Kōrankei
A small tourist village near a gorge famous for its display of autumn leaves.
Kōrankei Gorge is a popular seasonal tourist destination for its dramatic displays of autumn leaves. In Japan, “popular seasonal” equates to “seasonally overcrowded,” and I confess that I’ve never braved the scrum to walk the gorge in its glory. Nearby, though, there is a live museum Asuke Yashiki along the Tomoe River where visitors can watch traditional goods being made by craftsmen and women.1 At the entrance to the craft museum there is a small restaurant, and in the village a few hundred meters away across a small thoroughfare there is a high street with local restaurants and confectioners.
Above the Tomoe River, on a summit above the craft museum stand the ruins of Asuke Castle, a small mountain stronghold dating from as far back as the Kamakura period, overlooking the Asuke River that flows into the Tomoe.2
I had ridden to Asuke decades back with three other foreigners from the university, hauling our bikes to a parking area midway there and riding about 15 kilometers to take in the village and castle. To keep myself busy after Mieko’s passing, I took the folding bike to Sanage Station, and attempted without success to find a bikeable route from there to the village. Then in March of this year I was invited by Yokoi Toshiaki, owner of the local bike shop Quest, to join a “beginners’ ride” to Asuke. The ride was to be staged from the parking lot of a park about 15 kilometers out (Shōwa no Mori), but I rose early to rendezvous by departure time. And so I at last learned a bikeable route from house to village.
I haven’t any photos from that first ride, but Yokoi-san covered the excursion in a blog post, with photos of the group’s visit to a local sweet shop and of a meal served at the craft village restaurant.
The notes and photos below are from multiple rides over this day-trip course.
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- GPX data: Nisshin ↣ Shōwa no Mori
- GPX data: Shōwa no Mori ↣ Kōrankei
Here is an obligatory departure shot. It’s not obvious in the photo, but the bike is still in its 3-speed configuration here. This was taken a few days after the initial ride to Kōrankei with the Quest group, when I retraced the route solo.
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On the Road to Shōwa no Mori
The intersection below is pretty close to the house, and many routes in the general direction of Toyota City to the east pass through it. Shinto is associated with beginnings, and on my New Year’s Day ride to Sasado in 2024, folks were queuing to make the wishing-well prayer for a good one. Not sure if I’ll drop in myself next year, will have to think about that one.
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There is a stretch of straight and level between the suburban fringe and the foothills.
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On the first ride to practice the route after tagging along with the Quest riders, plum trees were in bloom.
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Century 21 was a familiar real estate franchise when I last lived in California, four decades ago. I was startled when I passed this sign, and it earned itself a snap.
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Multiple eastbound routes pass Nagoya Prison (see the prisons tag for other photos).
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I’ve seen a bunch of derelict vehicles while traipsing around Chūbu by bike. I’m terrible with a camera, but this one was too photogenic to mess up.
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Speaking of my meagre camera skillz, this scene was more striking than the photo lets on. After ascending through kind of garden-city suburban streets, I arrived at a T junction facing a hillside razed and stripped of its vegetation to install a row of houses that will-ye-nil-ye call forth Little Boxes by Malvina Reynolds. Probably great views from up there though.
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The gathering spot for the initial ride with the Quest group was the Number 5 Parking Area of the Shōwa no Mori park, which is about halfway between the house and Kōrankei/Asuke.
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On the Road to Tomoe River Bridge
Sometimes there are odd little follies in the countryside. I spotted this geodesic dome under construction out of the corner of my eye while riding past, and stopped to take a quick snap.
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Not a lot in this photo. I think the contrast between farmland and the wrecking-yard ambience of the derelict vans lined up on the lot were striking.
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This is one of the critical waypoints that I learned from riding with the Quest group: an aging footbridge that cuts out some seriously unpleasant mixed-traffic riding.
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The photos below were taken on a return trip from Asuke village. The rail bed parallels a highway, and much of its length has been converted to a walking/biking path. At the point where navigation directed that I leave the path and again mix with traffic, I ignored the guidance and continued on the path to see where it led. By the time I reached the gate shown below, the rail bed was high above the highway, and the only way to return to the highway was via a treacherous informal footpath snaking down the embankment. I met a mother from the neighborhood out for a walk with her children, and she said (if I understood her correctly) that the tracks continued on to a hotel. Out of curiousity I walked on for some distance, but there seemed no end in sight. I returned to the bike and manhandled it down the embankment to continue on my way.
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Kōrankei and Asuke
This is the entrance to the Kojaku-ji temple (香積寺), up the hill from the craft museum.
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One of the conveniences offered by convenience stores in Japan is ready access to a WC. In countryside villages “conveni” can be scarce, so when the need arises a little more thinking is sometimes required. On one visit to Kōrankei, the need did indeed arise, and I guessed that a commercial parking area near the high street must offer a public toilet. Intuition served me well.
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