Climbing
One of the things I had been thinking about doing during my time here in
There is a long tradition of climbing
As you can see from the photo below I arrived at my starting point (station five) at 7500 ft on the mountain just about at sunset, a little before
The sunset was great, in the opposite direction was the view of the mountain, it was ominously tall and as I looked at it thinking that I had until the sun came back around the earth to hit the top it was a bit sobering. I took photos of myself throughout the climb to show the extreme change in temperatures that happened as the altitude increased. In the photo below I’m just off the bus enjoying the cool mountain air (it was 90+ degrees in
The next photo I took about 30 minutes later shows the moon setting behind the summit
I spent about 30 to 40 minutes hanging out at station five and eating some food for dinner that I had thrown into my pack in
Just after 8PM I decided it was time to hit the trail, so I walked through the assembled mass of climbers (click on the photo and you can see a ton of climbers sprawled out on the ground) at station five and started hiking:
About twenty minutes into the hike I came to the first trail crossing which had this sign with a map of the climbing route, I started at
I took this photo about
Another really random thing happened when the clock struck
As you can see, it’s still warm and I am still not wearing a jacket. It was getting cool enough that when I stopped to drink from my water bottle I’d get a chill. Speaking of water, to combat altitude sickness I went on a crazy hydration regimine. I bought four 2 liter bottles of water and drank one in
There were a lot of Torii (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torii) along the trail, they are part of the religious pilgrimage, there’s also temples on the mountain related to the pilgrimage:
The climb is supposed to take
Here’s one of the crowd bottle necks, it took 10 to 15 minutes to clear this one, I would hit many:
Despite the crowds I was still making great progress up the mountain and it was still pretty warm when I took this photo a little after
About
A little while later I passed through the eight station, at this point I was thinking I would possibly have time to stop and sleep:
The higher I got the crowds got thicker and my progress up the mountain got slower, it was very odd running into crowds you would expect at Grand Central Station in
Many climbers buy a walking/climbing stick like the one you can see in the hands of the climber in front of me. They all have bells attached to them so all night there was the constant ringing of many many bells. Also, each of the mountain huts had a special emblem that they had designed into a metal poker. The huts heat the pokers in fires and climbers pay 100 to 200 yen to have the emblem of the huts burned into their climbing sticks:
You can see the bells on the climbing sticks in this photo, they are tied on with blue and red twine:
I reached 3250 meters (10,660 ft) a little after
Above 10,000 feet it became very cold, it would eventually drop to freezing and maybe a little below freezing. The week before I bought a winter hat and gloves in Tokyo, I put them and my parka on (shortly after I took this photo my headlamp batteries died, thankfully I had a flash light in my pocket and a spare set of batteries in my pack):
About
It was still dark on the mountain, and I was still moving with the crowd:
As you can see there were a lot of places where it was single file:
I took this photo looking back down the mountain, if you click on it to enlarge it you can see the endless train of headlamps the runs all the way back down the mountain:
Rather unexpectedly the crowds thinned and suddenly we were moving. Some of the people around me, worried like I was that we would miss the sunrise literally started running up the mountain. I came to the dragons below and stopped to take their photo, I was so out of it from lack of sleep and the altitude light headedness that I didn’t notice for two or three minutes that they mark the entrance to station ten which is the top of the mountain. I was literally thinking, well this looks like a nice place to stop and watch the sunrise, since I don’t seem to be able to make the top of the mountain. Then I looked up and realized, I was on the top of the mountain!!!! It was about 4:15 AM at this point so it had taken me a little less than 8.5 hours to climb the mountain:
This is the other dragon, there was one on each side of the trail:
The gate shown in this photo marks the entrance to station 10 and the end of the climb:
Looking back through the gate at the horizon, which continued to lighten with the coming sunrise:
I was elated to have made it to the top in time, but I found myself in a rather unexpected situation, there are a series of mountain huts that make up station 10, the trial dumps you right into them and there was a HUGE crowd around the huts. I was at the top of the mountain, stuck in a crowd, 10 people back from the view:
This is one of the huts, serving food and drinks to climbers, behind him was a rest area where people could sit and be warm (if they bought something from the hut):And this is the crowd I was stuck in, I was determined to fight my way through the crowd to get away from the huts:
More crowd:I managed to get through the crowds and then hiked up the rim of the volcano to find a place to watch the sunset, there were a lot of people on the rim as can be seen in the photo below:
The horizon continued to grow brighter:
I settled into a nice spot on the rim with a good view. It was light enough that I was able to take off my head lamp, it was still very cold:
The colors on the horizon continued to be beautiful and the stars began to fade out:
I sat amongst the crowd, eating Oreos and Powerbars for breakfast waiting for the sun to rise (it’s about
Everyone on the mountain was talking in excited hushed tones waiting for the sunrise:
Getting closer:I asked a group of German tourist near me to take a photo of me while we were waiting for the sun, as you can see it was mighty cold up there:
I should point out that many of my photo’s of the sunrise use my zoom lens, this is a zoomed photo:
This is also a zoomed photo:This is what it looked like without the zoom:
As the sky brightened the crater came into view, I was sitting less than 10 feet from the edge:
The size of the crowd also became obvious in the light:
A hush fell over the crowd as it became obvious the sun was about to come up (somewhere between
Here comes the sun:
Without the zoom and with the crowd:
I’ll let the sunrise speak for itself (click on the images for a much better :
The moment the sun was fully risen, someone yelled something in Japanese and the whole crowd responded by cheering Bonzai!!! Bonzai!!!! Bonzai!!! At the top of their lungs. Hearing more than 5,000 people (maybe even 10,000 counting the people below us on the mountain) cheer all at once like that was amazing. I had no idea it would happen, but I did get a photo of the third Bonzai!!!!!:
And then the sun was up, the sunrise was amazingly beautiful and made the hike so worth it:
I asked someone on the mountain next to me to take a photo of me shortly after sunrise, it was still cold up there:
The sun cast a shadow across the crater. As you can see there is a station on the far side of the crater, there are multiple ways to climb up the mountain, that station is the top of another one of the trails. You can also climb around the rim of the crater to that station. One of the big reasons to come up that side of the mountain is that
And here’s the crowd on my side of the mountain:
You can see the collection of buildings at the top of the mountain that make up station ten and how unbelievably crowded the top of the mountain was, there were literally THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE!!!!!! What really jumped out at me was how colorful everyone was, if you click on the picture you can see everyone is wearing bright outdoors clothing, the bright colors really jumped out in the early morning light. After spending a night hiking in total darkness by the light of a headlamp it was really shocking to see all those bright colors after many hours in the dark.
More of the crowd:The Japanese flag you can see on the far side of the crowd was hoisted up at sunrise:
The sun brought warmth to the mountain which was really nice after spending many hours with temperatures in the 30’s:
If you click on this image to enlarge it, you can see what one of the tour groups looks like, this one is hiking along a trail on the far side of the rim:
There were a lot of random reactions to the sunrise, one was that this group pulled out a bunch of flags:
It's getting warmer but still not that warm:
Looking across the crater:
This group was standing on one of the edges of the crater:
I walked quite a ways around the crater, I took this photo a few hundred yards around the crater:
Eventually I came back to the area I had watched the sunrise from, the crowd was hanging out enjoying the sun.
People were continuing their various celebrations of the sunrise, the older generation who make up most of the religious pilgrims were praying and sometimes crying. Among the younger generation people sang, cheered, waved flags, a few of them also cried, and everyone enjoyed the view.
There were two reactions that were hilarious, first there were two guys my age who tore their shirts off and took photos of themselves flexing their muscles with the sun between them (I unfortunately didn’t get a photo). And then there were four guys who put on dress shirts, ties and sport coats. They got dressed up, pulled out musical instruments and started singing and dancing for the sun. If you click on the image below you can see two of the four (one is in his dress clothes):
Everywhere I went I continued to be trapped in the crowd:
While wandering around the top of the mountain I came to a place where I could look back down at the trail I had hiked up. When I saw the crowds I was dumb struck, this is what I had been stuck in for all those hours in the middle of the night. Click on the next couple of images, you have to keep in mind that the people are in many zig zags above each other (I have a later photo that shows the zig zags from below):
Click on this image:
The buildings mixed in with the crowds are the mountain huts and stations on the climbing route (click to get a better view):
I was standing here, looking down at the crowds:
This is the gate at the top of the trail that all those people are trying to get to (also the gate I passed through when I got up):
After looking at the crowds coming up the mountain for a while I continued on around the rim for a while to see what it looked like:
I thought this looked really cool, it looks like the hikers are walking off into the clouds (we were a few thousand feet above the top of a thin cloud layer):
This photo is looking back around the rim at the spot where I watch the sunrise, I was just below and to the right of the gate:
About this time I decided it was time to start down the mountain, it’s supposed to take 4+ hours to get down and given my lack of sleep I figured I had better get moving. This photo shows the top of the descent trail (there are two parallel trails one for going up and one for going down):
Because of my nasty sunburn the week before I had to put on a lot of sunscreen and I also put on a lot of sun protective clothing, like my hat and bandana:
This gives you an idea how step the mountain is, and also shows the cloud layer at a lower altitude:
Here’s the beginning of the downward trail as I started walking down:
These next few photos I took on my way down looking across the mountain at the people who were still climbing up. These are the same people shown in the earlier photos that I took from the top looking down This gives you an idea of the crowds I had to hike through to get to the top of the mountain, it was just as bad when I came up in the dark.
The descent trail also had some pretty good crowds, although it wasn’t packed as tightly as the trail coming up. As anyone who hikes regularly can tell you, hiking down hill is often harder on your body than hiking up. On
It was pretty warm on the way down as you can tell in the photo below, no more jacket, it was hot, sweaty and dusty:
The crowd going down:Looking across at the crowd going up:
A mountain hut lower on the mountain:
The descent trial below me:
The next couple of photos are looking across the mountain at the line of people climbing up towards the top:
The photos that I took from the top of the mountain that looked like the crowd was bunched together were showing these zig zags from below you can see what it actually looks like (click on the image to see more detail):
This photo shows the descent trail below me, if you click on it you can see there are many many switch backs, probably 50+, about this point I was hating life, I’d been hiking for many many hours, my legs were dead from the hike up (at times my legs were shaking), I’d fallen down a number of times due to the loose sand and I was hurting. Every time I looked down I would see all the switch backs and I’d realized how many more I had to go through, I decided not to count and not to look very often:
This photo is about half way down the trail, if you click on the image you can see all the people in the switch backs I've hiked down:
And the switch backs ahead of me can be seen below, the building shown in the photo is a bathroom. The Japanese don’t appear to believe in taking a piss on the mountain the way you would see American hikers do, so you have to pay to use a bathroom at one of the huts like the one shown. I have to say this was one of my least favorite parts of the climb you have to pay a 100 to 200 yen “cleaning fee”. And yet despite the cleaning fee the bathrooms were heinously disgusting:
About
Shortly before I boarded my bus I walked over to the shrine at station five, it’s part of the religious pilgrimage to the top of the mountain. It had been closed the night before when I started, so I took a quick look around:
I boarded a bus back to Shinjuku at noon at station five, and was back in Tokyo by 2:30, when I got back to my apartment about 3PM I took the photo below to show how dirty I was, the look on my face tells you how tired I was:
I had left my apartment the day before about
2 comments:
Ryan, that's frigging awesome.
Great adventure and a great post.
In one of the descent pictures you can see a dozen or so army guys - helmets, packs and all - hiking on the trail. Sure beats running laps in boot camp!
Ridiculously fantastic photos Ryan. I now have to add "Climb Mount Fuji at night" as one of my to dos before dying. Love the pics of the crowded masses at each station as well as the BONZAI!!!! ones during the sunrise. A whole year huh? Wow, get brushing up on that Japanese fast! There is actually a slim chance I might be coming to Tokyo for work for a couple of weeks. Ill let you know.
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