An early rise with a grand view towards the city and the gleaming Mount Fuji before catching the bus into town to the station. I am not a urbanite but could not fail to be impressed by the sheer colossal scale of place with its towering office and housing blocks crammed into any available vertical space, offset by sweeping elevated roads and bridges, curving monorail and gleaming waterways. Everything was clean and shiny. We were efficiently deposited at the railway station to catch the Shinkansen to Karuizawa.
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The exceptionally well organised taxi rank |
Getting a sense of the speed of the Bullet beast was difficult
until we were out in the countryside and at that point we topped at 277kph. Little was seen as the landscape hurtled by
but Fuji was still unobscured by cloud.
We arrived in snow and picked our way through the skiers and
snowboarders to the first vans of the trip. Travelling out of town, we made our
first 7-11 lunch stop where the magical world of a Japanese convenience store
was laid out before us. Grub in hand we
moved just up the road and stopped in the shadow of recently dormant volcano by
a traditional red bridge.
Onwards to Lake Toden and the stony, braided Chikuma River
where we hoped to find the scarce Long-billed Plover amongst other things. It was now windy and bitterly cold but it was
a good first session in the field and we soon found two of our target waders pretending
to be river cobbles. Duck were
everywhere with all the regular dabblers and our first flouncy Falcated
Ducks.
Long-billed Plover |
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Long-billed Plover - Dave Farrow |
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Long-billed Plover - Dave Farrow |
Pintail |
Falcated Duck |
The lake held a large number of Spot-billed Ducks along with
Goosanders, 14 Smew and other dabbling ducks while a huddle or Grey Herons
hunkered down on the bank out of the wind.
Spot-billed Ducks Smew and Teal Grey Herons feeling the cold
Black-eared Kites scoured the river for scraps with our
first Oriental Crows in tow and the ever present Thick-billed Crows kronking away. A pale
Eastern Buzzard – like a small Rough-leg – hovered overhead and was buzzed by a
Peregrine.
Black-eared Kite Eastern Buzzard Oriental Crow
There was plenty of small bird action too with raspy
Japanese Wagtails and chiswicking Black-backs, a stunning adult male
Bull-headed Shrike, Rustic Bunting and a male Daurian Redstart down in the
willow margins.
Japanese Wagtail |
With the cold getting through and a drive ahead of us we
retraced our steps and spent a few minutes watching Grey-capped Greenfinches
around the car park where White-cheeked Starlings and Tree Sparrows were
feeding in the shrivelled Persimmons on a tree there.
White-cheeked Starling |
White-cheeked Starling |
Tree Sparrow |
Tree Sparrow Tree |
The weather soon deteriorated and we cut through countless
tunnels between valleys with different levels of snow cover. It was quiet bird wise but thousands of
White-cheeked Starlings swirled over the road in response to a male Goshawk. It
was dark and snowing by the time we arrived at our hotel in Udanaka where a
lavish Kaiseki banquet awaited us. It
was a little daunting but we were now in no doubt that we were visiting a very different
culture to our own.
The tatami mat rooms were exquisite but I required more than
one floor mattress to get myself comfy!