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     21 <h1><a href="/">Chris Bracken</a></h1>
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     35 <h2 class="post-title"><a href="https://chris.bracken.jp/2003/08/biking-japan-2003/">Biking Japan 2003</a></h2>
     36 17 August 2003
     37 <figure><img src="/post/2003-08-17-cycling-in-japan.jpg"
     38     alt="Brodie bike parked beside vending machines in front of restaurant">
     39 </figure>
     40 
     41 <p>The plan was to travel from Osaka north to the Japan Sea, northeast along the
     42 coast to Joetsu, south through the alps to Nagano, then southeast all the way
     43 to Tokyo — a total distance of close to 1200 km, entirely by bicycle.</p>
     44 <p>Unfortunately for me, disaster struck just over half-way, in the form of
     45 150km/h winds and torrential downpours. Typhoon Number 10 ploughed straight
     46 through Japan, following a track from the island of Shikoku through Nagano
     47 before it died out, dumping up to 650mm of rain a day, and flooding out every
     48 town and village in its path.</p>
     49 <p>I arrived in Osaka the night of July 28th and promptly hauled my bike,
     50 panniers, and tools through customs and immigration, across the airport, and
     51 into a hotel. I’m not entirely sure how happy they were to have a
     52 grotty-looking guy assembling his bike in his hotel room overnight, but no one
     53 said anything, and I snuck out around 6am anyway.</p>
     54 <p>It’s unbelievable just how slowly you start and stop when your bike is loaded
     55 with 40kg of gear. Sort of the cycling equivalent of driving an 18-wheeler. The
     56 weather was a scorching 36C, with the humidity hovering around 85%. Over the
     57 first 70km from Osaka Itami Airport to downtown Kyoto, I consumed 8 litres of
     58 Dakara, Boku, Miu, and the oh-so-deliciously named Poccari Sweat, crashed
     59 twice, and got lost every 5 minutes. Took a break in Kyoto, stopping by to take
     60 a look at Sanjuusan Gendo, take some pictures, and chat with Taxi drivers, the
     61 police, and anyone else who wanted to know just what the hell I was doing.</p>
     62 <p>Eventually, after a few more Poccari Sweats and some ramen for lunch, I jumped
     63 on my bike and started the trek to Otsu. Half an hour later, winding my way
     64 slowly uphill, along a narrow shoulder on a bridge 30m above a cemetary, I had
     65 the first major close call of the ride. Fortunately, through a combination of
     66 luck and skill, I deftly avoided flying over the railing and plummeting 30m to
     67 my death. Unfortunately, I did so by launching myself headlong into a traffic
     68 barrier, failing to release my toe-clips, breaking the seat right off the post,
     69 and trashing both my leg and pannier on the pavement in the process. Pretty
     70 sure my leg was broken, I lay there for a few minutes contemplating the
     71 resounding success of my bike trip thusfar while the last of the Poccari Sweat
     72 drained out of my water bottles into my shoes.</p>
     73 <figure><img src="/post/2003-08-17-fireworks-in-fukui.jpg"
     74     alt="Fireworks in Fukui">
     75 </figure>
     76 
     77 <p>Suffice to say that the rest of the day went uphill from there (both literally
     78 and figuratively) and I arrived in Otsu, on the edge of lake Biwa, in one
     79 piece. Annie met me at the JR train station, we ditched the bike in a parking
     80 lot, and rode the train back to Kyoto, where we met up with the entire
     81 complement of Shiga JET Programme teachers at The Hub, an Irish Pub in
     82 Karamachi. After a few beers, some fish &amp; chips and edamame, Annie and Brent
     83 hauled me back to their apartment in Imazu, where they (and I am forever
     84 indebted to them for this) put me up for three days.</p>
     85 <p>Although I didn’t get to go to SummerSonic in Osaka, I did get to pick up my
     86 bike in Otsu, ride 95km back north to Imazu, and spend the evening at Imazu’s
     87 Natsu-matsuri¹ with friends of Annie’s and Brent’s (Josh, Yo, and Hatsumi).
     88 Natsu-matsuris involve many elements, but some of the most important factors
     89 are: fireworks that put ours to shame, music and dancing, traditional Yukata²,
     90 and vast quantites of food and alcohol. After the festival, we dragged
     91 ourselves to Bumblebee Twist, a local bar, and had a few more before eventually
     92 hauling ourselves off to bed to recover.</p>
     93 <p>The next day, we were all invited to a barbeque. The one thing that any
     94 foreigner will immediately notice about a Japanese barbeque is that you can’t
     95 just light the barbeque using zip-lights or lighter fluid. No&hellip; the correct
     96 way to light a barbeque in Japan is for one person to heat the coals with a
     97 torch while the rest stand around fanning the flames with uchiwas³ until the
     98 barbeque, in a moment of glory, bursts into flames and the cooking begins. We
     99 had music, more food, beer and Chu-hai (a sort of cider), snacks, and more
    100 fireworks. It was totally great, even though I was beat over and over at some
    101 kind of pirate game by a three-year-old.</p>
    102 <p>The next morning, I said bye to Annie and Brent, then hurled myself off
    103 northwards up the highway towards the north coast. For 30km, the road winds up
    104 through the mountains over a narrow pass toward Tsuruga. In the scariest
    105 downhill of the entire ride, I plummeted down the winding road, drafting behind
    106 semi-trucks at 70km/h, flying in and out of tunnels and around hairpin turns
    107 for the 8km down into Tsuruga.</p>
    108 <p>Tsuruga sits on the ocean at the edge of the Sea of Japan, at the beginning of
    109 the long road leading northeast to Fukui and Kanazawa. Unfortunately, it also
    110 sits at the beginning of a 95km-long leg of straight uphill running along the
    111 edge of a cliff with no shoulder. Fortunately, it’s some of the most beautiful
    112 riding you could possibly hope for. Even more fortunately, midway through the
    113 ride, as I sat at the side of the road huddling in a tiny corner of shade at
    114 the edge of a cliff, two motorcyclists from Osaka pulled up and offered me
    115 something to drink, a look at their road maps, and some encouragement in
    116 Kansai-dialect. This was reinforced over and over throughout my ride by
    117 children hanging out of car windows waving and shouting &ldquo;ganbare!&rdquo; at the top
    118 of their lungs.</p>
    119 <figure><img src="/post/2003-08-17-lining-up-for-okonomiyaki.jpg"
    120     alt="Lining up for okonomiyaki">
    121 </figure>
    122 
    123 <p>Eventually, I wound my way up through the mountains to Fukui, where I almost
    124 had to spend the night camped on a park-bench by the river. Just when I’d
    125 almost given up hope of finding a hostel, someone walked up to me and in
    126 perfect English, asked if I needed a place to stay for the night. Turns out her
    127 family ran a hotel downtown, and she and her sister had spent several years
    128 living in Australia. Their mom invited me in for tea and snacks after dinner
    129 and we all stayed up late with their little boy, Ryu, yakking about travelling
    130 and good Japanese food.</p>
    131 <p>The next day it was off to Kanazawa, which it turns out has a lot in common
    132 with Kyoto. While it’s much smaller, there were many beautiful old sections of
    133 town. There are temples and shrines everywhere, Kanazawa Castle and Kenrokuen —
    134 probably the most famous Japanese garden in the world. There’s also a crazy guy
    135 dressed in a cape and John Lennon glasses who runs around dragging people to
    136 convenience stores. Too embarassed not to buy an ice cream treat from the
    137 shopkeeper, I grabbed some ice-cream mochi balls, borrowed the phone and set up
    138 reservations for Nagano.</p>
    139 <p>Because of the typhoon, I ended up doing the rest of the trip by train. I found
    140 a bike shop and spent the day yammering away in pseudo-Japanese to the little
    141 old grandma and grandpa who owned the shop. Turns out that he had done almost
    142 the exact same bike trip about 40 years ago! He had also cycled across
    143 Australia and much of the rest of Japan. Pretty amazing! If I hadn’t found
    144 them, my bike would probably be lying in a crumpled heap in a landfill right
    145 now. It took hours, be we did manage to pack everything into an unbelievably
    146 small bag that I could haul onto the train with me.</p>
    147 <p>From Kanazawa, I caught the train to Nagano, taking local lines and limited
    148 express trains the whole way. Nagano was the site of the 1998 Winter Olympic
    149 Games, but has since reverted to its pre-Olympic small-town feel. It was a
    150 beautiful place to visit, hidden away in the Japanese alps, surrounded by
    151 Japanese hot springs and ski hills. I can’t wait to visit in winter. Nagano’s
    152 biggest feature is probably Zenkouji, a Buddhist Temple which houses the first
    153 Buddhist images to come to Japan from the Asian mainland. Underneath the temple
    154 is a pitch-black maze of tunnels that you can wander into, pushed along by wave
    155 after wave of school-children on field trips, people on pilgrimmages, and
    156 curious tourists. It’s almost impossible to tell just how fast you’re moving,
    157 or how far you’ve gone&hellip; just disembodied voices in the dark. Eventually you
    158 arrive at the “key to salvation”, which you can’t see, but you can feel. A few
    159 shakes and rattles, then you’re swept away down the tunnels again.</p>
    160 <p>From Nagano, I caught the Asama Shinkansen into Tokyo. At 280km/h the trip
    161 takes just about two hours. The train tore through the edge of the hurricane at
    162 breakneck speed and we were in Tokyo on schedule to the minute. You can’t help
    163 but love the Japanese train system.</p>
    164 <figure><img src="/post/2003-08-17-akasaka.jpg"
    165     alt="Akasaka at night">
    166 </figure>
    167 
    168 <p>Met up with Yasuko in Tokyo, and we spent the week bumming around town and
    169 catching all the sights: Akasaka, Shinjuku, Shibuya, Odaiba, the Tsukiji fish
    170 market. Took a side trip to the art gallery a few hours away in Hakone
    171 Prefecture where a mix of European and Japanese art is on display. There were
    172 some absolutely amazing pieces of Japanese pottery in their collection. Back in
    173 Tokyo, we had the chance to see a Kabuki play. I wasn’t entirely sure what to
    174 expect, but it was great. The most striking thing is perhaps the movement. It
    175 was absolutely incredible. I wish I were able to describe it, but the best I
    176 can do is recommend that if you’re even in Tokyo, you go see a Kabuki play!</p>
    177 <p>I returned home on August 17th. Ate breakfast, lunch and dinner in Tokyo,
    178 jumped on the plane at 6pm and had another breakfast and lunch. Arrived back in
    179 Canada 8 hours before I left, and had lunch and dinner again, for a total of
    180 seven meals on the 17th. Not bad! It was a pretty wild and crazy trip, but it
    181 was one of the best trips I’ve ever taken. I can’t wait to go back.</p>
    182 <p>Thanks to everyone who put me up along the way! In particular, Annie &amp; Brent,
    183 and Yasuko! You guys are the best!</p>
    184 <h3 id="glossary">Glossary</h3>
    185 <ol>
    186 <li><em>Natsu-Matsuri:</em> every village’s traditional summer festival, usually in
    187 early- to mid-August, near Obon, the Day of the Dead.</li>
    188 <li><em>Yukata:</em> traditional light cotton kimonos that come in a variety of colours
    189 and patterns.</li>
    190 <li><em>Uchiwa:</em> Large, flat traditional Japanese fan.</li>
    191 </ol>
    192 </article>
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