03 August 2010

A few more photos for good measure

Here are pictures from my camping trip this past weekend.  Before going, I thought the name the Japan Alps was some sort of folksy hyperbole, an appealing and well-intended, but perhaps dramatic title.  Like Greenland.  I couldn't have been more wrong.

I've never seen mountains like these before, and before climbing Okuhotaka-dake, Japan's third-highest peak, I didn't understand the term mountaineering, or the reason all Japanese hikers have trekking poles.  In my lifetime, I have walked to the top of many mountains, but summiting Okuhotaka was an entirely different experience.  The trail consisted of boulders and hardscrabble with spraypainted suggestions for directions.  Chains were bolted to rock faces in particularly difficult places so that one might pull oneself up or rappel back down.  And I found out later that I took one of the easier ways up!

It was all worth it at the top, though, where, in the thin air, a diminutive Shinto shrine crowned the monumental peak, a reminder of the mystical quality of great heights and wide horizons.

Pictures:


Kamikochi


Okuhotaka-dake

02 August 2010

Photos galore

I've only got ten days left in Japan, and unfortunately I don't expect to have much time to update.  

My blog got off to a good start, but lost momentum down the stretch.  Here are some photos to make up for my lack of diligence:


Koyasan



Kyoto



Hiroshima



Miyajima



Iwakuni



Shimonoseki



Busan



Matsumoto


I've also got pictures of the Japan Alps that I'll try to upload at some point, because the mountains are spectacular.

Thanks for reading, despite the infrequent updates!

Mitchell