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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

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japan day three – the tunnels begin

Crows came in the morning and stole the Boy’s Y150 apple, and his melon bread. At least they weren’t bears. After chasing them away we got moving, an earlier start today. First thing was the pedal up and out of the river valley, then up hill and up hill and more up hill. And the longest tunnel I’ve ever seen.

 

Bears?

 

Through the hills we cruised through farmland, lots of rice paddies and melon farms and flower gardens (with so many different sorts of flowers – petunias, pansies, marigolds, tulips, poppies, orchids, irises, lupins, all planted through gardens and along the side of the road). Soon we were surrounded by snowy mountains.

 

Cycling up hills

 

 

Farmland

 

Location: Lake Katzurazawa – Kamifurano, Hokkaido, Japan
Distance cycled: 69km

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day two – cuckoos and green trees

A nice sleep-in had us on the road at the incredibly early hour of 10am or so (after being fed coffee by the nice man at the campground).

It rained on us occasionally, and we rode along nice sweeping roads, through farmland, and into hillier terrain. We met our first tunnel, and were pleasantly surprised by how polite the traffic was – even though the speed limit was only 50km/hr, everyone was giving us at least half a lane of space.

 

 

Lots of cuckoos and cicadas around, and rivers, bridges, and workmen with flags (it would be so easy to pose as a construction worker in Hokkaido, all you’d need is a red flag and a white flag). In the afternoon we started working our way uphill, and were rewarded with a long and sweeping downhill, sitting on the speed limit (40km/hr) and flying down the smooth deserted road.

We found our campsite at around 5.30pm, after finding a large tyrannasaurus rex, and a Japanese cycle tourist. We noted the large warning signs about bears in the area, then not long after going to bed we heard crashing about in the bushes next to our bikes. We carefully unzipped the tent and stuck our head round the corner… good, whatever it was, it was hidden by the bikes. Couldn’t be too big. We pointed our headlamps about for a better look, and finally caught sight of a foxy tail. Aha! Cheeky fox! We chased him away, and tied our food bags up in a tree. Going back to bed we heard the fox crash back up to the bikes again, then crash away empty handed.

Location: Hayakita – Lake Katzurazawa, Hokkaido, Japan
Distance cycled: 92km

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the start of the cycle tour – day one in hokkaido, japan

We arrived in Tokyo Narita airport at 7am. After being handed pieces of paper informing us we were quarantined (thanks to coming from a filthy swine-flu infected country) we were let loose on the Tokyo subway system with a bike and two stripy bags full of panniers and camping gear. After successfully picking up Alex’s bike, and cramming it into a bike bag, we set off for Haneda airport.

By the time we got to the roof top viewing platform at the airport, I was already sold on Japan. A viewing platform! On the roof! And it was sunny, and there was tasty food everywhere, and a man on a train platform had even given us candy. Tasty candy! (Yes, I accept candy from strangers).

After our JAL flight to Sapporo, we piled out of the baggage claim area and were found by the Boy. And then spent several hours assembling the bikes, and tweaking Alex’s bike to fit him, and all of that fun sort of stuff. We were kept nourished by food from vending machines (which was disturbingly tasty).

 

 

It was looking suspiciously wet outside, and as we set off into the dark it started raining on us. Oh well. 22 kilometres we were damp, and quite tired, and after finding the campground we quickly collapsed and fell fast asleep.

Location: Chitose Airport – Hayakita
Distance cycled: 22km

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the grand bike tour of 2009

Well, it’s nearly time…

 

 

Phase One – Japan
31 May – 17 June 2009

Phase One will be undertaken with myself, Alex, and a mysterious character known only as The Boy (who may or may not be my brother). The advantage to this set-up is that Alex and myself speak no Japanese, whereas The Boy has considerable kanji skills. But on the other hand, The Boy has not left Australia since he was 9, and has not done much camping since then either. Whereas Alex and I have spent lots of time travelling round and living in foreign countries. And camping.

We’ll be cycling around Hokkaido, and then Alex and I will go back to Tokyo to jump on a plane to Europe, while The Boy continues cycling around Japan.

 

 


Phase Two – Europe
18 June – 7 Nov 2009

Phase Two has Alex and I arriving in Dublin, meeting up with my mother, then travelling around Ireland for the next 10 days or so, hopefully getting a few days of cycling in. Then we’ll somehow catch the ferry over to Wales. Ride through Wales to London then Dover, take the ferry to France, then who knows what will happen! There are friends to meet up with in Europe, and friends who’ve mentioned interest in riding sections with us… so we shall see.

It’s hard to fit in all the places we’d like to go, and things we’d like to do, especially with the strong Euro smiting our plans left, right and centre. Doing a side trip to Iceland would be excellent. So would going from Finland to Estonia via St Petersburg. And drifting further east into Romania. And a trip down south into Greece! And more of Italy! And Spain! And Portugal! And Scotland! But for the sake of time and money these sections will probably be left out.

 


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