The heavy rain cleared to leave a beautiful morning on Lake Toya. Plenty of kayakers and SUPers to watch as we cleaned much mud splatter off our tents and dried them in the sun before heading back around the lake.



Back through town and an honest climb out of the crater that the lake and surrounds sit in.



Over the crater edge onto a bit of plateau for ten kilometres, more extensive farming – even a crop of rawang buki, hadn’t seen any for over a week.
Best view of Mt Yotei yet.
Rawang buki not taller than me, this time. (Rachel’s photo.)
Sharp drop back to the ocean, back to the Pacific, at Uchiura Bay. Through a couple of town, unfortunately we’d joined the highway to get around the bay – but still much more pleasant than highway riding in other countries, particularly home.



Finding the old highway stuck closer to the coast for bit, we took that welcome option.
Buoy art.
Refreshments from a rare non-chain convenience store.
Typical small rural station.
Roadworks up ahead showed why this stretch of road may have been quieter than normal – only open every half hour, we had to stop for a bit and wait.
Wasn’t difficult to pass the time here, warm water was very inviting.
Pity it was too early to camp, would have been a great spot.
Given the green light, we rode through the work area – a new tunnel was going in, I assume due to problems with rockfall in the current cutting. Seemed excessive for a relatively redundant route – must only be a small amount of local traffic, as the new highway we had been on is near. But perhaps this is a country that can build things and I’m unused to it.

Soon to be tunnel portal.
Signs that rockfall may be a problem.
Ex-tunnel view definitely preferable.
Extensive stabilisation.
Quite the temporary fence and scaffold.
Out of the roadworks and heading for the highway.
Engineering sure saved us a lot of climbing and descending in this hilly country.
Back down to farms at sea level, we found a few back roads – and had lunch in a field. The coastal highway around Oshamanbe was busy, and we did our best to avoid it – but it was difficult as we found ourselves skirting a huge engineering build. I’d apologise, but I’m not sorry, for more construction photos below – it certainly defined that stretch of riding.
The shinkansen (bullet train) is being extended from the southern Hokkaido city of Hakodate to Sapporo (by far the biggest city in Hokkaido). Count-lost mobile cranes, form work and concrete pouring; all a bit mind-boggling in scale.








Having decided the direct route down the east to Hakodate (to get a ferry to Honshu) offered no quiet alternative, we left the Pacific and cut west across the peninsula towards the Sea of Japan. A little climbing to Pirika – with a big, open campground attached to a large hotel-onsen.
Wonder what they grow here.

Checking in – seem well catered for budding cyclists.

Unusually the cooking shelter was screened for bugs, a nice change to avoid mosquitoes. A good wash and soak at the onsen to top off a different, but interesting day. Quite the contrast between Lake Toya and all the construction; still very hot, of course.
Camp dinners still delivering; mostly Rachel’s influence.




Surprised to see some Mongolian wool products at one of the stalls.





A town for my brother-in-law, it seems.

Outside cows!
Every so often in Japan the road marked on our maps would turn out to be a track – this was usually a welcome change.
This was one of the good ones, a steep easy descent to Lake Toya.
A flat quiet road around the lake towards our campground.









Onsen on the right, Rachel and I each had respective halves to ourselves the previous night – not a busy place.
Mt Niseko visible at times – a popular ski area, Rachel having skied there on one of her previous trips to Japan.


Best tea in a cafe, for my tastes, yet. Better than our go-to teabags for camping – if I ever return to Japan, must remember to take decent tea.
Also found a huge second-hand gear store – this would be a great place to come if over skiing. Plenty of other sports, clothes and household items covered too.
Didn’t take me long to get used to raw fish, so good.
Do love my saddle-bag for its surge capacity.
Old glass buoys as lampshades, or made to look so.
Even bigger than some of the abandoned hotels we’d seen.
Well, this is different.
Some of the interactive displays were impressive.
What we’d not seen hidden away.
Definitely pushing the boundary of our “visitor centre” interpretation – and we didn’t even go to the large heated swimming pool.
Friendly Mr Fission?
Getting a bit ridiculous now, the more we walked around and found still more.
Happy guy.






Suspiciously like Mr Fission in disguise.

We’d not seen much reference to the Pacific War in places we’d visited so far, so this was surprising.
Got a bit of a look a the power plant as we climbed.
The coast down which we’d ridden in the previous day.







Back at the parking lot, it was time for a big sando and Calpis.
Near the pass, there were a series of tracks through the hillside – making it look even more like teafields.
Fun descent for a couple of hundred metres lost, before turning off and regaining some of that altitude.



But there was an immaculately kept, unattended campground. We were the only ones camping, a couple of vehicles overnight in the parking lot.
Another big kitchen shelter to ourselves, mostly.
