Nemoto-san, November 4, 2001

(organised by Paul Reay)

 

Report by Iulia, photos below by Shinji and Bjoern.

 

nemoto-san - history of a rainy day

i'm iulia. it is shortly after midnight, sunday. we should wake up in 4 hours but bjoern says "that rain is making 'tip-tip' on the roof, i cannot fall asleep". i remind him that he might have to drive in the morning and this works.
it is morning and it is raining cats and dogs. i just had a discussion about responsibility, rainy paths, had no coffee and slept about 1 hour. i'm in the right mood to bite someone's head off. "someone" knows me well and manages to reroute my "negative energy" into "ambition and prove yourself". it works. i eventually decide to go to the 7/11 [not further but i would never say it loud]. the phone rings. stephan calls bjoern to say that he stays home. he might regret it later he says but by now going back to bed seems the perfect solution to save the day. i open the door to go. the phone rings again. it cannot be souad because she already adhered to stephan's party saturday. it is masako. she feels bad and cannot come. at least she doesn't blame the weather. i was right: bjoern must drive. in order to scare the rain i cover the backpack with the rain cover and leave my sunglasses home.
we reach the "usual 7/11" thinking about postponing the walk for the next weekend. chisa and shinji support bjoern's slogan "weather forecast is sunny for the rest of the day". [this club manages to attract all kinds of hopeless optimists!] christoph just bought new shoes for the trip, andreas looks enthusiastic. i give up; i'm thinking: 'am i the only one who fears the rain, muddy paths, slippery chains, etc. what the heck!? i'm old'. we keep a moment of silence for the people who preferred the warmth of their beds to the wet and cold morning and go. the rain is weakening in a direct ratio to the distance between tsukuba and us. turning on route 294 we see the mountains behind nikko and some blue sky.

what a splendid sunny morning! we are on the way to conquer the unknown - nobody from the club [almost as usual] was ever to nemoto-san. thank you paul for choosing this location. i got my hot coffee and i feel full of energy and kindness. i can forgive everything! even bjoern who took his damaged hiking poles because he doesn't want to use mine. but up there was decided that today is a bad day... for hiking poles. bjoern's poles gave up and he must take the club's poles.
just before the start there was a map of the hiking courses in the area. we stared at it but obviously we did not understand much. we have two maps we trust and bjoern - in who we also trust - to lead us. we are as excited as children to wonderland. bjoern tries in vain to keep serious. the hike starts with a lot of enthusiasm, jokes, ropes and some red signs. 4 of us, veterans form ryujinkyo, cannot ignore the red signs. fortunately from time to time the path is marked with black signs reading "hiking course". of course in katakana.
even if there are no thrilling parts [if ignoring the perspective of wet cold shoes] the walk is far from boring. the path changes from one side of a small creek to the other and quite often we have to choose the right boulder, or the less rotten part of an old wooden bridge. the forest is a brilliant collection of coloured leafs. and it's raining! red and yellow leafs are raining on us. chisa is putting on sunscreen - japanese people are prepared for any event.
going through the narrow valley we cannot escape the sensation of similarity with ryujinkyo. after roughly 2 hours - the last 20 minutes being a nice climb on gravel - we reached a point where according to our map we should turn right. two elderly - and obviously more experienced - japanese hikers claim that the right direction to follow is left. they cannot know what they are saying! of course we turn right! well, don't even think we are lost. ryujinkyo... we are not even on the wrong mountain. then, why should we go in the wrong direction? in the good twmc tradition we don't think much about it but go further. only bjoern - the delegate organizer - tries to understand what is the difference between the map in his hands and the paths we were following. and then we discover the chains much earlier than expected - alas we were already somewhere else than we believed to be.
it seems that sometimes the signs in japanese are unclear. we discovered a sign saying something about a peak - i could read only the altitude, 1197 m - on the very peak we were staying on. shinji - paying less attention to the sign or being too polite to say in front of us "what the hell! we're on the wrong peak" - translated as being about the very ground under our feet. it was wrong. the sign indicates where to look for that peak, i suppose. but the first rule on our club is "don't take anybody [thing?] serious." therefore we kept going - anyway it was so windy and chilly there... 1 cm between the index finger and thumb. the chains made a good exercise and the view of the mountain chains up to nantai-san covered with some snow was splendid. we all entered the old shrine (nemoto-san shrine ?) - hoping that it will hold a little bit longer and we will not be the "legendary last hikers who visited it". actually the wooden carvings inside are worth seeing and the bell at the entrance has a nice sound. i did not miss the occasion.
the two japanese hikers - who had no idea about this mountain - meet us again. well, at least they knew what shrine this one was (indeed nemoto-san shrine). bjoern had to admit that our trusty maps were wrong and we did the chains again. at least this allows us to blackmail him for a shortcut in the end of the day. why going for 1,5 h more when we did the exercise on chains twice?
in the end of day everybody was happy. christoph for his new shoes did not hurt him too much. andreas for his leak of exercise did not slow him. chisa and me for the sunny day. shinji was not so happy because some of us decided that if we meet a bear he would be the tastiest... bjoern should be happy because with all his trust in the map we did not manage to transform nemoto-san into a new ryujinkyo. he took a picture of the wooden map we ignored that morning. but it would be of no use. by now twmc went to nemoto-san and according to tradition each walk should be a discovery adventure.
oh, i almost forgot. one of the club's poles was completely unhappy. it gave up shortly before the end. anyway, six happy children went back home - inside six tired adult bodies - looking forward to the next happy days with the club.
thank you paul for organizing, bjoern for leading, shinji for the onsen and all the rest for the nice company.

statistics: 6 people, two japanese (chisa, shinji), two germans (bjoern, andreas), one austrian (christoph), one romanian (iulia); two broken hiking poles; thousand pictures again...

 


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