Our first hotel stay in Japan gave us our first hotel buffet breakfast in Japan. Always fun to see what food would be offered, and there was plenty. An unusual, to us, mix – but good cycling food, should at least get us the few wet kilometres to the ferry.

As if we were going home anytime soon.
Having negotiated the ferry ticketing rather wet, we got wetter waiting to board out in the open. But once on board, before the cars, we and our bikes were well looked after again and managed to dry out some on the short voyage to Honshu.

A little to look out as we left Hokkaido, but mostly a grey voyage to Honshu. We’d chosen to take the shorter route to Oma and ease into the fairly quiet looking northern peninsula – avoiding the city of Aomori.


Off the ferry, we found there had been other foreign cycle tourists on board – chatting pleasantly the short distance before going separate ways. But of course, we soon met some of them at the supermarket buying lunch. Charles and PJ from Brisbane had some interesting tales, and bikes, from their recent travels in Europe. Riding together, it was not far to the northern most point of Honshu and chance to lunch together and continue chatting.




Rachel and I moseyed on around the coast, already noticing Honshu looking more prosperous – far fewer abandoned buildings and general decay, at least in these parts.



At some stage Charles and PJ rejoined us; well, at different stages as they ride at different paces. Turned out Charles used to work in high hazard industries too, a rather out-of-place discussion about process safety (which I thought I’d left behind) ensued.


Popping over a few small hills to the town of Mutsu, the forecast poor weather hadn’t eventuated so extending our riding day we endured thirty kilometres of rather tedious main road as far as Yokohama town – by which time twilight and drizzle caught up with us.
The small supermarket was a bit different to what we were used to, but amply supplied we set off to find somewhere to camp – as the supposed campground a few kilometres before town didn’t eventuate. We found a great big park that was deserted and discreet enough to stealth camp in, success!

Concrete logs must have been unusual enough to snap a photo of.
Every so often one of us had reported public toilets with these unusual facilities in. Was quite a while before I saw one, there was one in this municipal park. It had been decided between us that the special sinks were for emptying ostomy bags. A bit of research shows that they’re more common than we came across – regularly in accessible facilities for those that need them.
Maybe not for washing camp dishes.



More rugged terrain that we missed.
At the small station after the tunnel there was a pretty high viewing platform for the trainspotters.
Apparently one of the very few places you can see a freight train and shinkansen pass next to each other.
The vegetables in the store below were perhaps as impressive.
Definitely leaning into the shinkansen finally reaching Hokkaido around these towns.
Back to plains and good growing areas.
The air somewhat overpoweringly spring onion filled.
Unsure what is going on here.
Honshu getting closer…
Back to flat coastal biking, found a park of scale models near where a Dutch built, Japanese navy ship foundered on the just-offshore reef in the late nineteenth century.
More of the same, and something different – we detoured inland to the Trappist monastery pictured.
The long avenue approach one of the monastery’s attractions.

Back down to the coast.





Unsure what these were about, but not chimney sweeps. Coloured covers were always a welcome find in our continued documentation of the interesting local designs on mundane service covers.



This bell was particularly useful for the rest of the trip – Japanese, not too loud, robust and easy to use. I was disappointed to not find them later in the trip to take some home for my nephews.



Not the ferry we would be taking in the morning. Now a floating museum, it was a large ship from the days before the Seikan tunnel opened.
Little bit different to where we usually ate.
Also different for spice offerings – scale of one to fifteen unusual. Supposed spicy food had not been hot so far in Japan, so I opted for regular.
Black ink squid soup curry – easily one of the best meals I had in Japan. Although Regular spice was a misjudgement – it was very hot in both temperature and spice!
Just a street of concrete super heroes on the way back to the hotel.









Off we went, looking back out our overnight island.

Helpful local warned us to turn around here and climb back up to the main road, due to a closure ahead.


This stretch of coast seemed to be one long sporadic wind farm, with more turbines going in.
Unusual hazards for a small golf course.

This does a better job of summarising the area’s history than I could.
The little wind thingamijigs were rather calming too. Also had free charging from the bench under the tree, so I assume some generation capacity.

Spotted our barge shadow again too.
Honshu! The little bit of older Japanese history in Matsumae having whetted my appetite, I was very keen to get over there.
Trying out one of the many camera stands we’d seen.



Found out later in Tokyo that is quite a famous character; I was just there for the chance to dress-up on top of my bikepacking gear.
At least there was a lighthouse, I guess.
And a gap in the barrier.
Not that Fukushima.



More matchstick logs.

Intrigued by this spiral bridge as we rode into Imakane – a relatively small town. Perhaps there is some big industry up there?
A pitstop in Setana for lunch supplies.
More moving of large concrete shapes – nephews would be right into that.



More long tunnels cutting out the climbing for us – up to four kilometres long. Distinct lack of traffic meant both that they weren’t deafening, and we could test out the echo qualities.
Okushiri Island – would have been nice to visit, but didn’t fit into our schedule.


Shrine that we didn’t get to way up there somewhere.

Although I’ve forgotten which this was.

Even made it to the manhole cover.




They also made it to the local manhole cover.
Into Esahi for the night.
Looking over to Kamome Island, no longer an island but home to a campground.
Kaiyomaru – a replica of a Dutch-supplied ship that sank in 1868. The wreck was discovered over a hundred years later and many artefacts now fill the replica.







