Thursday, February 5, 2026

Akiyoshidai Plateau

 


After exiting Akiyoshi-do cavern via the elevator I made the short walk to the observation deck overlooking the plateau.


Akiyoshidai is a karst plateau covering about 130 sq kilometers, about a third of which is classified as a Quasi National Park.


The circular observation platform has great 360 degree views over much of it


It is a very unusual landscape for Japan, and that for me in some ways is reminiscent of the moors back in the UK or some of the grasslands in the west of the US.


It was once completely forested, like the rest of Japan, but the local people took to burning the land cover once a year to stop the trees from growing and to allow susuki to grow.


Susuki is commonly known as Japanese pampas Grass, and was grown as feed for animals and as thatching material for roofs.


This annual burning still takes place every February and is known as yamayaki.


The other notable feature of Akiyoshidai is the limestone pinnacles, some as high as two meters, that dot the landscape.


Dozens of footpaths criss-cross the plateau, and the next day I would be walking clear across it on my walk to Hagi, but this evening I chose a simple circuit that stayed close to the observation deck.


After my walk I walked a few hundred meters to my room for the night in the youth hostel.


Unfortunately, it no longer exists.










The previous post in this series on day 27 of my walk along the Chugoku Kannon Pilgrimage was on the Akiyoshido cave beneath the plateau


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Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Mudo-ji Temple 10 Kinki Fudo Myoo Pilgrimage

 


After emerging from the forested mountain I come into what is in essence a suburb of Kobe, albeit in a valley separated from Kobe by Rokko Mountain. I cross the Yamada valley to the northern side and find the entrance to Mudo-ji, the tenth temple on the Kinki Fudo Myoo Pilgrimage.


The long approach is lined with statues representing the 88 Shikoku Pilgrimage temples.


Mossy steps lead up to the compact temple grounds with a bell tower, an elegant main hall, and an imposing, thatched residence.


The origins of Mudo-ji date back to the end of the 6th century, the very early days of Buddhism in Japan, and to the semi-legendary Prince Shotoku Taishi.


Along with his Soga Clan relatives, Shotoku Taishi was in conflict with the Mononobe Clan, and he asked a sculptor to carve a series of statues of Dainichi Nyorai and other Buddhist deities. Upon the defeat of the Mononobe he ordered the construction of seven halls to house the statues and this became Fukuji Temple.


The temple went through numerous changes and by the mid 18th century was in a dilapidated state. A twenty year fundraising campaign led to it being rebuilt in 1752. The main hall and priests' quarters date to that time.


There was a private ceremony going on when I was there so I was not able to enter the main hall, which is a real shame as I found out later that the Treasure House, entered through the main hall, houses 5 Important Cultural Properties.


The 5 ancient statues are a 3-meter-tall statue of Dainichi, the honzon of the temple, a seated Shaka Nyorai, believed to be the oldest of the statues, a seated Amida, a seated Fudo Myoo, and a standing 11-headed Kannon. They are all believed to have been carved in the mid-Heian Period.


There was a small, seemingly fairly new, Goma Hall in which I found a Fudo....


I wish I had been able to see the one in the Treasure Hall...


Immediately adjacent to the temple, and once its guardian shrine, is Wakaoji Shrine, another Important Cultural Property.


It was established in 1297, the current shrine , within its protective outer structure, dates to 1408.


It enshrined Wakaoji Gongen, the mountain guardian of the temple.


In the late 19th century, when the shrine was separated from the temple, the main kami changed to Izanagi.


Mudo-ji is now a Shingon sect temple.


As well as the Kinki Fudo Myoo, the temple is on several other pilgrimages; it's number 12 on the Kobe 13 Buddhas  Pilgrimage, and number 9 on the Settsu Kannon Pilgrimage.




The previous post in this series on day four of my walk along the Kinki Fudo Myoo Pilgrimage was on Shiogahara Pond in the mountains nearby...


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Saturday, January 31, 2026

Akiyoshido the Greatest Cavern in Japan

 


Beneath the Akiyoshidai limestone karst in central Yamaguchi, sit 400 caves, the largest of which is named Akiyoshido.


It is said to extend 10 kilometers, but only the first kilometers is opend to the public.


The cave was formed by limestone being dissolved in water, and through the first part of the cave a river still runs....


The first part is truly a cavern, the size of an aircraft hangar...


later the path into the deeper reaches does some climbing and descending...


many of the formations encountered have evocative names. There are multilingual explanations at many points.


For those that don't want to walk the full kilometer back to the etrance, an elevator takes you up to the plateau from where a shuttle take you back to the entrance during the busy season.


Or you can, as I did this time, walk from the elevator exit to the observation deck overlooking the plateau.


When I first visited Akiyoshido many years ago, many of the formations whoilluminated with coloured lights. A few shots from then can be seen here.


Though it is not far from Hagi, Akiyoshido is much esier to reach by public transport from Shin Yamagucho or Yamaguchi stations.










The previous post was on the nearby Akiyoshi Inari Shrine


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