We began our journey in Osaka and thanks to my new Japanese NABI (GPS) girlfriend I easily navigated the streets of Osaka and out on our way to Amanohashidate. We ventured up through the mountains, stopping along our way for Udon and for photo stops.
Amanohashidate is a beautiful place, one of the three most scenic spots in Japan, but we saw a different side of it as it was quite foggy. In general, it is a small bay where local conditions created a long, thin sand spit that was colonized by pines. The name roughly translates as `Bridge to Heaven`, which having now been there i completely understand.
From there we travelled through Fukui and Awara-onsen on to Kanazawa.
Kanazawa has been another one of my favorite cities! This old Samurai town I fear is often forgotten, but it boasts all the wonders of Kyoto with a much quainter feel and much friendlier people. We stayed in Guesthouse Pongyi with the WONDERFUL Musaki, who welcomed us into his beautiful home (which is an old Kimono shop from the Meiji (circa 1800)). We played wonderful Japanese games, slept soundly nested over the Kanazawa canals, then ventured around this beautiful cities old streets before heading onward still to Takayama.
We arrived in Takayama just in time for its most famed event - Haru Matsuri or Spring Festival. Being nestled in a quite open valley amongst snowy peaks and craggy edifices this town must have been a bastion of spring celebrations as its first blossoms appeared and last snow banks melted. The long and cold winer this year in Japan meant there were not so many blossoms this year, but the festival was still a magical event. When describing it to my mum she commented, `So its just like the David Jones pageant in Adelaide` and surprised by the superficial similarities I said yes (if you arn`t from Adelaide you may not understand this reference). The festival has numerous components, but the most famous is a procession of floats (or Yatai) around the old district of the town. Each float is individually decorated, and date from the 1600-1880s. They were each commissioned by local business people and artists to show off the goods of Takayama.
Other components include a puppet show with incredibly old marionettes that sit atop three of the Yatai. And a town procession where lion-dancers and flutes ring in a new to ensure a successful business year. I will never forget awaking from our temple lodging to the sound of Japanese flutes and drums rolling past our street as the procession rolls through town.
We have now disposed of our car and are hoofing it about Kyoto for a few days before mum heads home and Alex, dad and myself hit the old mossy trail up in the mountains.








