Hakone Day Trip
With just a couple days left on our trip we decided that we didn’t want our last memories of Japan to be of another crowded city block, so we bought a day pass and headed to Hakone which is a scenic spot a couple of hours from Tokyo.
Hakone is apparently the place where Tokyoites go to holiday when they want to see buildings with no second floors, lush rolling hills, flowing creeks and massive lakes.
The day pass came with a recommended guide to see all the sites of Hakone which requires 5 different modes of transport. First up though is a standard one and a half hour train commute on the Odakyu line followed by a connecting line for a couple minutes to Odawara and finally a forty minute ride on a bus that I swear was too big for the lane it was driving in. That is to say, ‘when’ he was driving in it, the largely uphill journey was full of hairpin turns which leads me to believe that buses were an after thought when they built the road.
A short walk along the river later we arrive at a wharf where a big pirate ship picked us up and very slowly delivered us to the ropeway cars to take us up one of the bigger hills. The pirate ship does look a bit strange in the middle of a lake in Japan – but hey, whatever floats their boat… so to speak.
The ropeway system is quite unique in the fact that you have a series of stops along the way where people can get on and off as they please.
From what we could gather though the only real attractions at the stops on the way up were hotel stops. The final stop on the crest of the hill is a smelly sulfur geiser which is actually part of an active volcano. Here, they sell equally smelly black eggs. The eggs are just normal eggs boiled in the sulfuric hot springs, however, each egg you eat gives you seven more years longevity. I dunno, sounds pretty dengerous to me…. that’s right, dengerous!
I thought “engrish” was only in China, but there are a few more funnies on this sign as well (click it to enlarge).
After smelling rotting eggs and watching people eat what look like to be rotten eggs we caught the ropeway car down the hill and then hopped on a ‘cable train’ to a connecting train station where we caught a ‘Romance Car’ equipped train back to Shinjuku where our hotel is. Confused? Welcome to our world!
Anyways, here are some scenery shots we managed to get. It was a very beautiful place and probably the highlight of all our time spent in Tokyo.
Rob