Away at seven, well – down the hill to Seicomart, yet again; not long before we were at the visitor centre on the edge of Shiretoko National Park.
Back to Utoro.
After the bear attack and body retrieval in the previous few days, most of the hiking tracks were closed in the park. But there was a short one still open behind the visitor centre, so we set off on that. Ten minutes in and we promptly saw an alarmingly large bear crossing the track not really that far in front of us. Thankfully we were far more surprised than the bear – who just kept walking through doing its thing. Turning tail, that was the end of our walk for the day!
Having reported the encounter, there were no longer any trails open in the park. But it seems that our sighting was not unusual, the tenth in the last two weeks according to the calendar below:

No more hiking for us, had better get on with the biking – up over the pass, looking at Mt Rausu most of the way. Good gentle gradient, little traffic and occasional shade.
Back down to the northwest.
Mt Rausu.
Didn’t seen any more bears crossing, thankfully.
View from the pass – big parking lot, plenty of people around.
To the southeast. There’s Russia again, its islands seemingly wrapping around this part of Japan.
Wonderfully long descent it was too; although I got very sleepy on the way down, most unusual – lack of sleep in the heat catching up with me.
We pulled into a wild (for want of a better term) free onsen on the side of the road. Too hot to swim, we did bump into the father and son cyclists for the third time that week.
Quite the little dude; must be strong – his loaded bike was heavier than ours. Perhaps because we weren’t carrying so many souvenirs – deer antlers particularly.

Lunch and ice cream stop in Rausu town before heading up the east side of the peninsula. Not far to a rider house and a campground opposite sandwiched between the road and the rocky coast. Was rather difficult getting tent pegs in. Camp made, we continued as far as the road would take us – seeing a fair bit of wildlife, not to mention rather too much of old men in the hot rock pools that were made in the shallows of the sea.
Plenty of fishing net buoys all up this stretch of coast.



Two of numerous little pools built around hot springs in the sea.


Chum salmon and pollack the prize catches in these waters.
Back to camp; I think Orlaith kindly volunteered to ride the five-ish kilometres back to town to get dinner supplies. She did well as the fresh tomatoes, mushrooms along with pesto and chicken was one of our best camp meals yet. Certainly beats the dog roll in Mongolia!
Although my snap doesn’t seem to have done it justice.
Sleep, well – attempted sleep, the closest we got to Russia – only twenty-five kilometres across the water to Kunashiri Island.
Think we got all this right before dropping the trash off.
Roller slide? Reminded me of the roller stands we used to have while packing boysenberries.
Big pillow looking a bit deflated; already a leaf blower out keeping it immaculate, wonder what the man thought of us.
Ouch, no thanks.






Fascinating structure made to look like it’s constructed with fishing net.
Shari also the gateway to famed Shiretoko National Park (we hoped for some hiking) – probably why the station was so much flasher than most provincial ones.
(Rachel’s photo)
One of the women enjoyed showing us pictures of the place – in summer here.
Obviously winter here. The ice flows down from the north and packs the coast in!
The vintage cameras caught my eye.
The handguns just sitting there dragged it down.
Returning to our bikes, and the furnace, we found a couple of extra loaded bikes. Fun to see the father and son from a week ago in the Wakkanai rider house.
A good sign indeed. Also, the road improved markedly and it was a little cooler right by the sea.


Into Utoro for the night, Shiretoko mountains in the background.
At least some of the concrete coastal protection gives a little aesthetic pleasure.


The climb to the campground paid for by the view.



Route planning in full swing; like in Mongolia – as I wasn’t the one on a short timeframe, I stayed out of it and stuck to navigating once the file was sent to me.

Still unable to get over how picturesque and clean the dairy farms are – certainly not contaminated with cows!

Suspect our loaded bikes are faster than these small wheels.



A little cut through some farmland away from the lake, first large greenhouse complex of note; which is curious as the winters aren’t exactly mild up here.
Back beside the lake, but seemingly going the wrong way – exploring a little headland park and campground.
Amused to see an indoor curling rink; more amused to find that one of my Naseby mates has curled there.
Colourful borders back besides the streets.
I may have overstocked on camping supplies at the hardware store. 😮
Still scallops around here.

Biggest snake yet, it waited until we were right next to it before showing signs of life. Alarming.
Certainly was old train day. No accommodation in this one but.

Guard booth.
These didn’t look comfortable, particularly the pillow.
Restored lime kiln.


An interpretation of “central” heating.
I don’t think we broke many of the rubbish rules, but it’s hard to know.
Home for the night – lovely to have limitless shower, bit of a kitchen and plenty of clothes drying space upstairs.
Did stop to look through a fancy deli, all I got was this dubious photo.
When not looking at the sea, I was gazing longingly inland at the hills.
Marigold beds back!
Starting to get a bit more agricultural…
Another Seicomart lunch, but a short distance to the shore was better than eating outside the store – more sea fortifications.

Skirting Monbetsu, we got a fifty metre climb!
Tent sites under the trees; mostly quiet except the neighbours in the cabins had multiple yappy dogs.
Dog ownership not high in Japan, but what there is often makes up with curious sights.