After leaving Kute, a line of small hills separates the road from the sea and inland a largish area of rice paddies.....
This was a brackish lake that has been drained by cutting an opening through the hillside allowing the land to be reclaimed and planted in rice. This was done quite a long time ago in the Kamakura Period.
I am not at all sure where the lake originally drained, but where it now reaches the sea is a spire of rock called Kakedo Matsushima.
It once had a pine tree standing on top of it, and maybe I am misremembering, but I seem to remember it was still there when I first passed by on a train more than twenty years ago.
There is a small harbour then a beach and tucked up against the sheer cliffs the main harbour of Hane.
Hane was at some point a small beach resort and there are still a couple of ryokan operating.
The train line got here in 1912 so it may have started then, although it has the feel of the 1960s about it.
The cliffs are quite impressive and there is a lighthouse on top.
From here there is no access to the coast fo the next 5 kilometers until the mouth of the Tagi River, the old boundary between Iwami and Izumo, so I took thebtrain home from here and will start from Tagi on the next leg.
Thanks Jake🙂
ReplyDeletethe candle rock is quite amazing
ReplyDeleteThank so much.
Gabi from Oayama
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