Day 6 – Matsumoto Castle

After catching a super express to Matsumoto, we arrived in 37°c heat and set about trying to find a locker for our luggage. I discovered with a bit of planning my main bag fits in the most common, smallest size 300Yen locker, with space for laptop and wash bag.  Joel’s larger bag requires a 400Yen locker, which are much harder to find, and were nearly all full. We spent around 15min hanging around for one to become free before discovering another area that had one. We also think that a 500Yen should hold both our bags, but we will discover in the future if we ever arrive somewhere which has one free.

After a slightly roundabout walk we arrived at the castle. It was amazing to see, and looked incredible. The grounds originally consisted of 3 concentric moats, only 2 of which remain. Most parts of the castle were salvaged for scrap metal in the 1850s, but luckily some locals bought the main tower for preservation.

We were able to go inside the tower after taking off our shoes and carrying them around in a plastic bag. The tower was 6 levels, each level had great views through the firing slits and some history displays about the castle. The stairs to the 5th and 6th floor were very steep and required careful navigation.

While inside we also experienced our first rain storm, with heavy rain falling and us hoping it would finish before we left. Luckily it had cleared up by the time we left the castle.

After a quick and direct route back to the station we caught our two trains to Shin-Osaka where we are spending the next 4 nights. Our room is basically 2 very small rooms (just barely fit the bed) and the bathroom between them. It looks designed for 2 business men on a trip who don’t know each other.

I’m now off to shower as I am still getting black feet from residue Fuji dust in my shoes.

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¥en

One thing that still seems a bit weird to me is the 1 Yen coin. It is small and made of aluminium, and seems to rapidly accumulate. Coming from a country that has discarded values below 5c, having a coin worth less than AUD$0.01 is very different.

The other important coin we have learned is the 100¥. Many machines will only take this coin, requiring changing other values to it to use them. In our hotel the washing machine only takes 100¥ and at the train station the lockers only take 100¥. From now on we will be trying to accumulate them rather than use them in transactions where another coin or note would do.

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Technical Difficulties

As viewers of our blog may have noticed, the server was down for most of the 26th. Apparently some critical networking component at my web hosting company failed, and it took a while to get a replacement.

On another technical I have been noticing my GPS was often giving false readings, way off course, or altitude. I have changed the way it gets the information to use the Windows driver rather than the programs own one. So far this seems to be more accurate, and even better it now gets fixes quicker (probably uses the QuickGPS program that downloads a data file of satellites positions)

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Day 5 – Fujisan Descending

One thing that frustrates me about taking photographs is how hard it is to make them look good. We see so many spectacular or beautiful or breath-taking things, but the moment we point a camera at it, it suddenly becomes unphotogenic. A serene forest becomes just a bunch of trees. The moon shining on clouds becomes something both too bright and too dark at the same time. And a lovely valley seen from a train abruptly becomes the wall of a tunnel.

Anyway, Fujisan. James covered some of the things I was going to go over here, so I won’t go over it again. Just as Monday had our first shinkansen ride, Tuesday contained our first daylight shinkansen ride, so we could actually see out the windows. And see just how fast it was we were travelling. The trouble is, we’d always see a perfect photo opportunity just after we passed it. For lunch, I had my first bento box – mine was a hambaagu bento (“hamburg” – it’s what they call mince patties in Japan).

Heading up the mountain, I suffered greatly from motivation problems. It was weird, but I wasn’t feeling tired at all, just incapable of climbing. When I was standing still, I felt I could make it all the way to the top, but when I was moving, I struggled just to take another step. The Subashiri path we were on was only 6.8km long, with huts positioned about eight hundred metres apart – but considering the expected travel time for those eight hundred metres was half an hour, that gives an idea of how difficult it is considered. According to my guidebook, a Japanese proverb says that a wise person climbs Fujisan once – but only a fool climbs it twice. As my previous post covered, we only got halfway up, so I’m not quite sure what that means so far as wisdom.

At the sixth station, we were amused to notice steam coming off each other. At the Main Sixth station, we encountered a large group of little old ladies and men – personally I was impressed they could climb so high, but maybe I was just comparing them to myself. A little further on I was amused to discover a wooden stake hammered into the ground with “ganbare!” (something like “keep it up!”) written on the side. And all the way up we could see the descent path to the left, and boy did it look daunting.

In any case, I absolutely loved the hut we stayed in. The sleeping room consisted of two levels of futons laid out – one level on the floor, and one level on a platform about a metre up. I’ll upload some photos of this when I get the chance. We were on the floor down the far end, along with another person. The room was warmed as only a room full of a hundred sleeping people can be. As James said, we were seated to dinner with two girls from Hokkaido – with their small amount of English and our small amount of Japanese, we hit it off, somehow. Didn’t get so far as to learn their names, though. They’d climbed up to the seventh station in order to see the sunrise, and would be descending again the next morning.

The night outside was seriously spectacular. The seventh station is far above the lower cloud level, and the full moon shining on the clouds gave everything a silvery glow. At the same time, a huge thunderstorm was approaching from the North, filled with superb lightning flashes. And even late into the night, there was still the glow of the occasional torch wobbling its way up the path. The thing is, I couldn’t photograph any of this – it was just too dark. We could even see the lights of the eighth station, some distance above us.

In the morning, we got up early for the sunrise. Breakfast was served shortly before sunrise, but due to a miscommunication when we booked in, we hadn’t actually been put down for any. That turned out ok, though, because I didn’t really feel like breakfast, and James really didn’t feel like breakfast. In the early morning dark, though, the peak of the mountain was wreathed in a twinkly crown of hundreds of torch lights. So many people were up there to watch the sunrise. The sunrise was quite impressive, but James and I headed back to bed for an hour or so after the sun was done rising.

While I was still sitting outside, though, a woman who’d just climbed the path came up to me. “Samui?” she said. “You cold?” She gave me a pocket heater pack thing – I’ve only seen one of these in Australia, and it’s a gel-based one that Mum got from a medicine company for free, and it only lasted half an hour or so. This one was still going ten hours later… though we were already back in the ground-level heat after three, so I didn’t really need it. I thanked her nicely and we had a bit of a conversation about where we were heading.

One other thing which amused me was the price of things. All sorts of foody things were available to buy at all the stations we visited. However, the price increased the higher you went. Pocari Sweat, a common sports drink (or rather, “ion replacement drink”) here costs 150 yen at ground level, 200 yen at the fifth station, and 400 yen at the seventh station. A single banana, 100 yen at ground level, cost 200 at the fifth station and 500 at the seventh. I was pondering trying doing a plot of price against altitude, but I didn’t bother actually taking down any numbers, and I didn’t make it to the top anyway. Toilets cost 200 yen all the way up, though.

Descending Fujisan is a matter of falling slowly. The path sloped at maybe forty or fifty degrees, but standing on the path, it felt as though the cloudy horizon was coming up to whack us in the face. I discovered a pretty handy sliding gait sort of like ice skating that got me down reasonably fast, while James enjoyed running in a zig-zag across the path, and so giving me no way to run behind him without being caught in his dust cloud. Every step we took sent dirt and pebbles rolling down the mountain, and clouds of dust into the air. It makes me wonder how long it’ll take to wear the mountain down to nothing, if every climber pushes dirt downhill as they descend. Some of the paths below the treeline were eroded down to below the level of the tree roots, leaving the worn-smooth roots sticking into the air. Unfortunately, after a while the slope reduced to a more modest thirty degrees, which was steep enough to be really annoying to walk down, but not steep enough to actually assist in the descent.

Unfortunately, I dropped my face towel somewhere on the descent. I can only hope it has earned a permanent position in the large collection of dropped items that decorate both the ascent and descent paths on Fuji. On the plus side, it gives me a reason to buy a new face towel – the Japanese know about face towels; my previous one was just a re-purposed hand towel.

We got back to the bottom of the trail in time for the 9:20 bus back to Gotemba, and managed to catch our remaining trains in pretty rapid succession. We even managed another shinkansen first: first time on a Hikari train – both of our previous trips were on the slower Kodama trains. While on the trains, I was amazed to discover that our water bottles, which had last been opened at the seventh station where we spent the night, were now squashed nearly flat, purely from the difference in air pressure. That is how far we climbled. Unfortunately, when I got off the bus, my thighs were starting to ache, and when I got off the shinkansen, my calves decided to join in the fun. By the time we reached Machida station, I could barely walk.

I managed to get back to the 100-yen store to buy a new face towel. James was looking at the displays outside – I scoffed, however, thinking Murphy’s law would guarantee that they would be some distance far inside the shop. Then I tripped over a whole display rack of towels sitting right next to the door. I also headed over to the bank to change the US money my grandparents had given me into yen, and James went to buy a bubble tea he’d been wanting for ages. We also discovered a little mini-shrine in the shadow of the Odakyu private railway station.

We rested the afternoon, and in the evening (after figuring out the hotel’s coin-operated washing machines) we headed out to dinner. One place invited us in while we were out looking the other night when we got ramen, so we decided to head back there, having no idea what sort of restaurant it was. It turned out to be a kushikatsu restaurant, where a whole range of food is served on skewers. Unable to read much of the menu, we ordered what appeared to be a set meal type thing. It was quite delicious, and I could even identify most of what the waiter said about the dishes. I’d have to say I was unenthused by the shiitake mushrooms, James was severely nonplussed by the chicken cartilage, and both of us were a bit concerned about the chillies.

Anyway, off to bed. Tomorrow, we’re saying farewell to Tokyo for now, and heading off to Osaka via Matsumoto Castle. Matsumoto is a few hours out of the direct route between Tokyo and Osaka, but on the other hand, we also have a few hours to kill between when we have to check out of here and when we can check in over there, and apparently Matsumoto Castle is worth seeing. Considering Matsumoto is in the mountains, I’m hoping the journey itself will be worth the trip, but I can’t really say for sure. Guess we’ll find out tomorrow. I’m also hoping my legs will be less sore. =)

Fujisan two-day photo count: three hundred exactly.

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Day 4-5 – Mt Fuji:The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

We started of the day with a nice trip to the 5th station of Subashiri Trail. To get the most value of our JR Rail pass we went all the way on JR. Machida -> Shin-Yokohoma -> Mishima ->Numazu -> Gotemba Station, then finally a 1 hour bus trip up the mountain. On the way up we passed numerous army vehicles, everything from Jeeps, transports, a field full of tanks and a fuel tanker.

At the start of the trail we decided to eat our bento boxed lunch.
Fuji Bento James Fuji Bento JoelMine was quite nice with a variety of meat balls and rice, presented in a nice balsa wood framed box to prevent it getting squished.  I then experienced the first Bad of the day. No rubbish collection. Anything you take up, you need to take down, even if you are at the bottom of the trail. So I was carrying the packaging of our lunch until the next day back at Gotemba station.

We started the trail around 2:30pm and although a bit steep I found it really enjoyable. Probably one of the best parts of the trip so far for me. We started off in an alpine forest environment and gradually walked out of it into lower lying brush and then mostly volcanic rock, with a few occasional plants. The timing worked out really well as we avoided most of the sun, being in the forest, and by the time we passed into more exposed areas the sun was setting so we didn’t cook. The moon was near full so we had plenty of light and there was only a light breeze.

As we progressed higher the time between breaks kept getting shorter, as we both stopped to catch our breaths. Surprisingly this is the first day in Japan I haven’t ended up with a headache in the afternoon. As we continued on Joel was getting affected by the reduced O2 and the unexpected strenuousness of the climb, so we decided to abandon our schedule to reach rim then look for a hut, and instead stay at 7th station.

Here we got a nice futon in a 3 man cubby hole, part of a large room holding ~ 100 people. We had a nice meal, which had some unidentified meat, some noodles, cabbage, rice and soup. Our table companions were 2 other late arriving walkers who spoke a little English and between Joel’s Japanese and Phrase book and my miming we found a little about each other. They were from Hokkaido and recommended the skiing there, they also thought Joel’s Mech Eng jumper meant he was a fan of Gundam.

After dinner we went back to our sleeping room (~8:00pm), and experienced another Bad. Lots of people in one room make lots of little noises, and different people will be snoring at different times. I had stupidly removed my ear plugs that morning when packing my bags, originally only taking them for the flight, so had no way to block out the noise.

Joel and I talked and he didn’t think he could make the summit, after looking at the map we realised 7th station is where the descent track started. So I could continue on around 1am to reach summit for sunrise, then head back down to 7th were we could both go down the descent trail.

Alas it was not to be as my night turned Ugly. Around 11pm I started feeling off, and a bit delirious. I went out and sat in the shoe room for some time (I have no idea how long) until someone opened the door to walk through. I was feeling really bad and discovered I was covered in sweat. I tried to go back to bed and found being in any position except directly on my back made me fell nauseous and I could just not sleep. Finally around 2am I had to go to the toilet and “worship the porcelain”. This made me feel a bit better but I was still off, although I did finally get to sleep.

Given my severe lack of sleep and still upset stomach I abandoned my plan to go to summit. I’m still not sure if this was caused by bad food (bento box, dinner, reusing chopstick that fell on floor, etc) or altitude sickness. As I did not seem to suffer on way up, and I was still feeling a bit off when we were on the train home I’m leaning towards food.

We did end up waking up around 4:30am to watch the sunrise, then we realised Joel’s iPod was on Sydney time and it was actually 3:30am, so I went back to bed. At 4:50am got up again and watched a beautiful sunrise from Fuji.

Sunrise

After packing up our gear we were ready to descend. This was one of the best downhill descents I’ve done. The entire walk up we had seen people coming down what looks like a 50-60 degree slope, it looks scary but can be lots of fun, especially if you are crazy enough to run down it. My family may remember me freaking them out when I decided to run down a steep descent in Switzerland. This was even better than that. The volcanic dirt and rocks are really loose so as soon as you put pressure on them they start to slide. This makes it really hard to stop once you start moving; I usually zigzag down the slope as I run to try to prevent building too much forward momentum.

The dirt that you are running down contains very fine black volcanic dust, which gets into clothing, bags and shoes. My toes in my socks got coated in a black layer of dust that squeezed in through the ventilation holes in my shoes.

On the downhill I had a real scare, I went to check my phone/GPS to find our descent rate, and discovered it was not in it’s belt clip. As I had just covered 200M down a 60° slope, with falling dust and dirt I felt my chances of seeing it again were slim. After yelling out to Joel who was still up slope of me we began searching around us before heading towards each other. Luckily Joel found it half buried in dust just above where he was standing. After this I placed it securely in my pack, however it no longer got as accurate readings, and the phone required serious cleaning back at the hotel.

Finally, on the bus ride back to Gotemba I discovered I had lost my return ticket, so I had to pay an extra 1,500¥.

Overall a great 2 days, I just wish we had been able to make the summit. Hopefully my stomach complaint will be gone by tomorrow when we go by train to Osaka via Matsumoto Castle.

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