Showing posts with label yatsugatake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yatsugatake. 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














Scandalous! Japanese woman bathing al fresco in the mountains. Japan's highest outdoor bath and Mt. Tengu.



Welcome ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, cave visitors of all ages.

How'd you like my clickbait title?  It's hard to become an influencer.  In my last few posts, I mentioned skinnydipping and you wouldn't believe how many views I got.  I'm not sure how I feel about the type of new readers I'm getting, though.

Unlike many internet entities; I'm not lying with my titles.  Maybe gilding the lily a bit, but I'm not lying.  Keep reading and you'll see what I mean.

Honest.  You can trust me.  I'm not like the others.

Anyway . . .

I went for a bit of a hike on the Yatsugatake Range yesterday.  It wasn't a picture-perfect day, but it was still a great experience.

Location:  Tengudake 天狗岳 Nagano

Starting and stopping point:  稲子湯唐沢橋登山口(みどり池入口)

Peaks bagged: Higashi Tengu (東天狗岳) ~~ Nishi Tengu (西天狗) ~~ Neishi (根石山) ~~ Mikaburi (箕冠山)

(First-time) peaks #828, 829, 830, 831

Getting there/getting around:  I drove.  There are buses to the trailhead I used.  They run between the Nitago Onsen and Koumi Station 4 times a day starting in April 22.  I guess they run until the snow makes the road impassible.

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

Weather Information: Nishitengu (Japanese)

Total Time:   7:08 Break time: :36  Distance:  16.5 km (just over 10 miles)

Elevation:  Lowest: 1,571 m Highest: 26,46 m Total Ascent: 1,386 m  Total Descent: 1,386 m

Technical considerations/difficulty:  Much of this is above the treeline.  There are not a lot of spots with chains or ropes but a lot of this hike is steep and there are a lot of boulders to negotiate.  I think the only places where getting lost would be a possibility would be at trail intersections.  Most of them are well-marked, though.  If you pay attention, you should be fine.

Facilities:  There are lots of onsens, huts and waterholes.  There are several campgrounds.

Thoughts/observations/recommendations:  This is, I'm sure, a great collection of mountains, but I really don't know just what they look like.  It was not clear enough long enough over a wide enough area for me to have gotten a good look!  The one peek I got of the peak of Tengudake from below was really cool.  This is another on a long list of mountains I have to go back to.

I was surprised at the number of onsens and campgrounds in the area.  I also was surprised by the number of people I saw.  It didn't ever seem crowded, but there were a surprising number of hikers up there.


Today's listening:  

Bible in a Year

                               

 Orthodoxy, by G.K. Chesterton, read by David Grizzly Smith  

"The only possible excuse for this book is that it is an answer to a challenge. Even a bad shot is dignified when he accepts a duel." Orthodoxy

I have listened to or read Orthodoxy, and a few other Chesterton classics, several times.  I find more and more gems each time.  He's not immediately accessible.  I find that the first 90% of a chapter is usually bewildering and takes a lot of concentration.  The last 10% or so when he pulls everything together makes the hard work worthwhile!  And, along the way, some of the quotes are just so clever and, well, quotable.


OK.....let's look at some pictures









The Shirabiso Hut next to Midori Ike.  There are camping sites here as well as some food, etc.


Midori Ike (Green Pond)
Looking up toward my invisible destination, Mt. Tengu.



Looking up from Midori Ike in another direction toward Mt. Inago.

Back on the trail





Mt. Tengu's eastern peak



Looking back at the eastern peak from the western peak. 
People were standing and waiting with their cameras for a long time hoping for breaks in the clouds.




This is the first fall foliage I've seen this year.  It's at an elevation of about 2,500 meters.  It's still all green down below.





The buildings are the Neishi Hut and that is Mt. Io behind them in the cloud.
"Io" means "sulfur".  It is the same word as is "Iwo Jima" ("Sulfur Island")  Sure enough, it smelled like sulfur around here.












That is a woman taking a bath in Japan's highest outdoor bath.  I'm glad she was clothed!  Even so, I wish she wasn't there.  I really felt creepy taking a picture with a scantily-clad maiden (actually, more like a grandmother) in it--even from a distance.  I couldn't not get a picture of this pool, though.  That is cool.  









The path to the outdoor bath . . .



This is the marker proudly pronouncing Japan's highest outdoor bath.  I felt really awkward whipping out my iphone to take a picture here.  The woman in the bath was the only person around.  I made some small talk with her when I took this picture and tried to make it obvious I was more interested in the sign than in her.  Haha.  She didn't seem to mind me being there.



Mt. Io


This is the Honsawa Onsen.  This is the business that owns the outdoor bath.  (1,000 yen, by the way.)  They have some indoor baths, too.  There is also some lodging and several tent sites there.  I saw quite a few people there and they all seemed to be having a great time.

Walking through the Honsawa Onsen



Before heading back to the car, I passed by the Midori Ike again.  Thankfully, the clouds had cleared and I finally got a picture of Mt. Tengu.


Well, cave dwellers, that's all for now.  Come again.

Caveman out.