Japan is an entire country of mountains. I think the thing that makes Mount Fuji so iconic is that it stands alone, not in amongst loads of other mountains. Everywhere we went on Shikoku we were surrounded by mountains. We drove up them, down them and through them. We stopped and admired them. We gazed in awe.
This was our view from the restaurant the first full day when we stopped for lunch:
So many mountains ... so we just had to climb the biggest one.
Mount Ishizuchi is the tallest mountain in western Japan, just short of 2,000 metres.
A seven minute cable car ride takes you probably about half way.
then you hike up to a shrine, and back down into the dip. This chart shows that point at 1300m, from where you go almost straight up:
This friendly sign give the 'rules for hikers', stuff like taking your litter home and being careful on the mountain:
In places there are these climbing chains that allow you to cut off some of the meandering route (if you're up to the climb):
It was very early April. We did not anticipate how much snow might remain on the mountain. The wooden steps were buried in places:
... until the path disappeared altogether. This is the point at which we admitted defeat and turned back. We were not well equipped, the last cable car was at 5 and we were not going to reach the top:
It was an exhilarating adventure just to look down from what felt like the top of the world.
View from the castle across the city of Matsuyama:
Go for the food ... stay for the mountains.
It's fantastic to be above the clouds and look down on birds flying.
ReplyDelete