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japan day eight – and so it rained

It rains on and off overnight, and we get up to dampness. First up is the climb up and away from Akan Lake, and the rain starts in earnest. As we pedal uphill in the rain many Japanese military vehicles go past us, and I get a few waves and thumbs up. Finally the climb is over, and we descend in a downpour with numb hands. Well mine were getting numb until I switched to mittens. We pass a sign that says it’s 10oC, then enter Toshikaga and huddle in the Seicomart, where all who enter are greeted with deranged cheeriness, and we squelch around in bike shoes that resemble swimming pools for feet.

 

Riding in the rain

 

Fooded up, we cycled onwards to Lake Kussharo, where the proprietor takes pity on us and drops the price of a cabin, so we can afford to stay warm and dry for the night (fronting onto the lake too – luxury… although it’s just a small wooden box with a gas heater, it was home to us). We quickly turn the place into a sauna with wet clothes hanging everywhere. After a dip in the open air onsen by the lake, some dry clothes, and washing my hair in the sink, I almost feel human again.

 

Our log cabin – home sweet hut

 

Location: Akan – Lake Kussharo, Hokkaido, Japan
Distance cycled: 60km

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japan day seven – hunting for electricity and wireless

One of the trials of a being a techno-geek cycle-camper is finding power to charge all your gizmos and whatsits, and wireless to access the internet. After packing up and leaving the campground early on, we wandered round Akan township, looking for power. No good location appeared (we were chased away from outside a town office when it opened, and the bathrooms, although warm, weren’t the best spot to hang out) showed itself until we stumbled across the free foot onsen that had both power and wireless available from it. The only downfall was that it was not the warmest spot in the world – lukewarm spring would have been a more accurate descriptor than hot spring.

 

Akan Lake

 

Once fully charged we leave the onsen and find food at Lawson (similar to 7-11) down the main street – it has hot food, tables and chairs, AND power and good wireless! Paydirt. We sit on our laptops, buying more food occasionally.

 

Napping with bike and lake

 

Eventually we feel obliged to move on, and arriving at the campground we find they’ve now opened, and we pay Y630 each for what was free the night before (and their laundry still isn’t open). But at least the onsen there is toasty warm now. This makes up for the raven which comes to steal our matches while we’re sitting warming our feet.

Location: Akan Lake, Akan National Park, Hokkaido, Japan
Distance cycled: 10km (rest day)

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japan day six – hellooooo japanese army

During the night we’d heard a huge thunderclap overhead and then a veritable downpour. Thankfully our shelter was relatively waterproof, and we were all as dry as we had been last night. Which was not particularly.

We cycled off at about 6.30am, winding around the Lake, then climbed up through rain over the range to descend into fog. Finally the fog cleared, and we emerged into flat dry(ish) farmland.

Another town stop for food at 42km, and we started churning through kilometres, cruising through hilly farmland and being passed by Japanese army trucks constantly, going in both directions.

 

Cycling through Akan National Park

 

I start contemplating the fact that having a new set of bicycle panniers is just like moving into a new house. Suddenly you have a whole lot of new cupboards to fill, and you’re not quite sure where to put everything. So you do the best you can, and shove everything away. And initially you can never remember where you put things, and maybe some things weren’t stored in the best place. But gradually you develop a system, and learn exactly where everything belongs, and can always put your hand just on what you need.

With around 100km under our belt we start the final climb up into the hills around Akan National Park, and then the descent to the Lake. We’re now on a run of three closed campgrounds – at least the Akan one seems to be getting ready to open for Summer, with running water and open washroom facilities – although sadly their hot showers, laundry and common room are not available.

 

Foot onsen!

 

To make up for this though, they have a foot onsen! So we sit and eat dinner with our feet in mildly warm water, then set up camp in the trees at the back, hiding from the onslaught of mosquitoes and bugs.

Location: Lake Shikaribetsu – Akan Lake (Akan National Park), Hokkaido, Japan
Distance cycled: 138km

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japan day five – up then down then up then down

One of the most baffling things about Hokkaido is the fact that the sun rises at 3.40am. And sets at 6.30pm. I thought I must have been imagining things, the first time I woke up in daylight at 4am. But no, it really is light that early. A quirk of the Japanese single time zone and lack of daylight savings.

 

Waterfalls in Daisetsuzan

 

We head back to Sounkyo to stock up on food, then head out and uphill, through tunnels and past waterfalls, and past snow, and roadworks, and finally to the pass.

 

At the pass

 

After lunch at the pass we fly downhill to Nukabira, an onsen (hot spring!) town. We have a brief internet and food interlude, then start the climb to Lake Shikaribetsu. An ascent of around 600 metres in 9km has us in great-granny gears the whole way, as we pass through the Nukabira ski resort, where deers graze on the snow-free ski runs.

 

Pushing uphill

 

It starts raining as we start rolling downhill, and by the time we reach the lake we are saturated. The campground is closed, so we join the other stealth campers and set up in a picnic shelter. At least we have running water this time, and there’s an owl.

 

Downhill in the fog

 

Location: Sounkyo – Lake Shikaribetsu, Hokkaido, Japan
Distance cycled: 89km

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japan day four – and so they cycled all night

We breakfast to the serene sounds of cicadas and the Japanese military training with heavy artillery. A lazy morning, we’re on the road at 8.15am, cycling along quiet farm roads with millions of cicadas singing to us. Occasional tractors are working in the fields, or people out whipper-snippering or hoeing.

 

Morning camp

 

We reach Biei for first lunch and a food shop at 11am. 7-11 is generally the food shop of choice, it’s barely more expensive than a supermarket, and they’ll warm things up for you too. And they’re more common than supermarkets, and have washrooms.

Another lunch at 2pm, then the heat starts to get to me (only 25oC or so, but I’m fresh from a Canadian winter and just not used to it). I have prickly heat on my hands, wrists and legs, and feel nauseous and crampy. Then the Boy loses a screw on his cleat. We fix it, and keep cycling through town and farmland on mediocre roads.

At around 100km we reach our campsite. It’s closed, with no hope of stealth camping. I curl up on the road and drink some Pocari Sweat (a Gatorade-like drink) and have a chocolate macadamia. Apparently this is what I was needing all along, as suddenly I feel fine. We cycle on to the next campsite, just 10km away. It’s closed for the winter still, with no running water and a mosquito plague. Well the next one is only 7km away…. we push on to the tourist town of Sounkyo in Daisetsuzan National Park, and have a bento box dinner at the 7-11, surrounded by tourists in fancy hotels, and huge impressive looking cliffs, and a roaring river.

 

Entering Daisetsuzan National Park

 

After filling ourselves up at the 7-11, we head on to the campsite in the dark. It’s a parking lot. But the next one is only… 200 metres away! It’s closed, but we wheel our bikes in and set up with our sleeping bags and mats under the picnic shelter. And fall fast asleep.

Location: Kamifurano – Sounkyo, Hokkaido, Japan
Distance cycled: 121km