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    <title>Outdoor Japan</title>
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	      <title>#82: Yarigatake 	</title>
		  <desciption><![CDATA[<p><em>After seven hours of straight hiking, I can see the unmistakable  spear-like peak of Yarigatake in sight. &quot;Just a little more,&quot; I think to  myself. I take a break in front of Banryu&rsquo;s cave. He is the Buddhist  monk said to be the first to climb Mt. Yari and look deep inside.  &quot;Gambare, you&rsquo;re almost there,&quot; echoes from the darkness. </em></p>
<p><em>When I reach the Yaridake Sanso, the re-furbished mountain hut below  the peak, all I want to do is sleep. Clear skies persuade me to keep  going as views of the mountain ranges in the distance are breathtaking,  and blinding gusts can roll in without a moment&rsquo;s warning. Half an hour  on the top of Yari I spend drinking up the views and wondering what  these mountains will look like tomorrow.</em></p>
<p><strong><img height="212" width="300" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue1/Yarigatake_1.jpg" />Trail Tips:</strong> Following the river along the Oku-kamikochi  nature path, the trail is relatively flat and easy-going for the first  day of the hike. You are literally making your way around the largest  peaks and approaching Yarigatake from the southeast along the river.  From Yarizawa Lodge on day two, the trail gets gradually steeper for  about four hours, and the push to the top is another 30 minutes from  Yari-dake Sanso. Some find the ladders to be intimidating, but they are  not technical, though concentration is required as the trail is narrow  and many others will be on it.<br />
<br />
To get to the summit, you must ascend three steep ladders, narrow but  sturdy. It&rsquo;s a good idea to go as light as possible with a windbreaker  to avoid getting dragged down by weight and crowds. From the summit of  Yarigatake on a clear day, you&rsquo;re in a sea of mountains as you sit atop  the second highest mountain in the North Alps. Don&rsquo;t miss the sunset  from Yarigatake Sanso after dinner and the gnarly gusts that come  rolling in as night approaches.</p>
<p>On the next day, the return is about a seven-hour hike, but downhill and  super easy-going. Beware during peak season, or on August weekends,  this route is often called &quot;Ginza,&quot; as it is notorious for crowds. If  you have plenty of experience, stamina and a few extra days, a more  challenging route back to Kamikochi is on the Dai-kireto, which can be  somewhat technical and exhausting, with steep ladders and small ledges  for which to look out&mdash;though the views are worth it.</p>
<p><strong><img height="178" width="400" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue1/Yarigatake_2.jpg" />Mountain:</strong> Yarigatake<br />
Difficulty Level: 3 out of 5  (some steep ladder climbs) (can we do some little icon thing here) <br />
<strong>Location:  </strong>North Alps (Kita-Alps), Nagano Prefecture <br />
<strong>Peak:</strong>  3,180 meters (5th tallest mountain in Japan) <br />
<strong>Duration:</strong>  2 days / 3 nights <br />
<strong>When to go:</strong> July &ndash; September <br />
<strong>Things  not to miss:</strong> Onsen (hot springs) at either Kamikochi Onsen  Hotel or Shimizu Onsen Hotel in Kamikochi. <br />
<strong>What to bring:</strong>  Raingear, flashlight, map, camera, sunscreen, water (you can refill at  huts along the way), camera, gloves, sunglasses, warm hat.</p>
<p><strong>Recommended Hiking Schedule<br />
Day 1:</strong> 4 hours, 50  minutes (stay at Yarizawa Lodge)<br />
<strong>Day 2:</strong> 5 hours, 20  minutes (stay at Yaridake Sanso)<br />
<strong>Day 3:</strong> 7 hours 20  minutes (back to Kamikochi)</p>
<p><strong>How to get there:</strong> From Shinjuku, take the JR Tokyu  Express to Matsumoto and transfer to Shin-shimajima by local train where  you can catch a bus to Kamikochi.</p>
<p><br />
<strong>Shinjuku &rarr; Matsumoto &rarr; Shin-shimajima &rarr; Kamikochi<br />
</strong>(2 hours, 37 minutes; &yen;6,910) &rarr; (31 minutes; &yen;680) &rarr; (1 hour, 15  minutes; &yen;3,500) <strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong>Important phone numbers: <br />
</strong>Yarizawa Lodge: (0263)  95-2626 (2 meals / 1 night stay &yen;8,500)<br />
Yaridake Sanso: (0263)  35-9707 (2 meals / 1 night stay &yen;8,500)</p>
<p><em><strong>Ginger Vaughn</strong> began hiking the hyakumeizan in an  effort to get to know Japan outside of Tokyo. She saw the mountains as a  chance to experience the countryside and get to know the land and  locals intimately. She plans to complete mountain #100 in early November  of this year and will be the first foreign woman in Japan to finish the  hyakumeizan. Her narrative about her hyakumeizan experience will be out  in 2006.</em></p>]]></desciption>	
	      <author><![CDATA[Ginger Vaughn]]></author>
	      <pubDate>Mon, 12 Jul 2010 11:23:14 +0000</pubDate>
	      <link>http://www.outdoorjapan.com/magazine/column_rss/47</link>
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