Lake Onneto to Nukabira

Morning visitor; better outside the tent, as with all other creatures.

Long gravel descent to start, extra layer on as a strangely cool start. Few light showers through the day too, but mostly the standard hot and humid.

This stretch first up another highlight of the Japan riding, following a creek down to a sealed road by which time it had become more of a river.

Used to sunflowers being tall…

But rawan buki was a new one. A large field, with a pleasant path through it, of these single stem plants with a broad leaf on top towered over us.

Roadside cheer squad?

Our forty-odd kilometre descent finished in the town of Ashoro, where we lingered for a couple of hours. Found some rawan buki on soft serve ice cream – yum! Pleasantly, not overly, sweet green jelly. The town really leaning into the plant, the manhole covers pictured it and there were plenty of banners around – with a cartoon creature of the plant. The visitor centre used to be the station, but the railway long since closed – pleasingly there was a bit of a display to show some of the history. It looked like we might be following some of the old line later in the day.

With about four hundred metres to gain to Nukabira, we mostly avoided the (admittedly quiet) highways. Steeper in parts than the gentle valley we’d descended earlier, there were enough down sections to get our climbing legs working again later to regain the lost elevation.

Still finding some nice gravel.

Starting to see some old rail infrastructure.

Nukabira is a small town at the end of an inlet at the foot of the lake its named after, sloping up a few streets towards a couple of ski lifts. Very quiet it was, unsure if it still sees much activity in the snow season. Not even a Seicomart, we scrabbled together enough ingredients for an interesting dinner. We had a huge campground all to ourselves; well, as far as other humans went:

More campground companions, about eight centimetres long.

I found a small rail museum in the tiny old station and enjoyed poking around that just before it closed – lots of old maintenance and operational items. Seemed the rail line was mostly there to service forestry. There was a bit of walking to be done from the campground – down to the lake, more old rail bridges and we found another public foot spa in an open area.

Kawayu Onsen to Lake Onneto

Farewell to the Ezo Rider house, a great spot a day off the bike. (Learnt much later that Ezo is an old word for Hokkaido.)

A little backtracking out of town, past the Mt Io volcanic area, before turning south on quiet roads to the town of Teshikaga and resupply (food, food and gas canister – konbini and DCM).

That’s a different way of loading logs on a truck, don’t think I’d ever see the like in NZ

Leaving town we took country roads for ten kilometres through river flat farm land before rejoining the quiet highway for a sustained, wiggly climb. A very cloudy day, but the humidity had returned to keep us sweating. But pretty gentle riding, and plenty of trees to look at.

Occasional peaks of mountains off in the distance. The closest one being Mt Oakan, the volcano which formed the caldera lake Akan.

Another abandoned building, just past the road summit – an old roadhouse, or visitor centre? Nice to stop for a bit.

Long galleria to break up the arboreal view.

Shortly after joining a busier highway, and reaching Akan, there was some walking to be done to the edge of Lake Akan. Fortunately or not, not enough time to continue to the summit of Mt Oakan. Some good West Coast style trail – gnarly roots, moss covered…

Into the touristy town of Akan for lunch and a wander past bubbling mud pools – reminders of a different part of home.

A lot of coloured covers in the streets – eye-catching.

Bit of time at an Ainu culture/handcraft street of shops aimed at all the tourists. My appreciation of such areas is not high, so only the one photo. Most of the crafts were wood or antler carvings – I probably should have taken a closer look, but little chance I was going to buy anything and then carry it for weeks.

Twenty more kilometres mostly climbing to camp beside Lake Onneto for the night. Last little bit on a gravel road off the highway, beautiful riding through close forest. Unfortunately a little late for the cafe still to be open, but a nice campground covered in by big trees. Another enjoyable, despite the gloom, day on the bikes – nice to be in the hills.

Kawayu Onsen Rest Day

Rain arrived as forecast and stuck around for most of the day. I wasn’t complaining, after very broken sleep for two and a half weeks, and the heat – I was in desperate need of a rest. Orlaith wasn’t – off on the bike somewhere to hike up a mountain. We returned to the visitor centre and spent some time in the upstairs cafe looking out over a beautiful forest. Lovely lunch down the street at a place run by an elderly couple (we would eventually learn to seek these out for the care shown in and the authenticity, tastiness of the food).

A long nap was high on my agenda early afternoon as the rain continued to fall. Once it stopped raining, bike cleaning and maintenance. The click from my bottom bracket had returned over the last week, so I had another go at fixing that – but the slight noise returned in another few days. Thankfully it was only mildly irritating rather than mechanically significant.

Remainder of the day spent soaking in the onsen, wandering the small thermal areas around town, a drink at a local bar with a curious gallery in the attic before dinner at an izakaya. Altogether a pleasant low-key day. Little did I know that it would be a month before the next rest day – far too long, both at the time and especially in hindsight. A few snaps from about town:

Numerous onsen and places we stayed had large bookcases filled with graphic novels and other printed materials. Not much use to us, but pretty cool to see.

Despite the rain, it was still hot – so a iced tea in the air conditioned visitor centre overlooking forest was the ticket.

First public foot spa we’d seen – pleasingly, not uncommon on rest of the trip.

Venison for lunch for me (certainly enough deer around), Rachel had oyudon (a chicken and egg, or is that egg and chicken, dish) – which she was still salivating over weeks later.

Fairly typical izakaya. Some seats at the bar, some tables with cushions for sitting on at a raised platform.

Nijibetsu to Kawayu Onsen

Got to see the campground we stayed in with some daylight. Lovely park grounds, with a river nearby we took a quick look at.

More flat rural riding for twenty kilometres before turning to climb five hundred metres up to Lake Mashu – a large caldera lake with an extensive viewing area. Large visitor centre and cafe too – pristine melons for $NZ170, we restrained ourselves.

Sneak peak of Mt Io and Lake Kussharo, showing further signs of volcanic activity.

New friends in the toilet block – which is not where one really wants to meet new friends.

Start of the trail to Mounts Mashu and Nijibetsu – no hiking for us today though.

I was surprised to see a sibling of my gravel bike (RLT9) – the bike I planned to ride around Japan, until I decided to go Mongolia too. It belonged to Jen (Xian?), a Chinese American who we kept bumping into over the next week.

Jen’s photo.

We very quickly lost those five hundred metres.

Soon at the volcanic area at the base of Mt Io, walking out over the flats with steam billowing around – quite like near where I spent my much younger years in NZ. Equally parts refreshing and alarming, you could get really close to the various features!

Into the onsen town of Kawayu, we found our rider house accommodation for the next two nights (a rest day! I was very much looking forward to it). Far nicer than our previous rider house experience, we settled in before a short walk around town.

Our stuffed bear numbers now thankfully far surpassing our live bear views.

Without our bags, it was nice to ride twenty kilometres in the woods, near the shore of Lake Kussharo to the Wakoto Peninsula.

As well as throwback pedallos, this beach had hot water – one could make little pools or just warm feet in the sand.

Easy going road.

At the peninsula there were more hot springs, plenty of people around and apparently a lot of crows – Orlaith lost a packet of chips/crisps to one bold corvid. With a bit of time on our hands, we all did our own thing. I walked around the peninsula:

Started out a gentle path.

Fascinated by woodpeckers, although most of why is lost in a snapshot.

Still more geothermal activity.

The crowds started to thin as the afternoon approached its end.

After seeing Jen again, briefly (she was riding and staying further on), it was time to return. The ride back got quicker as the light faded, plenty of deer sighted – and all avoided on the road thankfully.

Trying to fit in back at the rider house.

Biking to go places, going places to bike.