Hiking Trails in Japan: Chains, Ladders, and Luxury Mountain Huts

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I noticed that Tom, from the wonderful blog Two-Heel Drive, has introduced my site to hikers around the world. So I thought it might be nice to share what I find interesting about trails in Japan.


Hiking in Japan: Bigger Than Baseball

First off, you have to understand - hiking is big business here.

Last year, 10 million people in Japan "partook in hiking." That's more than:

  • Golf: 9.7 million
  • Skiing & Snowboarding: 7.6 million
  • Baseball (surprisingly): 6 million

Sadly, the number of visitors to Tokyo Disneyland blows all of these away with a staggering 25 million.


Trails for the People

Most Japanese hikers are well-monied retirees. As a result, many trails - originally created centuries ago by monks seeking communion with the mountain gods - are:

  • Wide
  • Well-maintained
  • Equipped to allow access to as many people as possible

For example, fully-equipped luxury mountain huts are spaced every few hours on many routes. That means you can go on multi-day hikes with just a day pack - no tent or food required.

This accessibility does come with risks, though. It can encourage unprepared hikers to enter dangerous terrain. A tragic example: several people died in a snowstorm on Shirouma in October - just two weeks after Tomoe and I had climbed it. Without those huts, many hikers wouldn't have been on the mountain at all.

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Ropes, Chains, and Ladders

What amazes me most is how the difficult sections of Japanese trails are made accessible by installing:

  • Permanently fixed ropes
  • Heavy chains
  • Metal ladders

These aren't rare either. Many trails feature long chains to pull yourself up nearly vertical rock faces.

Where a single rope or chain isn't enough, ladders are added. And where one ladder isn't enough...
You get the idea.

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Note the chain used to climb nearly vertical terrain.

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When a rope isn't enough, bring in the hardware.

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