Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Along the tracks
On Sunday I went down to Gotsu for the annual Kagura Festival, but after a few hours indoors I couldnt stand it any longer... outside was another beautiful clear day and as we have had so few this month and as the good weather was not likely to last, I headed off for another walk.
I got off the train in Kawahira and headed up the tracks.
This section of the river has no road on this bank, and as it was 90 minutes or so till the next train I reckoned I could get along the tracks before it came.
There are a few abandoned farms along this side of the river....
Closer to Kawado I passed by a place that has fascinated me since I moved here, a hidden valley. The entrance is very narrow and choked with bamboo and undergrowth and there appears to be no trail in, but one of these winters when the undergrowth has died back Im going to try and find a way in...
Though its the longest river in West Japan, the Gonokawa is not well known but I have yet to see a river in Japan that is more beautiful.
I arrive safely into Kawado without encountering the train.
Kawado, the bustling commercial hub of Sakurae Town.......
Monday, November 22, 2010
Second fall colors walk part 2
After my brief exploration of the abandoned school I carried on into Kawahira.
There is not much to Kawahira,... a couple of temples, a shrine, a koban, a railway station,.... no shops.......
I climbed up to the local shrine, a place we have visited several times for matsuri.
Down from the shrine I get to the station where I have to wait 10 minutes for the next train. 5 trains a day in each direction. I get off next station up the line, Kawado.
Heading across the bridge to my village I notice it is starting to cloud over.........
For a final blast of Fall color hanging down a neighbors wall......
Sunday, November 21, 2010
School haikyo
Coming into Kawahira I stopped in to explore the old abandoned school
There are hundreds and hundreds of abandoned schools in the countryside of Japan. As the population has fled to the cities student numbers decrease until a community can no longer sustain a school.
Many of them get used as community centers.
This one had some machine tools and so was used for something, and also used for storage of agricultural equipment, straw, etc.
There were many holes in the roof and consequently the floor was in bad condition so I didnt try to explore upstairs.
A few more years and this building will collapse in on itself. Maybe a few years later it will be bulldozed. A few years after that they will maybe try and get it listed as a World Heritage Site.
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Second Fall colors walk
9 a.m. and the sun starts to burn off the mist that fills the valleys and blankets us all night long. It promises to be a fine day as I head across the river to catch the train downstream to Gotsu Honmachi where my mountain walk begins.
I head out of Honmachi by the ancient San'indo, the road that once connected the capital in Asuka with this region. Then I head up the slope of Star Mountain.
It takes less than an hour to reach the pass at 300 meters, and from then on its downhill all the way to the river at Kawahira.
I love these mountain roads. More like wide hiking paths as there are no vehicles.
The forest and vegetation is thick, and only rarely can I catch glimpes of a vista, so for Fall colors best to look up.
There are no villages up here in the mountains, nor hamlets, only the occasional isolated homestead. If 2 or 3 are in close proximity then for sure they are relatives. A different breed of people. More independent, more self-sufficient.
Maybe half the homesteads are now empty.
About halfway down there is a small shrine on the hillside across from a big Gingko tree. When I first walked this way some years ago I stopped in at the shrine, as is my habit, and found it fairly dilapidated, so I was surprised this time to hear the sound of hammering and power tools as it appears it is being renovated. I would guess there are about 6 families left in this area, so it is good to see that they still care about the shrine.
Getting lower in altitude the valley starts to widen a little and I reach the "suburbs" of Kawahira.
To be continued
Labels:
fall,
gotsu honmachi,
Iwami,
kawahira,
walk
Friday, November 19, 2010
Fall colors walk
As the sun burned off the mist early this morning the day promised to be fine, and as it has been pretty lousy weather for a few weeks I decided to get out and try and photograph some Fall colors.
I had to meet someone in Oda City in the afternoon, so I decided to head up early and spend a few hours exploring the Honmachi district.
Honmachi means "oldtown" and there are a half dozen or so temples and 3 or 4 shrines to explore.
There wasnt a lot of color about, but enough to satisfy me.
Going upriver on the train home the setting sun highlighted the mountaintops so I resolved to head up into the mountains for a walk tomorrow.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Mine-Ji
Mine-Ji is an ancient mountain temple looking down on Unnan Town in the Okuizumo district south of Lake Shinji.
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
The views from Fukuoka Tower
From 123 meters above ground the observation deck of Fukuoka Tower offers stunning 360 degree views.
Right down below in the Momochi Beach and Marizon, a pier with expensive restaurants and a wedding chapel.
Looking up the coast towards downtown. Numerous hi-tech companies have buildings in the Momochi district. The largest high-rise visible is the Hilton Hotel, formerly the JAL Seahawk.
Fukuoka City is home to about one and a half million people. Ranked 14th in the worlds best places to live, most people seem to live in apartments.
Bombed heavily towards the end of the war, like most Japanese cities there is little left of prewar architecture.
Another view of the Hilton.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Phallic Hokora
Hokora are small roadside shrines found all over Japan.
Often the doors are closed, but sometimes they are open and one can see the shintai which is usually a stone, sometimes a small statue.
This one I found in a village in southern Okayama is obviously a small fertility shrine.
They were much more common in earlier days, though one can still find them in the countryside.
Each carving would have been made by a local person to ask the kami for a baby.
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Some views of Kobe in yellow
A series of 4 manhole covers from the city of Kobe.
Located an a narrow strip of land between the sea and the mountains.
The top left design shows the Kobe Port Tower and the Maritime Museum, both of which I have bloogged about previously. The top-right design shows the port of Kobe.
The view from Meriken Park
More views of the tower, one of the ropeways up Rokko Mountain, the bridge to Rokko Island, and various other sights I have no idea what...
Labels:
drainspotting,
kobe,
manhole
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