Naguri/Nariki area Mt. Bono, (棒ノ嶺) Mt. Iwatakeishi (岩茸石山), etc.

I hiked in Saitama and Tokyo a bit today.  The skies weren't clear enough for any good views, but fairly fresh snow and empty trails made for a nice day.  

Crampons were a necessity today.

Here's my trail today.





I started at a parking lot near Nagurigawabashi and hiked up to Bonorei (Mt. Bono).  From there, I hit three or 4 more peaks before the last one, Mt. Iwatakeishi.  From there I descended to Route 202 and then walked along Route 53 back to where I'd parked.  I walked about 5 km on the pavement today, 16km in total.

The hike took a little more than 6 hours.  The snowy parts were slow.  The pavement allowed me to make up time.

I don't have anything super-beautiful or insightful to share so I'm tempted not to blog about this hike but have decided to just to give the information about the trails.


This was my starting point near Nagurigawa Bridge.  There is a bus stop nearby.  I'd assume the bus comes from Hanno.


A shrine by my departure point.


The beginning of the trail was paved.  

I liked this rock.



Leaving the road.

棒ノ嶺登山口 trailhead to Bonorei



This boulder is called Iwatakeishi.  Not to be confused with Iwatakeishi Mountain which I'd climb around noon.  This is where I put on my crampons.  I needed them for the next 4 hours or so.


Today's highest point was Mt. Bonorei.  Here are some pictures of it from today and from October.
棒ノ嶺 Mt. Bonorei

Today
October
棒ノ嶺 Bonorei in October







Another spot today

The same spot as the last picture.  I think this was in October.






Mt. Iwatakeishi.  It was standing-room-only last time I was here.

雪の岩茸石山 snow on Mt. Iwatakeishi


Basically the same spot last April.




On the way down.



This cafe is popular with bicyclists.  It's at the beginning of a hill that bicyclists ride up for training.

成木の家 Nariki no ie Bicycle cafe


I don't like to descend the same way I go up that much so I often will hike in a circle.  This sometimes means I need to close the circle between different trailheads by walking along the road.  Today was one of those days.  I don't mind it that much.  I'm still walking in the woods.




That's all for today.  Drop by the cave again sometime.


Here's another hike to Iwatakeishi...


Caveman Out







Once upon a Kamoshika

 

A nice walk from Okutama Lake to Okutama Station.  Pleasantly surprised to see not one but two kamoshikas on the way.  


This is Okutama Lake, a major source of Tokyo's water supply.  It was created by damming the Tama River in 1957.  

I took a bus here from Okutama Station.  My plan, basically, was to walk along the Okutama Mukashi Michi from the lake back to the station.  Muskashi means old.  Michi means road.  One way to translate it would be "The Old Okutama Road".  Mukashi has another use, though.  Japanese fairy tales always begin with "Mukashi mukashi"; ie, "Once upon a time."

Before actually going to the Mukashi Michi, I wandered around the dam and took a few pictures.  Then I headed uphill behind the Okutama Water and Green Friendship Hall to check out those trails.  There are a lot of switchbacks up a steep, southeast-facing slope and it offered some really spectacular views of the lake as the morning sun rose higher and higher over it.


As you can see from this map, a lot of trails were closed.  I had to retrace my steps and start over to continue onto the Mukashi Michi but I had wanted to take a look around that hill for a long time and decided it was worth it.



It was!  I ran into this guy.  This is called, in Japanese, a kamoshika.  The name is similar to the Japanese word for deer, but it's not.  It's a serow in English.  Out of all my trips into the Japanese woods, this is only my 4th sighting.  And I got to see two at the same time today!


kamoshika near Okutama Lake

Not only were there kamoshika here, but there were a lot of monkeys.  It was like a petting zoo.

Okutama Monkeys







My wildlife encounters weren't over.  I found some poop!


I encounter scat (poop) in the woods often but usually have no idea what it is.  Today I dropped into the Okutama Visitor's station before getting on the train and was told the poop in my picture is probably from a tanuki.  (Japanese raccoon.)  The reason the pile is so large is that they poop in a communal spot.


While I was there, I asked about bear poop.  I know I've seen that before, too.



The Mukashi Michi was a very gentle, pleasant walk.  I think this is my first hike in a few years that didn't bring me to some mountaintop or other.  Most of the road is paved.  Since I started at the lake (upstream), most of my walk was downhill.  The only people I met on the trail were coming from the other direction.  I liked my plan much more than theirs!




Remnants...


This is on the 3rd floor at the business across the street from the Mizune Parking Lot.  On the street just below, there is a sign warning people to be careful of bees' nests.  I don't think they are kidding.




A "grow operation" in the mountains.  
The green stuff behind the fence is wasabi.




Getting there from Tachikawa means taking the Ome/Okutama train line to Okutama and then the #14 bus.  From Tachikawa it would take about an hour and a half.

My jaunt was a nice, fairly gentle hike.  I took my time because I took so many pictures and gawked at the kamoshikas but still finished in about 4 hours.  It was a little more than 8 miles or 13 km.  I walk a lot, though.  Many might balk at walking 8 miles.  

The Okutama Water and Green Friendship Hall has a lot of exhibits about drinking water and forests, but it's not geared to people who don't speak Japanese.  That place has a nice cafeteria-type restaurant and a gift shop.

The dam has some exhibits, too.  I seem to recall a diorama-type exhibit there.  

If you are interested in the area but don't want to walk all the way back to Okutama Station, you might enjoy spending a few hours around the dam.  One option would be to start at that Hall and take a walk to the far side of the dam to the Ikoinoro trail (いこいの路).   https://goo.gl/maps/U1MBnBTPgCsNRW4w5    
That trail traces along the lake so it's basically flat.  It still manages to offer great views.  I've seen lots of monkeys and once a bear on that side of the lake.  I have even seen masses of bullfrogs doing things that I don't want to describe.  It was yucky.  My biologist nephew would probably think their activity was interesting.   There are plenty of picnic tables around if you want to bring a lunch or you could drop into the restaurant at the Hall. 










Lake Okutama










The 500th that almost got away

Welcome to my cave.  Sit down by the fire and let me tell you the story of the 500th that almost got away.

Choose a comfortable rock.  This may take a while.

Sometime in late November, a glance at my mountain climbing app notified me that I had climbed about 470 mountains in Japan.  (It only counts Japanese mountains.)  I was a bit surprised at the number and thought it would be a neat way to round out the year if I were to get it to 500 before the end of the year.

Japanese mountains, generally speaking, are much like Japanese people.  Many of them are not too tall, but there are a lot of them and they tend to be crowded together.  Because of these facts, it isn't uncommon to cross 3 to 5 peaks on a day hike.  In order to achieve my goal of 500 by the end of the year, I planned on doing some hikes I'd done before that I knew had a lot of peaks.  

In the first week of December, I did a long hike that took me over 10 peaks or so.  When I left home, the total on my app was around 470.

When I got home and checked the app, the total hadn't changed.  I thought maybe it was a software problem.  I tried turning my iphone on and off.   I thought maybe that company's engineers had the day off. 

The next week, I tried my next hike.  The same thing happened.  I left home with a total of around 470 and it had not changed when I returned.

That was when my mind was really blown.  I realized the app counts each mountain climbed only one time.  It was hard to wrap my head around the idea that I have climbed that many different mountains.  I can only imagine how many times I have summited in total because there are mountains that I have climbed 6 or 8 times.

In order to bump the number up to 500, I had to go a bit further from home than usual to be sure of getting to mountains I'd never climbed.  I was getting close to 500 by the end of January.  

Then I got the idea to try and climb someplace special to commemorate this number.

David Lowe over at https://ridgelineimages.com/ mentioned searching the  Japan GSI Map database for a certain mountain name recently and that gave me the inspiration to see if there are any mountains named 500.  My search revealed two mountains named 五百山 ("gohyakusan"), which means "500" "Mountain". 


Wow.  Now I had a mission.

At that point, I was at 498 on my count, so I knew that my next hike had to be it or I would miss the chance to commemorate the 500th by going to one of those mountains.  They are both small and far away.  I would never want to go to the trouble of getting to either of them unless it was for this special occasion. 

One of the gohyakusans is in Niigata.  The other is in Nagano.  I really have no experience in either area where these are and I had no idea what the lay of the land was.  I decided to try the one in Niigata.  Niigata is on the Sea of Japan side of the island (I'm on the Pacific side) so the weather is different.  I knew there was snow on the ground, but had no way of knowing how much until I actually went there to see.  I knew I would be going through ski country to get there.  I thought the mountain was on the other side of ski country but I was wrong.

After 3 hours on trains and half an hour in a taxi, this is what greeted me when I got out of the taxi on my way to the trailhead.  Oops.


snowy street in Niigata


I knew right away that I was not going to get to that mountain that day.  This was the condition of the street and the trail was still a mile away!  I didn't want to waste the day, so I tramped around for about an hour through the waist-deep snow before turning around and walking along the street to the station.



sunk in snow

It was a failure and an embarrassment but if I didn't go there and try I would never have known whether it was possible or not.

It wasn't a total waste.  It is a gorgeous area and the walk to the station through the snow-covered rice terraces was beautiful.



I decided to give Gohyakusan in Nagano a try next. ** That "summit" seemed much more doable from a simple map recon because it's just a hilltop next to a tertiary road.  As long as the road was passable, getting to the top would be no problem.  After all, for this hike, it was more about the name of the mountain than for anything like the grandeur someplace high and hard to reach. 

**There was another hike between these two but that's another story.

I called the local police station to inquire about the snow conditions on the road.  I was sure the local constabulary could give me a good appraisal of the roads in their village.  Especially since their station was right at the base of the hill I wanted to climb.

The cop I got on the phone was non-commital.  He wouldn't give me an answer about the road.  He told me to call the tourist board at the village office.  

I called there.  The woman there didn't want to give me an answer either.   She told me she'd have someone call me back from the public works department.

I got a call back from the public works dept. and that guy said that that road isn't plowed in the winter and probably is impassable.  He also said something about the abominable snow monster, thundersnow, and sharknadoes.  


He left me with the distinct impression that it might be so bad that cats and dogs might be even living together there in mass hysteria.



I decided to rent some snowshoes for this try. 

So, for the second time in about a week, I got up at 0 dark thirty to ride a shinkansen 3 or 4 hours to climb a pimple of a hill in a tiny town in the middle of nowhere.

(Mrs. Caveman really is a sport to put up with me.  She's the best.)

This was my first time actually stopping in Nagano on a train.  I've made slight incursions when hiking on the prefectural boundary lines with Nagano but I've never gone there by train.

This is what the platform in Nagano looked like.









Nagano Station Platform


After arriving in Nagano Station, it was a 40-minute bus ride to a little place called Shinshumachi (Shinshu Town).  This sign is one of the first things I saw.  "Roukakuko" means Lake Rokaku.  It was lovely.



Lake Rokaku ろうかく湖




Then, I started up the hill.

This is what the road's condition was like for 90% of the journey.  I began to wonder if the bumble needed to migrate north for the winter.



Thankfully, eventually, there was some snow!


And I put on my snowshoes for the ascent.  The "peak" was just off to the side of the road and was a hike of only a few hundred meters.



It was just enough to make the rental of the snowshoes worth it.





Voila.  I brought this paper in case there was no marker.  I was almost right.  There was a marker but it was very small.

信州新町 五百山 Mt. Gohyaku (500) Shinshu Shinmachi




This makes it official.




Coming down.















As always, thank you for dropping by my cave.  I really love the mountains and am happy to share them with others.

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Mountain #499. Lake Miyagase area again. (Still leech-free!)

This was another lovely day in the Tanzawa area.  Lake Miyagase, like all the dammed-up reservoirs around here, offers some beautiful views.

Lake Miyagase 宮ヶ瀬湖



This was a short trip.  I only wanted to get to one new peak on this trip.  According to the climbing app I use, I am approaching 500 peaks.  I have something special in mind for #500 so yesterday's goal was to get to #499.




Considerable planning and expense have gone into the plan for number 500 so you can imagine my shock when I got home yesterday and saw this statistic on my iphone.





Say what?!  How could I possibly have miscounted?  

The plan I had/have for #500 is meaningless except for my 500th.  Drastic measures were necessary.  

I deleted yesterday's hike from my app.  Voila, problem solved.



I am now a mere tenderfoot with only 499 peaks under my belt.



So, onto yesterday.  This sign is where I started.  This trailhead is right next to a bus stop.  From there, it's only an hour or so hike up to Mt. Bukka.  




Mt. Bukka has some great views.

Mt. Bukka, Kanagawa 神奈川仏家山

Looking to the west and northwest, you can see the Minami Alps.




Looking north, you can see up to Okutama and beyond to Saitama. 



I was also able to see Mt. Nantai, Mt. Tsukuba and Tokyo Skytree with the naked eye.  I could even pick out the mall we live by with binoculars.  I've never been able to catch a glimpse of it it from this area.

Miyagase 宮ヶ瀬湖




The trailhead where I started is at a bus stop.  There is also a parking lot and some picnic benches nearby.  The point where I popped out of the woods back onto the road also is a similar setup.  These mountains are not very high yet offer some spectacular views.  Despite these good points, these hills aren't as heavily trafficked as mountains like Takao.  

I recommend this area for families, date-type hikes, or to other people who want to get out but are not interested in anything too strenuous. 

The buses to this area start at Hon-Atsugi Station.






Stay tuned for #500.  I should be posting about that trip real soon.  I'm hoping it will be interesting.  I've put a fair amount of planning into this hike and am even spending a lot more than the usual tank of gas.  (Feel free to hit that support me button if you can!  Papa needs a new pair of socks after all this walking.)  

I don't want to give away any spoilers.  I'll just say I will be going much farther from home than I usually do and I'll be employing some special winter equipment my next time out.



Thanks for dropping by my man-cave.  Looking forward to having you by again.