Kurodaki~Takanosu~Kanoniwa in Nanmoku Mura


Location: Gunma, Nanmoku 

Starting and stopping point:  Kurotakisanfudoji Dai 2 Parking Lot 黒滝山不動寺 第2駐車場

Peaks bagged: Kurodaki 黒瀧 ~~ Takanosu 鷹巣 ~~ Kanoniwa観音岩

Getting there/getting around: Car

Map:  Yama to Kogen Chizu #21 NISHIJYOSHU MYOGI-SAN・ARAFUNE-YAMA 西上州 妙義山・荒船山

Weather Information: Mt. Arafune's weather (not too far away) 

Total Time:  2:41 Break time: :14  Distance:  6 km

Elevation:  Lowest: 591 m Highest: 870 m Total Ascent:  686 Total Descent: 692

Technical considerations/difficulty:  The trail up to Kurodaki is not so challenging, physically.  It's hard to follow, though.  The portion of the hike out to Kanoniwa and Takanosu is thankfully provided with a lot of chains and ladders.  There are really necessary.  Much of that part of the hike is on a very narrow ridge that falls off quite precipitously on both sides.  It's very exposed in many parts and I would not like to go there in winter.

Facilities:  There are two parking lots at the Fudoson Temple.  I think there was a restroom, but I don't recall.

Thoughts/observations/recommendations:  

Wow, I'm glad I did this today.  I had a few hours to play with and wanted to get out but the weather forecast was iffy.  Well, I should say that the forecast(s) were not definitive.  I was looking at four different forecasts.  One called for 70% chance of rain, another for 30% chance, another that said it wouldn't rain at all and yet one more that was calling for torrential downpours over the whole island of Honshu.  I am pretty sure that forecast was warning about a sharknado, too.

What to believe?  What to believe?  I decided to just go and turn back if the weather was bad.  I left home and it started sprinkling while I was driving.  I decided to go as far as the trailhead and then decided.  I got to the trailhead and it started raining a little more.  I decided to just start hiking and see what happened.

Wouldn't you know it, but it stopped raining within a half hour or so and, by the time I got to my first scenic lookout, it was pretty clear.  Woohoo!

(And the climate activists expect me to believe their predictions about the weather in 10 or 100 years?  Oh, please.  We can't even figure out if it's going to rain in the next few hours.  Enough about that topic.)

Anyway, it was a great way to end the day.  These are not high hills but they are a bit thrilling.  They remind me of many of the mountains in Saitama.  They are not that high but many of them are pretty extreme.  I worked up a good sweat and got the old Timex in my chest cavity ticking.   


Today's listening: Bible in a Year



Let's look at some pictures.



The Fudoson Temple










Mt. Kurodaki ("Black Falls")


I often marvel at the chains and ladders in places like this.  How did they design the installations?  How did they get the materials into these hard-to-access places?  How did they do the construction?  I'm very grateful to whomever it was that did these things.





If it weren't for this chain, I think I would have gotten vertigo passing along here.





It was very cool looking down at this village.







This is the top of Takanosu.  Takanosu means "Kite's Nest."  It didn't dawn on me until I got home that there was a kite wheeling above my head and squawking the whole time I was on top.


It wasn't me.


More and more chains



The red roofs below are the Fudoson Temple--where I started.

This ridge was a bit of a knife edge.  I'm glad there are sturdy chains and ladders.



That's all my pictures from the trail.


I saw about ten deer as I wound my way home on this narrow mountain road.


Thanks for visiting my mancave.  I enjoyed today so much that I'm hoping to do it again real soon.




 

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Kobushigatake of 100 Famous Mountains fame from the north side.



Greetings ladies and gentlemen and spelunkers of all ages.  Welcome to my mancave.

Location:  Mt. Kobushi (甲武信岳) in the Tama Kai Chichibu National Park

Starting and stopping point:  Mokidaira Parking Lot, Nagano

Peaks bagged: Jumonji ~~ Oyama ~~ Bushinshiraiwa* ~~ Sanpo ~~ Kobushigatake

*The top to Bushinshiraiwa is blocked off

Getting there/getting around:  There is a large parking lot at Mokidaira.  A taxi there from Shinano-Kawakami Station on the Koumi Line will set you back about ¥6,500 (2019 estimate).  

Map:  Yama to Kogen Chizu 27 KINPU・KOBUSHI OKUCHICHIBU 金峯山・甲武信 奥秩父

Weather Information: Kobushigatake weather

Total Time: 8:46  Break time: :56  Distance:  20.1 km

Elevation:  Lowest: 1,414m Highest: 2,483m Total Ascent: 1,702m  Total Descent: 1,702m

Technical considerations/difficulty:  There are several steep spots with chains or ropes.  You must have your wits about you to not get lost.  Most people doing this route stay overnight either at the Jumonji Hut or the Kobushi goya (Hut).  It isn't that strenuous, but the stats of this hike bear out that it is longer in distance and has a greater overall change in elevation than the usual hikes up Mt. Fuji from one of the 5th Stations.

Facilities:  The parking lot has a public restroom.  The Jumonji Hut and the Kobushi Hut provide lodging for the night as well as public restrooms and the usual stuff for sale those places have.  I forgot my lunch!  It's a good thing I carry emergency food because I found out that there are no convenience stores or anything like that anywhere near the trailheads.  (I'm too cheap to buy food at the huts unless I'm really in a pickle.)

Thoughts/observations/recommendations:  People ask me all the time, "What's your favorite mountain?"  I'm generally at a loss for words because there are so many!  It's like being asked where I'm going next.  I have no idea.  I always have about 20 hikes planned--it just depends on the weather and time available which one I will choose on a given day.  I think if I have to shortlist my favorites, though, Kobushigatake would make the cut.  This was my 4th time up there and I have some great memories of the mountain so it was nice to revisit it.

The previous trips I took up there were taken when I still lived in Tokyo so I approached it from the south side.  Now that I live on the north side, I took the chance to approach it from this side.

The south side can be approached for a (strenuous) day trip from the Nishizawa Keikoku.  That is a great area with a michi no eki nearby.  Keikoku means gorge or canyon in English.  The keikoku by itself is a beautiful, less strenuous hike for daytrippers from Tokyo hoping to escape the heat.  

One time I stayed at the Kobushi Hut on the second night of a 3-day hike from west to east from Mt. Mizugaki in Hokuto City, Yamanashi to Nishizawa Keikoku.  That was awesome.  Mt. Mizugaki, Mt. Kinpu which that trail goes over and Kobushigatake are all 100 Meizan so it was such a great experience.

This hike didn't have the greatest weather for visibility so I think I may have to revisit my past excursions to augment the pictures I took yesterday.


Today's listening:  Bible in a Year


Let's look at some pictures.


I took this on the way.  There are a lot of lettuce fields in the area.


The weather in the morning couldn't have been better.






The Jumonji Hut.


Just prior to passing the Jumonji Hut, I went to the top of Mt. Jumonji.  It didn't have any view.

This is one of the few mountain views I got yesterday.



It got cloudier and cloudier as the morning progressed.




There are a lot of rhododendrons around here.  (シャクナゲ)





I have no idea what kind of bird this is--but it was cool.


Swag.  I bought this at the Kobushigoya.  It's a replacement.



The Kobushigoya.  I've pitched a tent here a few times.

Up to the top of Kobushigatake.  I got robbed of the view.



The marker for Kobushigatake.


These are some old pictures from the same area.


















Now, back to yesterday . . .


This puddle is the starting point for what will turn into Japan's longest and widest river.  It will eventually flow into the Sea of Japan in Niigata.


The last few hours of the hike are along the Chikuma River which becomes larger and livelier with every step.






Oh, yeah.  Oh, yeah.  That's what the doctor ordered.
BTW, as a veteran of mountain streams, I have to say this was the coldest one I've been in.



Thank you for stopping by the mancave again.  Come again.  Don't forget to subscribe and to tell all your friends to subscribe, too.