Hiking in Nozawa
Finally found a bunch of excuses to get out of the house!
We went hiking today up at the top of Nozawa ski area. It was actually really beautiful, and oh so wonderfully cool. Really, any of you poor city folk (I was in Tokyo a few days ago for just a few hours - oh, you poor poor people!) need to get out. Give me a call.
It's hot during the day where I live, but nothing like Tokyo, and nights are generally quite cool. Even still, I was loving the chill at 1,700 meters.
Excuse #1: The Kid's Camp At the end of July, I'm helping organize a kid's camp that will be held up there, so I had to go check out the area and kill any snakes or bears I came across - just to put the parents at ease.
I've been near the campground before, but for some reason never visited it. Can't believe we've missed this for the past four years.
I highly recommend the Sutakako Camp area. While it will certainly be more crowded in August when summer vacation starts, it's still pretty off the beaten path - so it won't be as packed as some of the more famous spots or anything closer to the heat zones. There are plenty of easy walks through nice forests, a steeper hike to the top of a mountain, lots of mallet golf courses, and best of all: no buses allowed on the road heading in.
Excuse #2: The Cancelled Photo Contest Apparently the photo contest the village was holding - and the one I've been pulling all-nighters for this week to get the website and social media stuff online - was cancelled... quite a while ago.
No one bothered to tell me. Despite me being on the board. Even after I specifically called the guy in charge (post-quake) to confirm that I'd be reimbursed for any expenses.
Now I'm down a hundred bucks for some WordPress templates. But the thing that ticks me off the most is that I didn't find out until after I got home today. So I wasted some potentially good moments worrying about work I wasn't doing, instead of enjoying the beauty around me.
Excuse #3: The High-Tech Hiking Upgrade After receiving four Docomo phones from various blog readers (thank you all), and breaking or struggling with reception on each one, I finally broke down and got a brand-new phone.
As it turns out, the cheapest phone at the shop (about $15) was an Android smartphone. Today was my first time experiencing the joys of high-tech hiking.
Instead of watching boring nature around me, I was glued to my screen watching my altitude chart update in real-time via GPS.
Can't believe I didn't get one of these earlier. (Note: that was 2011)