I had a four-day break from work last weekend, so I took a trip up to Hirosaki, a medium-sized city near the northern tip of Honshu, the main island of Japan.
To get there, I bought a special ticket called the seishun juuhachi kippu, which is only offered during periods that coincide with student holidays. For about US$100, the ticket gives you five nonconsecutive days of unlimited travel on local trains. Cheap, but slow. Travel between Nagano and Hirosaki took 15 hours each way. But I had time to spare, I love riding trains, and the scenery was great.
I rode on six different trains, taking me through many cities and towns along the way:
Nagano –> Arai
Arai –> Niigata
Niigata –> Murakami
Murakami –> Sakata
Sakata –> Akita
Akita –> Hirosaki
Much of the trip between Niigata and Akita was right along the coast of the Sea of Japan. The weather was spectacular and the views were great as the trains traveled through small coastal villages.
Through the mountains between Nagano and Arai, and then again between Akita and Hirosaki, there was still a lot of snow. In Hirosaki, banks of snow remained, but it was melting quickly in the warm, spring sunshine.
I visited Hirosaki because it’s where my great-grandfather lived in the last years of the 1800s. There is a museum in Hirosaki that contains family photos, letters, diaries and more. My grandmother visited the city in 1991 along with her four children for the dedication of the museum. I’ll be posting more about this part of my visit to Hirosaki soon.
I’ve added two photo albums of the trip:
Local trains to Hirosaki:
I love trains.
Nagano to Hirosaki:
Scenery as seen from many trains, and photos of Hirosaki.
I’ve also added nine video clips taken during the trip.
3 thoughts on “Hirosaki Trip”
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loved the photos, especially the wonderful colors. living in the suburbs of tokyo, easy to get down on the landscape, the concrete, the factories, the expressways, etc. Thanks for reminding me there there still remains a ton of natural beauty in this country. (JR East has a North Tohoku campaign on now, I need to research that more!)
ps. wanted to see the vids, but for some reason Mozilla (on Win) kept insisting I needed the plug-in, despite Apple’s site saying I’m good to go. Boo hoo…
Kurt,
Sorry about the problem with the videos. My platform and browser testing on this site has been almost non-existent. I’ll see what I can do to fix the problem, and then you can be my Win/Moz guinea pig, okay?
By the way, congratulations on the new addition to the family.
Thanks for publishing your pictures mike. I especially liked that little sandy cove. Looks very inviting for a quick swim (wearing head-to-toe neoprene of course).
Cheers.