth is out there.


What is this place, the Japanese Area 51?


No, it's nothing like that.  That dish is a deep-space research facility called JAXA.  JAXA

The road was open to cars just to there.  Beyond that, they haven't opened up the Tateshina Skyline because all the snow hasn't melted yet.  (99% of it has.  I was fine on the bicycle.)

By the time I reached the deserted parking lot at the Ogawahara Pass, my legs were like rubber.  I seriously questioned whether I could hike after that.  Actually, the hike was almost less taxing.

There was more snow on the trail than I'd anticipated.  



This was my first glimpse of Tateshina from the trail.


This is the Ogawahara Hut (大河原ヒュッテ).  Several trails intersect here and the trail from here to the top got a bit crowded.  Until this point I had only seen one or two people.









This hut (and the facility at Futago Ike) is linked here.
蓼科山頂ヒュッテ Mt. Tateshina Hut




Mt. Arafune from Tateshina 蓼科山頂から荒船山







The top

蓼科山頂 Top of Mt. Tateshina







I live in that valley.













I am a big fan of pictures like this.  I just learned that there is a Japanese word, "komorebi" that means "sunlight filtering through lush, thick leaves."  I love komorebi.




There are two small ponds side by side which are called 双子池 (Futago Ike)--that means Twin Ponds.  There are campsites by the lake and a hut nearby.  Futago ike mountain cabin 双子池ヒュッテ

双子池1 Futago Pond 1



The smaller of the two ponds.
Futago Pond 2 双子池2

Did I mention that I like komorebi?


I took this shot of Tateshina from Mt. Futago just before descending down to my bicycle.



From there, it was all downhill.  Quite literally.  According to my app, I burned 931 calories on the bike ride home.  I doubt that very much.  Gravity did all the work.

Update for 2024
I made a similar trek in May of 2024.  Check that out here: 2024 bike/hike to Otake

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