This weekend I made a trek (ok, a short train ride) to Tsukuihama to walk, climb, slide, maybe fall, and talk my way around a few mountains with a few good friends! We may have taken the longest route to our destination, we may have walked towards the same mountain peak at least two times, we may have gotten turned around in a tiny little town, and we quite possibly could have seen some strange stone-work, but we most definitely had a fabulous day!
As you can see, it was a beautifully clear day! We left Tsukuihama Station and headed toward Mt. Miura-Fuji. Last January I hiked Mt. Miura-Fuji with a couple girlfriends. This year, we took a slightly different route.
The beginning of our hike was nothing but fields and sun!
(Note: All pictures were taken on my phone,
so not as good (or bad, depending on whether or not
I have the camera on the right setting, sigh) as they would be on my camera).
And....Fuji-san!!!!!
-I kept expecting to see two perfectly round blue eyes peek at me from under those cabbage leaves...oh, dear Kimberly, I remember you fondly, with your Xavier Roberts stamp on your behind, and your way too easy to fray, yarn hair, and all those cool sweaters my grandmother knitted for you.
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The view from Takeyama.
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At the end of our Takeyama Hiking Course we stopped for lunch at Junko's house. She had ozoni prepared for us. Yum! The boys toasted mochi for us and we slid that into a warm bowl of broth, veggies, chicken, and fish cakes. Oh My Word! This was the perfect meal after a great hike. And, oh how I love green tea!
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A short walk through the city of Tsukuihama, a left turn at a park, a right turn after the park, a curious look-see over a fence or two, and eventually we found the incredibly steep trail up the mountain.
We made our way to the end of the trail. It was a great hike! Most hikes I tread upon are easy enough for the 6 and 8 year-old legs in my little group to handle. This hike was steep enough in a few places that we used a rope to help us up the incline. Definitely not for the kiddos. Not a picture-taking trail either. It was actually nice to get out and wander around without constantly thinking, how can I make that shot look good, which angle is best to look at that flower, how can I get a picture of that without all those people in it? I could just....walk....breathe...be....
The end of the trail had such a tranquil little collection of statues, green with moss.
Poor guy had a broken leg that someone propped back up.
Just down the street we found a six foot tall Ebisu. Just makes you wanna smile, doesn't it?
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Some of the statues here were like none I've seen before. They were stunning!
Strange to see a cross in the middle of a cemetery here.
The kannon Mackenzie and I have said, "we HAVE to go see that sometime", every time we went past it on the train. I may not know the most direct way to get back there, but we can figure it out, I'm sure.
Behind the kannon was a section of Jizo dedicated to children. There is a somber line of praying statues, some covered, some uncovered, some with flowers, some with toys, all placed there with love.
Is this Modok? Maybe a sad Modok instead of angry?
Awesome hands! Huge hands...like five feet tall.
Sleeping Buddha
There was a row of statues toward the back of the park. This guy had pretty cool facial features. Each one seemed to be holding something different and had a different expression on his face. There were ten in a row.
This guy had a baby lion in his hands.
The line of ten.
I'm very thankful for the beautiful weather and therapeutic conversation! This was a refreshing first hike of the year! BTW...13.5 miles!!!
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