Hitoyoshi, one of top 3 places difficult to reach, is now recovering from a tragic flood

aoiaso shrine3

Hitoyoshi is my top 3 hardest places to get to.  It’s located deep in Kumamoto Prefecture, but I noticed on the map that it’s surprisingly close to Kagoshima Airport.

First, I went to Hitoyoshi Station from the airport and bought the famous chestnut bento (lunch box).    Even the shape of the bento is chestnut.  Before the flood, the old-fashioned ekiben vendors on the platform used to shout out their good-old cries.    Now, I pass by the deserted station building and buy a bento at the bento shop next to the station building.    With a bento in hand, I head to Kaname Falls (Ohdaki), a waterfall that tumbles vertically down a columnar jointed wall, and eat my lunch while being showered with the spray from the falls.    Although the Medaki waterfall is nearby, it is impossible to get any closer due to the large stones and timber that were washed away by the flood.    This shows the extent of the damage caused by the flood.

hitoyoshi kaname fall2
hitoyoshi kaname fall2
suiranro1 flood water level
suiranro1 flood water level

At the hotel where I’m staying tonight, there is a marking near the ceiling of the front desk showing the water level of the Kuma River when it overflowed.     Apparently, the flood caused driftwood from nearby areas to flow into the Kuma River, where it became caught on railway bridges and other bridges, causing the muddy waters to overflow and wash away the entire town.     Now, the Kuma River flows calmly and steadily in front of the hotel.

 

Aoi Aso Shrine is a national treasure that has managed to survive under such circumstances, and it is definitely worth visiting.    The shrine’s sanctuary is generally not open to the public, but an elderly man who seemed to be the chairman of the preservation society, who was watching over the restoration work around the shrine, invited me to see the sanctuary.    There is a pamphlet with beautiful color prints, which is free of charge.     What is amazing is the 400-year-old building, the thatched roofs of the tower gate and worship hall, the colorful decorations and colors of the Momoyama style, and the intricate plaster decorations of the inner sanctuary.     It has an overwhelming presence.

Detour

eikoku temple5 ghost legend
eikoku temple5 ghost legend

During the Satsuma Rebellion, Takamori Saigo’s troops traveled around the country fighting the Meiji government forces, and here in Hitoyoshi, they had their headquarters at Eikokuji Temple.     This place is also known as the Ghost Temple, and a hanging scroll of a ghost has survived the ravages of war without being burned.    I found it interesting to read a piece about what one would say if someone came to take them from the afterlife.    There are many other attractive temples and shrines remaining in the Hitoyoshi Basin.     As the area has been ruled by the Sagara clan since the Kamakura period, it seems that many things of great historical value remain.

brewery3
brewery3

Near Eikokuji Temple is Hitoyoshi Castle, famous for its cherry blossoms, and the famous rice shochu brewery Sengetsu, which you are welcome to come and sample the drinks.    The shochu “Kawabe,” which can only be purchased locally, uses water from the clear Kawabe River, which flows into the Kuma River, but recently there has been talk of building a dam to prevent flooding, which worries me.

former shrine2
Go back to itinerary

 

One of the three sacred places for railway fans

loop and switchback2 business card to pray for promotion

The view of the railway that goes around the mountains is itself a tourist destination.    Jungfrau Railway on the European Alps is a typical example, but due to Hakone’s proximity to Tokyo, Hakone Tozan Railway is now overflowing with foreign tourists.    In order to transfer at Hakone-Yumoto Station and secure a good seat on the Hakone Tozan Railway, the front car of the train from Odawara Station is as full as a commuter train.     I had mixed feelings when I saw foreign tourists dashing onto the Hakone-Yumoto Station platform and being the first to secure seats on the left side for a better view.

loop and switchback4 left line to loop and right line for switchback
loop and switchback4 left line to loop and right line for switchback

Now, on the Hakone Tozan Railway, you can experience three switchbacks, but here on the Hisatsu Line heading towards Hitoyoshi in Kumamoto Prefecture from Hayato in Kagoshima Prefecture, you can see two switchbacks and a loop at the same time around Okoba Station.    It’s sad that railway transportation has not resumed as Hitoyoshi is currently recovering from the flood damage, but instead you can walk along the tracks at the site and get a feel for it.    Furthermore, in February, white flowers of the nearby Hitoyoshi plum grove are beautiful, and in March, the cherry blossoms along the railroad tracks inside Okoba Station are also beautiful.

In fact, the sacred place for railway fans is not here, but the landscape from the train window at “Yatake Goe”, which steeply climbs the inner wall of the Kakuto Caldera Somma, reaching the highest point on the line.    However, railway fans naturally enjoy the switchbacks and a loop around Okoba Station as well.     To get there by car, you need to go from the bottom of the caldera through the outer rim of the mountain, so the road is connected twice by  loop bridges at the front and back.

loop and switchback1 ohba station
loop and switchback1 okoba station

Now, regarding the station building of Okoba, there is an urban legend that if you put a business card on the wall, you will get promoted, and when I went there, I found business cards stuck all over the walls of the station building.        Maybe you’ll find a business card of someone you know.    Now, in preparation for the reopening of the railway, they have been completely removed, and I wonder where the removed business cards are.     It is of great interest to know what happened to the career afterward of the person who inserted the business card.

former shrine2
Go back to itinerary (under construction)
my herb pots
Contact us for your planning