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My Japanese Trip Aug/Sept 2010


westfalen

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Across from the picturesque old station at Yahiko was a large abandoned hotel. On the way back I got a shot of a huge torii gate towering above the houses.

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What an amazing trip, did you get to see a lot! (You might need a vacation to rest up from this one  :grin)

There is one photo of a Mascot/or Logo of a what looks like a ghost with "Mr." on it. What is that supposed to represent?

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What an amazing trip, did you get to see a lot! (You might need a vacation to rest up from this one  :grin)

There is one photo of a Mascot/or Logo of a what looks like a ghost with "Mr." on it. What is that supposed to represent?

And we're not even half way through the trip yet.

 

I had to look back through the photos to see which one you meant, I've seen a lot of strange pictures on trains over the last ten days. :grin

 

The  "MR" stands for Matsuura Railway of which he is the mascot, as for why he looks like a ghost your guess would be as good as anyone's. ???

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We caught Shin-Etsu Line Ltd Exp Kubikino #2 to Higashi Sanjo then the cross country Yahiko Line to Yoshida.

 

That's a good train to ride, it uses 485 series so it's very comfortable, but it's a kaisoku (rapid service), so there is no extra fare.  Had the pleasure to ride the same 14:00 departure from Niigata as far as Naoetsu in July.

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Which Station did you go to on Tokaido main line to get the views of Lake Hamanako and the railway bridges?

I got off at Araimachi and walked to the bridges, it's about a kilometer.

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We went from Niigata to Aizu Wakamatsu this morning. We couldn't get enough seats on the Banetsu Monogatari SL and the ones we had were all aisle seats spread through the train so I traveled up earlier in a kiha 110 trailing behind a couple of kiha 120's.

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We are now in Hokkaido for a few days.

 

The first of today's shots is for those who have watched the Aizu Wakamatsu webcam. :grin

 

Then some Shinkansen shots at Koriyama.

 

There was a post a while back about JR Hokkaido stopping passengers from looking out the front of trains. I can report that when I went up front on the 789 on today's Super Hakucho #9 to video our passage through the Seikan Tunnel the passage to the front door was barred and had a sign reading 'staff only'. :sad:

 

When we arrived in Hakodate I went for a tram ride to Yunokawa to complete my riding of every rail line in Hokkaido with scheduled passenger service. :cool:

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Later in the evening we took the bus up to Mount Hakodate, I've been there before but it's one of those places that's worth going back to for the view over the city. In the centre of the third shot is our hotel opposite Hakodate station.

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Welcome to Hokkaido!  I hope you find it a bit cooler here than down south, though we've also been experiencing record breaking heat (on the order of the first in 50~60 years).  Those weird and/or tacky buildings are common in resort/hot spring areas, the one pictured is a "sky lounge" for an hot spring hotel (Yunokawa is famous for hot springs).  Often when these businesses go bankrupt, the weird buildings turn into "haunted" spots.

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Welcome to Hokkaido!  I hope you find it a bit cooler here than down south, though we've also been experiencing record breaking heat (on the order of the first in 50~60 years).  Those weird and/or tacky buildings are common in resort/hot spring areas, the one pictured is a "sky lounge" for an hot spring hotel (Yunokawa is famous for hot springs).  Often when these businesses go bankrupt, the weird buildings turn into "haunted" spots.

You're right on both counts. There was something about the abandoned hotel in Yahiko that told me I wouldn't want to spend the night there, I've seen a Japanese website where a guy explores such places but I don't have the link on this computer. I'm looking out of my hotel window at a wet and overcast Hakodate though it's still not really cold it's much more pleasant than than it has been in the south. We head up to Asahikawa today then the day after do the trip up to Wakkanai, from my previous experience the weather should be a bit cooler up there.

 

As I sit here looking out the window at the street corner outside Hakodate station it's dawned on me that it looks just like a corner of the Unitram starter set. It's not as obvious at street level but from the 7th floor you look at it more from the angle you would see a model.

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We head up to Asahikawa today then the day after do the trip up to Wakkanai, from my previous experience the weather should be a bit cooler up there.

 

Asahikawa will likely be hot (inland location surrounded by mountains), but yes, further north it should be more pleasant.  Make sure to get some pictures of the old Asahikawa station(especially the Furano Line platform that serves track 6 and 7), it'll eventually be torn down once the new elevated version comes on-line.

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We head up to Asahikawa today then the day after do the trip up to Wakkanai, from my previous experience the weather should be a bit cooler up there.

 

Asahikawa will likely be hot (inland location surrounded by mountains), but yes, further north it should be more pleasant.  Make sure to get some pictures of the old Asahikawa station(especially the Furano Line platform that serves track 6 and 7), it'll eventually be torn down once the new elevated version comes on-line.

There was a thunder storm this afternoon which cooled it down a bit, 17 C at the moment.

 

We traveled from Hakodate to Sapporo on a series 281 and again the front door was roped off. Good and bad news for the diesel fans, Higashi Muroran loco depot was full of DF200's but several DD51's were being cut up, one unit in a string of four had been cut down to the cab and frames and several others were parked nearby looking like they were waiting their turn at the cutting torch, I didn't get any photos unfortunately. At Naebo shops outside Sapporo I got a glimpse of the standard gauge cars that are planned to carry narrow gauge freight trains through the Seikan Tunnel after the Shinkansen goes through. As we arrived at Asahikawa a DF200 hauled freight was arriving from the other direction, the tracks in the old station are getting a bit overgrown in view of their upcoming abandonment. We're here for two nights so I should be able to get more shots of the station, I got some shots of the Furano line platform in February 2006 covered in snow. We spent the afternoon at the Asahikawa Zoo, some of the newer exhibits are not bad but a lot of the animal enclosures would have the animal rights people knocking on their door back home.

 

I just looked out of the window and saw the tail end a freight passing through the station heading east/north trailing several tank cars behind the usual containers.

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Good and bad news for the diesel fans, Higashi Muroran loco depot was full of DF200's but several DD51's were being cut up, one unit in a string of four had been cut down to the cab and frames and several others were parked nearby looking like they were waiting their turn at the cutting torch

 

Sad indeed :sad:  As railfans on the west coast of the US were oft to say back in the 90's (when many of the remaining first and second generation diesels were being retired, concurently with the formation of the mega rr's)- "get your pics while you can, 'cause it may be gone tomorrow".

 

I just looked out of the window and saw the tail end a freight passing through the station heading east/north trailing several tank cars behind the usual containers.

 

Possibly a ferry move to the Kita Asahikawa Freight Station, which has both container handling facilities and a siding operated by JR Freight subsidiary Japan Oil Terminal Co.  Shunting on this siding is carried out by Asahikawa Tsuun's DD13 type loco:

http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E3%83%95%E3%82%A1%E3%82%A4%E3%83%AB:D5603.jpg

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I just looked out of the window and saw the tail end a freight passing through the station heading east/north trailing several tank cars behind the usual containers.

 

Possibly a ferry move to the Kita Asahikawa Freight Station, which has both container handling facilities and a siding operated by JR Freight subsidiary Japan Oil Terminal Co.  Shunting on this siding is carried out by Asahikawa Tsuun's DD13 type loco:

http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E3%83%95%E3%82%A1%E3%82%A4%E3%83%AB:D5603.jpg

I did a bit of googling after I made the post and found Kita Asahikawa. When we passed by on our way to Wakkanai this morning there was a DE10 in JR colours with what appeared to be the private company's name on a green patch under the cab windows shunting the tank cars. I wasn't quick enough to get a photo because we were busy looking at the lineup of snowplows on the other side.

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We did the trip from Asahikawa to Wakkanai and back by Super Soya today. I took plenty of photos of the soon to dissapear old Asahikawa station, I'll put them on a seperate thread. At Wakkanai we went by bus to Soya Misaki, Japan's northernmost point. When our leader went to the bus station to buy 26 tickets the bus company arranged a special tour bus for us instead of us using the regular bus. You can see it in one of the shots parked beside Japan's northernmost public toilet. :cheesy As the photos show the weather was brilliant and we could clearly see Sakhalin across the strait. In Wakkanai itself the station area is in the process of redevelopment and the old building looks like it will soon dissapear, only one platform is in use and the track seems to be shortened somewhat from my last visit in 1997. Along the main street loudspeakers were blaring out songs from old musicals such as Doris Day singing "Que Sera, Sera" and Judy Garland and fred Astaire with "Easter Parade". Japan ???:grin

 

On the way back to Asahikawa we were delayed five minutes with our first meet with an opposing train. We had just regained the schedule when somewhere (it was dark by then) between Bifuka anad Nayoro there were two blasts on the whistle and the brakes went into emergency, where I was sitting three cars back we heard and felt a thud under or on the side if the car, we got underway after twelve minutes during which the crew appeared to be inspecting the train. We didn't find out what had happened but we assumed we may have hit a deer.

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We've reached Abashiri on our circumnavigation of Hokkaido, tomorrow we press on to Kushiro.

 

Not many rail photos today as we arrived just after lunch time and then went for a look at the Prison Museum and Museum of Northern Peoples. There's not much rail activity at this remote outpost of JR anyway. There was a DD51 hauled freight waiting for us at Engaru and another at the freight facility at Kitami that looked like it was made up ready to leave or had just arrived, both had DD51's at each end for the reversal at Engaru. The red mini bus was waiting for us to pass at a crossing on the way into Kitami.

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