Up and away early from our stealth camp, tracking parallel to Matsu Bay mostly managing quiet secondary roads. After an hour, slight hills as we turned inland to the centre of the peninsula.
Climbing through tranquil forest.
Under the large transmission corridor through farmland.
Dropping to Lake Okagawa, we followed the shore for an hour and a half with a light tailwind, little traffic and plenty of birds and boats to look at – and the occasional self-defence (fighter) jet screaming overhead from a nearby base.
Didn’t work out what all these boats are used to fish for.
Lake looked a little low.
Looking across the southwest end of the lake and the hills towards which we were heading.

With the earlier start, a long lunch layover was enjoyed – also a chance for Rachel to shed some of her load by posting excess to her brother.
The early part of a pleasantly warm afternoon was spent riding through peaceful, productive cropping land very gradually climbing; onions and diakon being crops of note in these parts.








As the gradient increased, the fields began to be replaced with forest; that and the clear creek running down the valley helped also to keep the temperature down.
Maybe one day I’ll have a wood stack like that…
About the time we would normally be looking for ice cream, we found a store stuck about forty years ago – it did at least have ice cream.


There were still a few rice fields amongst the trees.
The first we’d seen of this method of drying rice.
Only in the last ten kilometres of the day, above 500 m, did the road steepen, put a hairpin or two in and bid farewell to the farming. Enjoyable riding, rather deserted up there too.



Having crossed the main road, we found a short walk to the source of the creek – wonderfully cool and clear spring water.




The few facilities up here were entirely deserted, summer holiday season having ended two weeks earlier. Having cooked on the side of a large parking lot, battling mosquitoes, we slept in the large clean toilet block – but still had to put our tent inners up to avoid the bugs.
Parking lot view – a rather spread out wind farm.

As if we were going home anytime soon.












Concrete logs must have been unusual enough to snap a photo of.
Maybe not for washing camp dishes.



More rugged terrain that we missed.
At the small station after the tunnel there was a pretty high viewing platform for the trainspotters.
Apparently one of the very few places you can see a freight train and shinkansen pass next to each other.
The vegetables in the store below were perhaps as impressive.
Definitely leaning into the shinkansen finally reaching Hokkaido around these towns.
Back to plains and good growing areas.
The air somewhat overpoweringly spring onion filled.
Unsure what is going on here.
Honshu getting closer…
Back to flat coastal biking, found a park of scale models near where a Dutch built, Japanese navy ship foundered on the just-offshore reef in the late nineteenth century.
More of the same, and something different – we detoured inland to the Trappist monastery pictured.
The long avenue approach one of the monastery’s attractions.

Back down to the coast.





Unsure what these were about, but not chimney sweeps. Coloured covers were always a welcome find in our continued documentation of the interesting local designs on mundane service covers.



This bell was particularly useful for the rest of the trip – Japanese, not too loud, robust and easy to use. I was disappointed to not find them later in the trip to take some home for my nephews.



Not the ferry we would be taking in the morning. Now a floating museum, it was a large ship from the days before the Seikan tunnel opened.
Little bit different to where we usually ate.
Also different for spice offerings – scale of one to fifteen unusual. Supposed spicy food had not been hot so far in Japan, so I opted for regular.
Black ink squid soup curry – easily one of the best meals I had in Japan. Although Regular spice was a misjudgement – it was very hot in both temperature and spice!
Just a street of concrete super heroes on the way back to the hotel.









Off we went, looking back out our overnight island.

Helpful local warned us to turn around here and climb back up to the main road, due to a closure ahead.


This stretch of coast seemed to be one long sporadic wind farm, with more turbines going in.
Unusual hazards for a small golf course.

This does a better job of summarising the area’s history than I could.
The little wind thingamijigs were rather calming too. Also had free charging from the bench under the tree, so I assume some generation capacity.

Spotted our barge shadow again too.
Honshu! The little bit of older Japanese history in Matsumae having whetted my appetite, I was very keen to get over there.
Trying out one of the many camera stands we’d seen.



Found out later in Tokyo that is quite a famous character; I was just there for the chance to dress-up on top of my bikepacking gear.
At least there was a lighthouse, I guess.
And a gap in the barrier.
Not that Fukushima.