Numerous waterfalls created by the eruption of Mt. Aso

harajiri fall6

The area was completely covered by pyroclastic flows from the great eruption of Mt. Aso 90,000 years ago, and the heat of the eruption transformed this into welded tuff.     As it cooled further, its volume contracted, creating countless long vertical cracks, and subsequent erosion revealed columnar joints that can be seen everywhere.     This is clearly visible in the waterfall.

Bat Falls

You can’t get close to the waterfall, it can only be seen from above, the road isn’t shown on car navigation systems, and the road to get there is so narrow that even a compact car would likely go off the rails, so the whole experience of getting there is filled with a sense of unease and a sense of being in a remote area.    Suddenly, a parking space and a space to turn around appear. This is thanks to the local people who have maintained the area.     Please check the entrance (“Park golf course” sign) from the main road (National Route 502) and the terrain from an aerial photograph beforehand.     Cars cannot pass each other, but it seems that the road has been widened recently.

bat fall2
bat fall2

The waterfall is shaped like a bat with its wings spread, and in the Edo period, a wooden slide was built on part of it to allow ships to pass through.     People in the past were amazing.     The Kuju mountain range can be seen beautifully beyond the waterfall.     It’s a place worth visiting.

Harajiri Falls is like Niagara Falls

The collapse of the tuff rocks over a width of 120m created a circular waterfall similar to Niagara Falls.     The waterfall and the surrounding scenery are so beautiful that they make you think of a movie set or Disneyland.    There is a suspension bridge that offers a panoramic view of the falls, but once you cross it the road is closed off beyond that point.

harajiri fall6
harajiri fall6

Chinda Falls

The collapse occurred over a width of 100m, creating a 20m-high step.     It is famous for being depicted in a sumi-e painting by Sesshu during the Muromachi period.    Unfortunately, the original painting was destroyed in the Great Kanto Earthquake, and only copies remain.    Sesshu also painted Amanohashidate in Kyoto, so people really did travel a lot by foot in the past.

chinda fall by sesshu source yuagariart
chinda fall by sesshu at source “yuagariart.com”
chinda fall
chinda fall

In modern times, a dam was built behind the falls to generate hydroelectric power, and the structure remains.     At first, I thought it was just part of the falls.    The welded tuff that forms the foundation of the waterfall is a geology that is weak against vertical shocks, and has repeatedly collapsed due to being unable to withstand large-scale flooding.     As a result, the waterfall has gradually moved upstream over a long period of time.  Kyushu Electric Power Co. reinforced the rocks around the base of the waterfall, and now it is in its current form.     Even man-made structures like dams can sometimes help preserve the natural landscape.   There was a lot of water and it was making a roaring noise.

 

 

 

climbing18 mitsumata mountain from kutsukake mountain
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This is Little Kyoto, Taketa Old Town

taketa9 earthen wall of samrai residence
taketa8 aso mountains
taketa8 aso mountains
taketa7 hirose lieutenant
taketa7 hirose lieutenant

Taketa City is famous for the ruins of Oka Castle, a castle built on top of a cliff.  It is the motif of the song “Kojo no Tsuki” (Moon over the Ruins of the Castle) composed by the musician Rentaro Taki, but I’ve already been there so I’ll pass this time.    I took a walk around the old town, which I hadn’t been able to see last time.     It’s a town with a sense of history like Kyoto.     I was surprised to see a bronze statue of Lieutenant Hirose, who carried out the Port Arthur blockade operation during the Russo-Japanese War.     I didn’t know he was from here.    After the operation, the Japanese Navy, led by Commander Togo Heihachi, faced off against the Russian Baltic Fleet, which was said to be the most powerful fleet in the world at the time.

In one corner of the samurai residence is the Hidden Christian Cave Chapel, giving the area a sense of its rich history.

Finally, we had a special lunch (reservation needed in advance) at Okura Shimizuyu, a café that was once a bathhouse.     Apparently, his parents own a vegetable shop next door, so they served us a variety of vegetable dishes.     I couldn’t finish it all.     They even served us matcha green tea.

taketa35 fukujyuenn distilled spirits factory and shop
taketa35 fukujyuenn distilled spirits factory and shop

Our final stop was a barley shochu brewery in town, where we had the opportunity to try a variety of shochu while the proprietress was busy on her way to Tokyo to attend a wedding.

 

 

 

climbing18 mitsumata mountain from kutsukake mountain
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Laputa (Ghibli) is not the only castle in the sky

oka castle8 kuju mountains (2)

The next morning, the mountain road leading back to the Yamanami Highway was a tunnel of autumn leaves, shining brightly.

On the road to Taketa City, I come across a light truck with an elegant English Pointer on its back.    The pointer on the loading platform does not look at me easily.   He is balanced well on the carrier.

oka castle6
parabolic curve

Meanwhile, I arrived at Taketa.    I didn’t have enough time to visit the old town (>refer to the post in the near future), so I headed straight to Oka Castle.   This castle was the setting for “Kojo no Tsuki” (“The moon over the ruined castle” in English) composed by Rentaro Taki who spent his childhood here.     It’s interesting that the admission ticket comes in the form of an old period scroll with a guide map of Oka Castle, but it gets in the way and is inconvenient when it comes to taking it home.   Although only the stone walls remain of this mountain castle, the stonework is beautiful and draws a parabolic curve.

oka castle9 do not the same thing
Do not the same thing

Since there is no protective fence, you can sit on the protruding tip of the stone wall, but it doesn’t feel like you’re alive.    It feels like my lower abdomen is falling out.   Those with a strong heart can admire the beautiful Kuju Mountain Range from here.    There are several castles in the sky floating in the morning mist in Japan, but Oka Castle, which appears out of nowhere amidst layers of mountains, is a true Ghibli castle in the sky.

 

 

kuju highway2
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