Showing posts with label kitayatsugatake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kitayatsugatake. Show all posts

Caveman hikes and bikes. Saku City to Mt. Otake via the twin ponds

 

Caveman hikes and bikes.  Saku City to Mt. Otake via the twin ponds


Greetings, cavedwellers!

Here's a hike after a long up-hill bike ride for you.


Location:  Saku City, Nozawa ~ Mt. Otake, Sakuho

Starting and stopping point:  Riding, Saku City, Nozawa.  Hiking, the Futago Ike Hutte ("Twin Pond Hut")

Peaks bagged: Mt. Otake (大岳)

(First-time) peaks #886

Getting there/getting around:  

  • I took my bicycle up the Tateshina Skyline.  That road is closed to cars because of snow until about June.  
  • I'm not sure where people who stay at the Futago Ike Hutte park.  There is a parking lot near the hut, but that is accessed by a 林道 (forest road) that is off-limits to regular cars.  Perhaps their patrons park at the Ogawahara Pass.  That's about a 3~4km walk away, back on the Tateshina Skyline.

Map:  

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 (Mapple)'s site, you should be able to find the latest version.

Weather Information: Kitayokodake English Mountain Weather Forecast Yokodake

Time and elevation:

Total Time:   9:41 Break time: 1:36  Distance:  bicycle: 52.5km  hiking 5.7km  

Elevation:  Lowest: 672m Highest: 2,380m 

Total ascent/descent 2,041m/2,037m

Ascent:  bicycle: 1,592m      hiking:    449m

Descent: bicycle: 1,606m     hiking:      431m

Technical considerations/difficulty:  

This ride is a pain in the butt, literally.  It's a long bike ride!  Saku City is in a river valley and the goal is high up in the mountains, so it's a long, up-hill climb.  The Tateshina Skyline, which goes from Saku on the east to Ikenotaira on the west via the Ogawahara Pass is unrelentingly steep.  My average speed going up was about 7.5 km/h, going down, it was 37 km/h.  Often, I was going 48 km/h downhill.  Zoom. 🚀

The hike is fairly arduous.  It's steep and much of it is across boulder fields.  You can't make very good time because you really have to choose where to put your feet for each step.  There is still snow between the boulders in May, so it is necessary to be especially cautious.

Facilities:  

This is the link to the lodge and campground and hut at the Futago Ike.  It also covers the Tateshina Sanso.  If you want to stay there, you need reservations.  They're open from the end of April to November.  Tateshina2531  They have food.  Pay toilets.  They're fairly serious about keeping the two ponds clean.  The campsites are well away from the shores and they don't allow you to bring food or any bags near the water.

Thoughts/observations/recommendations:

That was fun.  I didn't go nearly as far on this trek as I had planned.  My plan was to go beyond Otake to Kitayokodake and to make a wide loop back to the Futago Ike.  That seemed similar in distance and elevation to a biking/hiking trek I made last year to Futagoyama and Tateshina.  See last year's post.  The hike up from the Futagoike was more arduous than the hike up to Tateshina though so I cut it short.  That's ok.  I don't want to exhaust all of my hiking opportunities too quickly.  As it is, I probably have only 2 or 3 more hikes on the Yatsugatake Range until I've walked it from one end to the other.

Bring water.  There are waterholes on the map that don't seem to exist on the ground.  There is one stream on the Tateshina Skyline between JAXA and the trailhead that is always running.  It's in the area where you start to encounter a lot of private mountain retreats.

Let's look at some pictures.

First, the bicycle portion

Tateshina Skyline

🥶Brrr🥶

temp. of 3 celsius (37f)

rice field looking at Tateshina

Looking at Mt. Asama

rice field looking at Asama

sunrise over spring rice field

beginning of the Tateshina Skyline

"Road closed ahead"

"Road closed ahead"

This is about halfway up the Tateshina Skyline.  I would get off it just before the Ogawaratoge Pass.
Lake Misasako (Beautiful Bamboo Grass Lake) is a small pond popular with fishermen.  It's a frequent destination for one of my shorter bike rides.  There is also an outdoor speedskating rink right around the corner from it.  That was a neat discovery.


On the way up the Tateshina Skyline, you encounter the 
Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency's (JAXA) deep space exploration site.
There are several dishes like this in the area.  The skies here are good for looking at stars.

JAXA dish

Just after the JAXA site the road is closed until June because of snow.  I don't think they need to worry about that this year.  All the snow's melted off the road already.


Just short of the Ogawahara Pass, I left the pavement and took a 林道 --forest road--for another few kilometers to the trailhead.


Now, the hike

Google earth of hike to Otake from Futago Ike

After parking my bike, I took a quick look at one of the twin ponds.  They're low this year.
Note the snow on the far shore.


You can stay in the hut or camp here.  There's a link above.

Futago Ike Hut


Starting out . . .

There are a lot of boulders around here.  They are cool looking but demand a lot of attention and make for slow going.
Boulders near futago ike

More boulders near Futago Ike


I was rewarded with this view of Mt. Akadake (Red Peak) from the top of Mt. Otake (Big Peak).  Akadake is one of the 100 Famous Mountains.  Check out this post (after you finish this one.😉)
Akadake from Otake



Lunch was peanut butter on homemade banana bread on the top of Mt. Otake.  Oh my God, that was good.

hiking lunch

Usually I don't eat on hiking days until I get to the highest peak of the day--and that was my plan for today.  I burned off so many calories on the bike ride though that I dug into my emergency stash of food and started eating long before lunch.  That was good, too.  My dad always said that everything tastes better in the woods.  He was right.


Another view from the top

Akadake from the top of Otake

Looking east toward Mt. Arafune and Gunma

Arafune etc from Otake on Yatsugatake


Looking southwest toward Saitama and Yamanashi.  The pond in the foreground is Amaike.  (Rain Pond)
Amaike below

Mt. Tateshina, one of the 100 Famous Mountains, is the one on the left

Tateshina from Otake

Back down to the twin ponds.  This is the eastern one.

futago ike

Futago Ike

Well, that's all for today.  If you want to see a similar excursion, check this on out.


Make sure you subscribe.  Google is trying to pretend I don't exist.  I think they've overheard me talking (or thinking) about them and aren't happy.

Caveman out














No Plan Survives First Contact With the Enemy. Leaf-peeping around Mugikusa Pass~ Shirakoma~ Nyu~ Nakayama~ Maru



Welcome cave dwellers to a leaf-peeping extravaganza.  

"Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth."  Mike Tyson

I agree with Iron Mike.  You can never count on a plan to go, well, according to plan.  

That's where contingency plans come in.

As far as the mountains are concerned, I tend to have a lot of contingency plans up my sleeve because I spend so much time daydreaming about the mountains.

I hadn't been for a long hike in a few weeks and had planned a long one for Saturday.  I planned it so as to get to the top of Yatsugatake before the snow flies.  

Then I looked at the weather forecast.  Rain.  On Sunday.  You may wonder why the forecast for Sunday was so important.  Well, Sunday is the day I was going to take Mrs. Caveman leaf-peeping.  It just wouldn't do for me to go play outside on Saturday and leave her at home knowing that she'd probably be stuck inside on Sunday.  

Plan 2.  An earlier start on Saturday for a shorter hike with an early enough return to come back and get the little woman.  (Don't be getting on my case about calling my wife the "little woman."  She's short.  Got a problem with it?  Take it up with Peter Dinklage.  Nothing wrong with being short.  [Unless you want a part as a dwarf in a Disney movie.]  "Good things come in small packages" and all that, you know.)  

Anyway, I got up early Saturday and drove to the target area only to find the last 5 miles of the road were closed.  Drat.  Foiled again.

Plan 3.  Thankfully, I had another hike of a similar length already planned.  It was just a case of punching a few buttons on my iphone and driving 10 minutes to another trailhead.

I'm writing this tongue-in-cheek, but I do offer this vignet as a service.  I love the mountains and enjoy spending time out there--but I do take it seriously.   On the fly, I was able to make a change and still do something fun and safely because I had put in the time previously to study maps and figure out the logistics for this type of situation.  If only I could apply this level of attention to work or to retirement plans . . .

Before I get going, let me apologize ahead of time if there are too many pictures.  It was one of the most photogenic days I've experienced in weeks.  It was really beautiful and I couldn't stop snapping away.  Now I find it hard not to post every single picture I took.

Location:  Northern Yatsugatake Range in Nagano

Starting and stopping point:  Mugikusa Pass

Peaks bagged: Nyu (ニュウ) ~~ Naka (中山) ~~ Takamiishi (高見石) ~~ Maru (丸山)

(First-time) peaks #832, 833, 834 and 835

Getting there/getting around:  I drove.  Parking is difficult at this time of year.  The parking lot at Shirakoma Pond is insanely crowded.  People wait overnight!  Some people parked several kilometers away from there and walked along the highway to get to a trailhead.  There is no parking on the side of the road.  You will be towed.  There is a bus from Chino Station (1 hour and 6 minutes).  There is a shuttle bus from the Yachiho Kogen Ski Area on Saturdays and holidays.  That service ends today (October 15, 2023) but the link to shuttle bus info for this year will perhaps be updated next year.  You'll have to do your own research.

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

Weather Information: Weather on Mt. Nyu (ニュウ)

Total Time: 5:12  Break time:  :58 Distance:  11km

Elevation:  Lowest:  2,099m Highest: 2,494m Total Ascent: 688m  Total Descent: 688m

Technical considerations/difficulty:  Some of this is steep and there are some boulder fields but there aren't a lot of chains or ladders.  Not too much of this is above the treeline.  It is colder up there.  It was below freezing when I started in the morning.  The trail for the descent from Maruyama has a lot of small boulders.  If they get wet, I think it would be slippery.

Facilities:  There are lodging with toilets and selling various food items, etc at Mugikusa Pass, Shirakoma Ike, and Takamiishi.  There are no other water/toiletry facilities on the trail.

Thoughts/observations/recommendations:  Shirakoma is pretty.  It's some of the best fall foliage I've seen in Japan.  It really was crazily crowded on the road.  I don't know what to recommend.  TBH I don't know if I would come go to this area at this time of year if I didn't live so close by.  I was shocked at the ong line of cars on the road waiting to get into the Shirakoma Parking Lot at 6:45 am!  They weren't waiting for the parking lot to open.  They were waiting for someone to leave!  Although I did take in the pond on my hike, I arrived there by walking through the woods first.  My plan started at Mugikusa Pass.  As it turns out, parking there is not really an option either.  I parked behind one other car at the entrance of the Mugikusa Hut off Route 299.  When I returned to my car in the afternoon, there was a sign placed in front of the front car saying "No Parking.  Park here and we'll fine you 20,000 yen.  We take license plate numbers."  

When I was driving home, as I was driving past the Shirakoma Parking Lot, I asked one of the old guys directing traffic how early you need to get there in the morning to get a parking space.   He said, "In the morning?  People are here all night!"  It's like a Grateful Dead concert, I guess.  Or Black Friday.

Today's listening:  Bible in a Year







Where I started.  This is next to the Mugikusa Hutte.  


It was just freezing when I started.  By noon, it was 17 celsius/ 62 fahrenheit.








Shirakoma Pond 白駒池
They say this is the highest pond in Japan.  I'm quite sure that "they" probably means the local chamber of commerce.  It's a popular place for leaf-peeping.  Probably because consumers are easily led around.  (Just kidding!  It is beautiful.) 

BTW, where I come from, we call looking at fall foliage leaf-peeping.  Sounds kind of pervy in an arboretical way, now that I think of it.  


Here, they say "momiji" "gari" which translates to "leaf"-"hunting".


I should incorporate this into my upper-level English classes.  "If you were a leaf, would you prefer to be peeped or to be hunted?  Discuss this with your partner."  


You can stay by the pond . . . Shirakoma Pond Lodge

Enough chatter.  Here are some pictures.







It's nice but to be brutally honest, I wasn't that impressed.  
I'm spoiled.  I'm from New England.
We have some of the best fall foliage in the world.


The first frost/ice I've seen this fall.  


The next few pictures are from Mt. Nyu (ニュウ).  
Fuji-san was in the house!

(BTW It was clear and I was able to get quite a few long shots today.  I could see Yamanashi, Tokyo, Saitama, Tochigi, Gunma, Gifu, Niigata . . . If you're interested in knowing what mountains I was able to see, the last half of this post is full of labeled photos.)












Mt. Asama is the big one in the middle of the next picture.

I live in that valley about mid-way from where I took this picture and Mt. Asama.


Can you find Cosmos Tower?  (In Saku City, Usuda)  It's in the lower righthand quadrant.


It's right next to Waldo.







From Nakayama Pass


Mt. Tengu.  I was there a week or so ago.  It was rainy so I didn't get a good view of it then.  I was really tempted to climb it again on this day but didn't want to make Mrs. Caveman wait.


From near the top of Nakayama



That Dai Kiretto is scary-looking even from here.

The mountain in the immediate foreground is Kirimine (Kuruma).  That is a great mountain!  I want to go snowshoeing there.




















This is the Takamiishi Hut, just below the Takamiishi.  ("High" "View" "Rock")
This place was really crowded.



They have a lot of food.  Their specialty is agepan ("ah" "gay" "Pahn") (Deep-fried bread).

I would have tried some but they only sell it in batches of 5 for 900 yen.  1.  I'm a cheapskate and 2. five pieces of deep-fried dough is more carbs than I need so I didn't buy any.  I got someone to let me take a picture of theirs.🤓🤓








This is on the way up to the Takamiishi.







From the Takamiishi





Ready for my closeup, Mr. Demille.


Is this the big rock?



The top of Mt. Maru.
Boo!

Is this my good side, Mr. Demille.




Lunch was leftover homemade sausage pizza.
It was ugly as sin but it tasted like a bit of heaven.
I'm quite sure it was better than that agepan.  
I know it was cheaper.




Getting near the end of the hike.

I climbed those hills in front a few weeks ago.  After 3 or 4 more day hikes, my footprints should span from one end of the Yatsugatake Range to the other.





This is inside the Hutte.


As promised, labeled mountains.



























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Caveman, out.