If you remember way back, I made a list of goals for Japan right after I got here. I have revisited it a few times, but that first goal was always just hanging there, being unattainable. WELL...I went last weekend and CLIMBED MT FUJI! Goal #1, complete!
Let's go through the weekend.
Friday...I left school early and took my final kanji test. And then Kim, Carolyn and I drove to Kawaguchiko. There are a few trails that lead up Mt. Fuji, but we chose the most popular, the Yoshida Trail, which starts from Kawaguchiko city in Yamanashi Prefecture. We stayed at a really convenient hotel right near Kawaguchiko station that had free parking for us.
Saturday...Fuji-Q Highland! It's an amusement park with some crazy roller coasters. I was too scared to go on most of them, but Kim and Carolyn convinced me to go on one that goes from 0 to 172km/hr in 1.8 seconds. It then loops around, goes straight up and comes straight back down. I screamed my head off, and I think every four-letter word I know came out of my mouth at one point. But it was fun. I am really not good at drops. I prefer loops. We also rode the log flume that has a splash so big, they suggest you purchase a poncho prior to riding. I am very glad I got a poncho. After FujiQ we went to Lake Kawaguchi to take pretty pictures of Fuji and the water.
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Me with one of the FujiQ characters, "Blue" |
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The only ride I rode. It was terrifying. |
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Fuji, Lake Kawaguchi and a swan boat. |
Sunday...check out of the hotel, bus up to the 5th station!!! We
started our climb at the 5th station which is about halfway up. We ate
lunch first, bought a few more drinks, cans of oxygen in case of
altitude sickness, postcards and stamps to mail from the top, a few more
snacks, and then we CLIMBED! We started about 1ish, I think. I had
reserved us beds at a lodge at the 7th station so we got there at about
4pm and rested a bit, ate dinner, watched the sun set, etc.
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At the 5th station. |
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This way up! |
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Our lodge, Tomoe-kan. |
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inside of the lodge. |
Monday...At midnight, we got up and continued our climb, using our handy
dandy headlamps since the trail is not lit at all. At this point, my
left hip was not cooperating at all. Like grinding and really, really,
really painful, so we were pretty slow moving and did not make it all
the way to the top for the sunrise, but we did make it to station 8.5
where we saw one of the most amazing sunrises ever. We were incredibly
lucky with weather, so it was dry and clear and not too cold, although
it was really windy, like almost get blown off the mountain windy. But
seriously, we could have been climbing in the rain. Or it could have
just been cloudy. It was neither.
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8th station! |
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first signs of sun |
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more sun |
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and beautiful! |
Monday (still). After sunrise, we continued up to the top. We
probably got to the top at 7ish? I wasn't really checking my watch, but
sunrise was 4:37. The top was SO windy!!! It was sort of cold, but if
we were moving, it was not a problem for me. I bought a hot chocolate
and ate my breakfast. I also got some top of the mountain only
souvenirs. We checked out the crater, found the post office and mailed
our postcards (we were lucky! the post office opened July 14...we were
there on the 16) and then began our descent.
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crowded. |
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At the top!!!!! |
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Looking down at the people climbing up |
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I made it!! |
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this is pretty much everything on the top. If you walk around the crater, you can get to a post office and there is some sort of building, but mostly, this is it. |
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crater |
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post office! |
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Normally you have this kind of view from an airplane. Well, I was on top of a mountain. |
Monday (still still). We started down at about 9am. We got to the
bottom at about 1. And let me say, those were quite possibly the worst
four hours of my life. The way down is just zig zags back and forth of
rocky, slippery paths. Thank GOD it was not raining at all because as
it was, I fell at least 10 times. My knees hurt a bit, but not nearly
as much as I expected, and not nearly as much as my hips. It was also
pretty windy on the way down, so sometimes we just had to stop and
protect our faces from the dust pelting us. When I got to the bottom,
my eyes, ears and nose were full of Fuji dust.
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snow on the way down. |
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this is what the whole way down looked like. rocky slopes. |
Monday (still still still) So 1pm...been awake for 11 hours at this
point. We ate a quick lunch at the 5th station and then took the bus
back to Kawaguchiko. We showered at the hotel we had stayed at and then
drove home. I got home at about 9. That is a long time being awake.
I
am really glad I climbed it and all in all it was a positive
experience. But, there is a saying in Japan that translated roughly to
you would be stupid to not climb Mt Fuji once, but you would be stupid
to climb it twice. I completely understand this saying. I am not sure I
would ever want to climb it again.
Some other things...
Thankfully,
we were all fine with the altitude. I did not need to use my can of
oxygen. I think I can probably thank my hip for the nice, slow pace we
were forced to take.
I
bought a mini version of the walking stick at our lodge, and I got it
branded at the 8th station and then again at the top. It was a really
good solution. I wanted one of the poles to get branded but I was not
sure how to get it back to America (It would have been like 4 feet
tall). Also, I am really glad I did not have one, because there were
places where I needed both my hands to climb and having a pole would
have been a problem. Coming down, I wish I had had a pole of some
sort. Oh well.
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my mini walking stick! |
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and the other side. The top-most stamp is from the top of the mountain. |
I never got to ask someone...but I wonder where the people who work at the lodges live...like, do they stay there 2 weeks and then climb down? What about the people at the top working in the post office and in the souvenir shops? Do they stay up there a few days or weeks?! just some food for thought.
A few Fuji fun facts:
Fuji is 3776m tall.
It is the highest mountain in Japan
It is a dormant volcano. It last erupted in 1707-08.
On average, it takes 5-6 hours to climb up and 3-4 to climb down from the 5th station.
Mt. Fuji has been submitted as a Cultural (not Natural) World Heritage Site.
Ok...that's all folks!
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