Summer Walks Part 1

September 30, 2006 | Laughing Knees | 12 Comments 

Karasawa Watercolors

(Click on the pho­tos for a new, in­ter­est­ing effect!)

With a whole sum­mer ex­empt from work shades of child­hood sum­mer va­ca­tion crept back into my daily rou­tine, all of four months with more time on my hands than I’ve had in over ten years. Of course, with bills to pay and food to eat and other peo­ple to think of, it wasn’t as if each day came on a sil­ver plat­ter. But it did leave me some time to set out on some walks that I’ve been mean­ing to do here in Japan for quite some time. In July and Au­gust I de­cided to pack my beloved back­pack and take the time to walk in the North and South Japan Alps, to Kara­sawa, the Kurobe­goro Route, and along Houou Three Peaks. I’d been to both Kurobe­goro and Houou be­fore, but the Kurobe­goro vale be­ing one of my fa­vorite alpine ar­eas in Japan, it would be like vis­it­ing an old and lovely friend.

Part of these walks was to see if my knees could han­dle the high ridges still and get up to the heights that I loved so much when I was younger. For the last seven years I’ve slowly adopted the tech­niques of ul­tra­light back­pack­ing (see here, too. This is where I spend a lot of time dis­cussing and learn­ing about re­fin­ing my pack weight, gear, and walk­ing tech­niques) and my pack weight has more than halved since my 18 kilo­grams pack weight from back in the nineties. This brings moun­tain walk­ing so much more plea­sure and I find my­self ac­tu­ally slowl­ing down more to take pho­tographs and some­times to just stand there drink­ing it all in. Still, the trails con­tinue to be steep and the weather un­pre­dictable. The two tents I was us­ing hadn’t yet proved their vi­a­bil­ity in above tree­line con­di­tions so I headed into these walks with some trepidation.

The first se­ries of pho­tos here hail from my first walk from Kamikochi up to Kara­sawa, a two-​​day, easy climb.

Azusa River

This area was first made pop­u­lar in Japan in 1880 by the British alpin­ist Wal­ter We­ston and trav­eller William Gow­land, who named the peaks of cen­tral Hon­shu, “the Japan Alps”. Here the walk along­side the Azusa River is more like an af­ter­noon stroll, with thou­sands of tourists vis­it­ing every year from all over the world.

River Rocks

The wa­ter runs al­most turquoise through a sub­alpine val­ley of larch, beech, and birch. I couldn’t stop paus­ing to watch pris­tine wa­ter gur­gling by; it is such an un­usual sight in Japan.

Karasawa Crag

The climb be­gan in earnest as the crags be­gan to close in. Though cooler than Tokyo, the sun seared my skin like a fur­nace. Japan­ese climbers al­ways carry tow­els around their necks to stave off the sun from their napes and to wipe off the con­tin­u­ous stream of sweat from the high hu­mid­ity. I al­ways love the great va­ri­ety of cre­ative re­sponses to us­ing the tow­els; some wrapped around people’s necks, some wrapped around their heads, some hang­ing like Arab kofias, some even draped around like wed­ding veils…

Karasawa Lily

It is lit­tle de­tails like this that make climb­ing through the forests, when views to the moun­tains re­main lim­ited to peeks through the canopy, bear­able. The only prob­lem is that Japan­ese hik­ing par­ties of­ten tend to mob up to fifty or a hun­dred strong, so stop­ping to ad­mire any­thing in rel­a­tive peace chal­lenges your sense of “get­ting away from it all”.

Karasawa Icefield

Last win­ter brought record-​​breaking snow­fall to Japan, mak­ing it, as one of my friends joy­fully ex­claimed to me, “The best ice-​​climbing con­di­tions in a hun­dred years!” It also meant lots of left­over snow­fields wher­ever the sun couldn’t quite make it.

Climbing the Last Stretch

The fi­nal ap­proach to Kara­sawa lodge and camp­ground was com­pletely blan­keted in snow­fields. Not hav­ing brought my usual in­step cram­pons for such oc­ca­sions, kick­ing steps into the hard snow proved to be some­what of a chal­lenge with my trail run­ners. Nev­er­the­less, even while huff­ing and puff­ing up the steep slope, the whole val­ley rang out with the sound of a Ty­rolean horn. There was some­thing haunt­ing and mag­i­cal in the sound, some­thing wel­com­ing and no­ble at the same time. Nor­mally I’m not a fan of peo­ple caus­ing a racket in the moun­tains, but this was some­thing that fit right in. It gave me the imag­ined hero­ism I needed to fin­ish the last leg of the climb.

Karasawa Clouds

To be greeted by the gods of the clouds was a fit­ting end to the day. Even when you’re beat from push­ing your body all day, you feel small and hum­ble enough to look up and pay rev­er­ence to the source of all that heav­enly light.

Karasawa Campsite

Some kinds of mat­tresses, no mat­ter how much you try to adapt to the sur­face, will never make good beds. Kara­sawa camp­ground, while set in an sub­lime lo­ca­tion and in spite of nearly an hour of fid­dling with tent place­ment and guy­lines, was quite pos­si­bly the most un­com­fort­able camp I’ve ever slept in. All night someone’s skull kept push­ing up into the small of my back.

Karasawa Superboy

Nearly every­one who came across this lit­tle boy on the way down from Kara­sawa stopped to gawk at him and ex­claim amaze­ment at his pack. The pack was ac­tu­ally his grandfather’s, and so big the hip belt wouldn’t close around his waist. While tak­ing a snack break along the side of the trail I over­heard the boy sto­ically an­nounce to his grand­fa­ther that he would walk by him­self, while car­ry­ing his grandfather’s pack, the en­tire fif­teen kilo­me­ters back to the Kamikochi bus ter­mi­nal, and that is ex­actly what he did. Ten kilo­me­ters on, while I was tak­ing an­other break, he promptly walked right past me, look­ing no worse for wear. I have to say I was green with jeal­ously at the de­ter­mi­na­tion and strength of such a young boy. I wished I had been like that, and ex­posed to such ex­pe­di­tions, when I was his age. I mean, he’s done so much walk­ing al­ready at his age that his boots are falling apart, the soles about done in!

I’d been want­ing to visit Kara­sawa for years, but had al­ways been dis­suaded by the sto­ries of the enor­mous crowds. The crowds were def­i­nitely there, but there is a tran­quil­ity and in­ti­macy about the whole val­ley that mutes the hu­man pres­ence. I came home from this walk with a lin­ger­ing affin­ity for all those other peo­ple who made the climb with me. There are some pil­grim­ages that defy your preconceptions.

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