Showing posts with label Gonokawa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gonokawa. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

To Kasubuchi to end the Third Day

 


A short walk after leaving the Ago Ohashi Bridge, the river turns towards the north and will stay north until the small town of Kasubuchi.


Part of some transformers at a small power station using water piped from upstream and then dropped from a height to power turbines....


Other than a few thatched farmhouses with tin covers, not much of note until reaching Kasubuchi.







I cross via a fairly new bridge, the Akebono Ohashi, completed in 1992.


A little downstream is the old railway bridge. It was unusual in that it also had a pedestrian section.


Unfortunately, since the rail line closed, they also closed the pedestrian section.


The bridge has been dismantled since I was there on this trip.


In Kasubuchi I catch a small, local bus downstream and head home to end day three of my walk along the Gonokawa River to its source. The train used to take between 70 and 90 minutes. The bus will take almost three hours.


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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Passing by Ago Ohashi Bridge on the Scenic Gonokawa River

I continue upriver towards the source...... 


Carrying on up the right/East bank of the Gonokawa River after leaving the red Kurihara Bridge


The former Sanko Line railway runs on this bank. Whereas some bridges have been dismantled, mostly in urban areas, here the small bridge remains...


Roadside altars are commonplace everywhere in Japan.... this one is quite substantial.... as usual someone locally keeps the  flowers replaced....


Quite a few thatched houses with metal covering the thatch...


The last time I walked by here the little gas station was still in business....


Up ahead, the Ago Ohashi Bridge comes into view....


It is a two-truss type...


Built in 1954, it is one of the oldest existant bridges across the Gonokawa...


for a purely stone type, this altar is quite big....


For the first 40k going up river, the river and landscape is quite similar and it can be hard to differentiate where you are from a photo...








Up ahead the top of Mount Sanbe. The highest point in Shimane and a volcano was last active about 4,000 years ago.


The river continues to head towards it for about 4 more kilometers before doing a 180 turn and heading away from it....


The previous post in this series was on the Kurihara Bridge


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Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Kurihara Bridge over the Gonokawa River

 


Kurihara Bridge is the 13th bridge across the Gonokawa River from the rivermouth in Gotsu on the Sea of Japan.


It is the seond of many that fall within the boundaries of Misato, a large collection of villages and mountains grouped together as a municipality in the mountainous interior of Shimane.


I was here on day 3 of my walk from the mouth of the river to the source. It is about 40-45 kilometers from the start.


The bridge opened in 1976.


It is a simple, two arch type of bridge.


The previous post in this series on my walk up the Gonokawa was on the short stretch between Onbara and here.


if you would like to subscribe by email just leave your email address in the comments below. It will not be published and made public. I post new content almost everyday, and send out an email about twice a month with short descriptions and links to the last ten posts.



Friday, February 20, 2026

From Onbara to Kurihara Bridge

 


On the third day of my walk up the Gonokawa River towards its source, I have passed through the boundaries of Gotsu City and Kawamoto Town and have entered Misato Town, a huge area of scattered vullages and uninhabited mountains straddling the river for the next few days.


I leave the small settlement of Onbara after visiting its shrine. A very quiet little place that the "main" road along the river bypasses.


It's mid-October and the Goldenrod is in full bloom. It's originally an American plant but since the mid 20th century and spread across Japan. It occupies the same ecological niche as the native Susuki, often referred to as Japanese Pampas Grass. Goldenrod is an invasive species seemingly taking over. In the US, Susuki is an invasive species seemingly crowding out Goldenrod. Balance of a kind I guess.


A narrow lane leads back to the riverbank. Kurihara Bridge is just ahead.


Several roadside altars have some offerings of coins and fresh flowers, and swept clean, attesting to the care given by at least one of the locals....


The previous post in this series was on Onbara Hachimangu, the local shrine.


if you would like to subscribe by email just leave your email address in the comments below. It will not be published and made public. I post new content almost everyday, and send out an email about twice a month with short descriptions and links to the last ten posts.