Showing posts with label Kusatsu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kusatsu. Show all posts

19 October 2022

Glorious Great Ginormous Gunma

Lake Haruna ... after our first 1000m elevation gain.

RAMAX ready to go. One bag on the frame, plus a rucksack with some light gear.

After my epic ride of the Fukushima SR600 and Covid-19 DNS at Cascade 1200, I wanted to try one more SR600 this year. Jerome said he would join, and we planned it for the week of Oct 10-14 when we would both be in town and hoped to have some time during the week, and I could celebrate my birthday. 

I suggested AJ-Gunma's new SR600 Joumou Sanzan course, because it is easy to get to/from, and while it goes through an area I am generally familiar with, I have done only small segments of the actual route, and only a couple of the 13 climbs.

The title of the ride is written in romanized characters, but Joumou is 上毛, a name for the area of Japan that makes up roughly modern day Gunma Prefecture. Sanzan is probably 散々 which has various meanings, but I guess here means "more than enough!"  "Sanzan" also might mean 三山 or "three mountains", or even "lots of mountains". Anyway, the ride covers a lot of Gunma and as an SR600 has well over 10,000 meters of climbing, so more than enough mountains.

Gunma has plenty of excellent riding territory, including most of this route. Gunma has beautiful onsen (hot springs), including famous ones such as Kusatsu, Ikaho, and Shima, all of which are along this route, and many other smaller onsen of all types -- ancient, rustic, luxury retreats, local day spas, and more!  Gunma has lots of mountains that jut up sharply at the top, exposed rock lumps as if stones had been turned on their side and stood upright on top of forested hills ... in a way vaguely reminiscent of, but smaller than and with more rounded and crumbled sides than, some of the Dolomites in Italy, or the mountains of Guilin in southern China. Gunma has dozens of ski areas. Gunma also is very convenient to Tokyo. Takasaki is less than an hour from Tokyo by shinkansen -- and all shinkansen going toward Niigata or Nagano/Kanazawa stop in Takasaki.  There are 2 other shinkansen stops in Gunma -- Annaka Haruna, between Takasaki and Karuizawa, and Joumou Kogen, near Minakami in the north of the Prefecture.

But I think Gunma has an image problem. First, what is Gunma? Some people will think of it as a distant part of the Kanto megalopolis, with low elevation areas of urban sprawl and rice cultivation around Takasaki, Maebashi, and Kiryu that are as hot in summer as adjacent Saitama, and do not have much in the way of physical separation from Tochigi or Saitama. Or is Gunma represented by the mountainous western and northern parts of the Prefecture, where only a small fraction of the population lives?

Gunma is landlocked. But unlike other big landlocked prefectures, it lacks one dominant headline attraction. Shiga Prefecture has Lake Biwa, a major landmark that dominates its landscape. Gifu Prefecture has Hida Takayama and Shirakawa village, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and major tourist destination. Yamanashi has, well, Mt. Fuji (at least the northern half of the mountain). It also has the southern side of Yatsugatake around Hokuto city, and a wealth of history including Takeda Shingen, pre-eminent feudal lord who struggled unsuccessfully to unite medieval Japan and many of whose innovations were eventually adopted by the victorious Tokugawa Ieyasu. Tochigi Prefecture has Nikko, a major tourist attraction, as well as Nasu Kogen, where the royal family has a guesthouse. And Utsunomiya, the gyoza capital of Japan.

Nagano Prefecture has so much, it is difficult to know where to begin. Nagano had its own winter Olympics, for goodness sake. It has its soba, its miso, its apples, its cultural monuments, it has served as the home to many distinguished personages, it some of Japan's best ski areas (Hakuba, to start, Nozawa Onsen to continue, and many others); it has the longest average lifespan in all Japan (recently exceeding Okinawa); it has the fanciest countryside resort towns (Karuizawa, Tateshina), the highest paved road in Japan (up Norikura), and much much more.  If people in Japan hear "Shinshu" or "Shinano" (two pre-modern terms for the Nagano area), they think of good things, cultured countryside, valued traditions and foods. Heck, the area around Lake Suwa in Nagano has evidence of some of the earliest (Jomon and pre-Jomon) human settlements in Japan. People in Japan poke fun at Saitama (and Chiba, and yes, Gunma), but no one, not even Tokyo nor Kyoto folk, makes jokes at the expense of Nagano!

Gunma? Well, Gunma has Konnyaku. Gunma produces more of it than any other prefecture in Japan. It also has the Konnyaku Park, a theme/amusement park about ... konnyaku. 


And Gunma has Gunma-chan.

Gunma-chan

Gunma has some major onsen towns ... Kusatsu, Ikaho, Shima, and plenty of others. Kusatsu is nationally famous ... almost as much so as Gero onsen in Gifu, or Beppu in Oita, or Atami and Hakone in Shizuoka.  In some surveys, Kusatsu comes in ranked as the #1 onsen in all of Japan. But just about every prefecture in Japan has onsen of which it is proud. Kusatsu may be in the current lead, but it is not a clear #1, and it is wedged in the NW corner of Gunma, far from the rest of the prefecture.

If more evidence were needed of Gunma's branding issue, our second big climb on the first day of our ride was from Kurabuchi west up to Nido-age Pass and the plateau in Gunma on the north side of Mt. Asama. Mt. Asama straddles the Nagano/Gunma border. Anyway, this plateau is called "Kita Karuizawa" or "North Karuizawa".  The Karuizawa (Nagano) brand is so strong that the neighboring area of Gunma piggybacks on the name, rather than trying to create its own brand. Sadly, Kita Karuizawa is a 45 minute drive, mostly up a mountainside, from the Karuizawa shinkansen station, quite remote. And while remoteness has its attractions, let's just say that it has not been quite as successful at developing the local economy, attracting celebrity Tokyoites' second homes, or boosting real estate prices as the main Karuizawa. 

After this climb, we descended National Route 146 toward Naganohara town.  What? NAGANO-hara? They really should rename the town something else. Why not call it "Lower Tsumagoi", or "Kusatsuguchi" (the name of its train station, as the train does not go up the hill to Kusatsu itself)? Why weaken your brand by using the same name as Nagano ... even if it has been called this for a thousand years?

The next day, I wanted to buy some fruit to send back to Tokyo after leaving our lodgings in Shima Onsen. I was told that the road back down the valley is called the "Ringo Kaido" (the "Apple Highway") and that there were stands where I could buy a box of apples and have them shipped back to Tokyo. We were even given coupons to cover the cost of a 10kg box of apples ... part of the government's support for tourism recovery post-pandemic. After consultation with a lady running the apple stand where I stopped, I decided on a box including 3 different types of apples that she guaranteed were excellent flavor for eating (as opposed to for use in apple pie). The varieties were Shinano Gold, Shinano Sweet, and Youkou. "Shinano" ... is another name for Nagano! Gunma is growing Nagano apples, and selling them even to tourists who are visiting Gunma to explore! Why not Joumou Sweet and Joumou Gold? Or better yet, Agatsuma Sweet and Agatsuma Gold?

Gunma-chan appears on the JA Agatsuma apple label and the Agatsuma "Gunma Quality" seal
 
Gunma can be the same apple tree, the same variety as the shinano brand ... but change the name to signify that they were grown in Gunma! Of course, the part of Nagano between Nakano and Iiyama is famous for its apples (as is the area of Aomori Prefecture around Mt. Iwaki and Hirosaki, which also has an "Apple Road" -- actually lined with apple orchards as far as the eye can see).  Maybe Gunma growers can sell for a higher price with the "Shinano" variety? Gunma ... is not really famous for its apples, and it definitely is not going to become famous for them as long as the apples are called "Shinano" ... though in fact the ones I ate were delicious.

I think Gunma needs a brand consultant. I would be happy to advise on this topic for a modest fee, slightly less than the 200 million yen that Takahashi-san, the Dentsu alum, charged four companies for "arranging" their Tokyo Olympic sponsorship opportunities. The payoff could be immense, for Gunma.

--------------------------------------------

Our plan to ride the SR600 fell apart even before we started.  I had suggested taking an early train to Takasaki for an 8AM start on the 12th. But Jerome needed to be back in Tokyo on the 14th during the day, so we decided on a 6AM (later switched to a 5AM) start, with hotel in Takasaki near the station. This meant planning to do the ride in around 48-50 hours, rather than the 55-60 hour plan I had made for the Fukushima SR600 a few months ago. It meant a very aggressive schedule the first day, with the early start and a ride of well over 6000 meters elevation gain and 260kms to get to Shima Onsen.  

(If I had been doing this on my own, I would have done a 55-60hr plan, with the 8AM start, and rested the first night at Kusatsu, after 185kms and 4300 meters elevation gain.)

On the 11th as we were heading out, Jerome said that he needed to be back in Tokyo sooner than expected, by Thursday afternoon, to prepare for his next international business trip - heading out on Saturday. I could see that he was just too busy to do this ride. I appreciated him trying to accommodate me -- a great birthday gift -- but his work seems busier than at any time since pre-pandemic, and he could not get enough time away to make it practical to really have a go at it.  He was doing a lot of business during the ride, taking phone calls and sending emails--which he can do because he rides faster than me. He is not in the shape of May/June, but he is still a beast climbing hills, grinding up in big gears faster than I can spin in my lighter ones. 

If I were to do this ride again with Jerome, I would get to Takasaki early enough to sleep by 830PM (instead of close to midnight), and start a couple hours ahead of him with the idea that he would catch me the first night after 18 hours or so on the road, and we could then ride together the second day. That is what we did on the 600km ride to Hamanako in April, and it worked well -- I started 2 hours ahead, he caught me after 450kms, and we rode together to the finish. Indeed, when we completed the SR600 Fuji back in 2015, I started 2 hours ahead and he and one other friend (Tanaka-san from Aichi) never caught up (except at the brief sleep stop in Ueda), but I was motivated the entire time, and we could celebrate together with breakfast at the finish.

Anyway, we got to Takasaki after 9PM, and by 930PM had checked into the Route Inn Takasaki Eki Nishiguchi (which is over 700 meters north of the actual station Nishiguchi). We went to the main drag looking for some good food ... but nearly every place was closed except bars that served only "tsumami" (snacks). We ended up settling for fried, somewhat greasy kushiyaki -- not ideal pre-ride nutrition.

We explore beautiful Takasaki

Back at the station for our 5AM start.

We were up before 430AM and at the start ready to go within a few minutes of our scheduled 5AM departure. The route started with a long climb, 25kms to Ihaho Onsen on the NE side of Mt. Haruna. I climbed slowly, warming up and knowing not to push hard because of what lay ahead. 

All these photos from the climb to Ikaho

What a great time of day to be up and about ... once up and about.





Finally, the checkpoint.

After the checkpoint at Ikaho, I expected a long descent into Annaka.  But actually Ikaho is around 800 meters elevation or a bit higher, while the top of the climb was at 1170 meters and at least 7-8kms ahead.  Still, it was a beautiful morning, low traffic, and nice views, so I was not in a mood to complain.

Nice views from above Ikaho

Up on top ... is this the crater?


After going across the flat crater of Mt. Haruna, then past Lake Haruna, we climbed briefly over the southern edge of the crater, then started a steep descent down to Annaka. We seemed to head SE for a long time, and all the signs said we were going toward Takasaki. And we did go through the Takasaki outer sections, but eventually turned SW and reached the second checkpoint, Annaka Station.

From there, we headed south toward Tomioka, then west toward Shimonita, the third checkpoint, climbing gradually.  This section of the ride was the most familiar, as we took roads I have traveled often, though usually heading to the NW or SE, rather than this time to the SW then West. For many sections around here, you take the same road across a valley whether your ultimate intention is SW or SE. 

Checkpoint.

Typical Gunma scene - konnyaku field, solar PV, power lines, road.

Checkpoint.

After Shimonita and a brief section to the west, we did our second real climb, over the shoulder of Mt. Myogi, with the top at Nakanotake Shrine, home to a 20m tall gold statue. This was a lovely climb up and a nice descent to the north, and I will definitely try it again when in the vicinity.

We did not actually climb Mt Myogi ... looks quite technical for rock climbers even.

Turned here onto the Myogi climb

At the top. Side profile of Jerome!

Cosmos (flowers) everywhere on this trip!

After dropping into the valley, between Yokogawa and Matsuida, we turned east on Route 18 and passed a hundred meters or so from GS Astuto's Gunma base, now including a rider's cafe and some overnight accommodations, perfect for a stop in the middle of a long ride ... but not at 1145AM after only 6 1/2 hours on the road. We said hi to Tim and Naoko Smith, the proprietors, filled our bottles and accepted some offered konnyaku jelly snacks, and continued on our way. Of course, the bicycle I was riding this trip was my RAMAX all road maximum adventure bike, which was designed by Tim.

Tim ... with riders' guest room to the rear.

Naoko, with the other guest room behind her.

Now serving.

By now it was painfully clear we were behind schedule, and had not a moment to lose.

We headed north on Gunma Route 33, the Shibukawa-Matsuida Line, went over another pass not quite as high as Mt. Myogi's shoulder, then descended again, to Kurabuchi. There we stopped for lunch at a cafeteria in front of the town hall. Now it was time for our second big climb, 22kms, with elevation gradually increasing from 400m to 1400m, ending at Nido-age Pass.  It was already well past 2PM as we started. I climbed until 3PM, then pulled over for some food and a 5-minute rest, flat on my back.

The road was well marked with indicators of the remaining distance to the pass, often every 100 meters or so.  8.5kms to Nidoage Pass, 8.4kms ..., 8.35kms, ... 8.1kms. Overkill. The markers crept by. Around 4.5kms from the top, I adjusted my seatpost, elevating it maybe 5mms. It had felt a bit on the low side, and well into this climb my left knee had started to develop an occasional twinge -- something that is not a normal part of my long ride experience. The slightly higher seat resolved it immediately, and I could kick myself for not having adjusted it hours earlier to get a bit more power and less pressure on the knee.

Only 0.8km to Nidoage Pass

From the pass looking toward enclouded Mt. Asama. Signage for Kitakaruizawa.

On the downhill to Naganohara.

I found Jerome waiting at a pull-out in the road, a bit below the pass. Jerome said he had been there quite awhile, not surprising given my pace and earlier rest, as well as the seat adjustment stop.  We went together the last few hundred meters to the top and planned our next move.

It was just 4PM, with perhaps another 80-90 minutes of daylight. We would descend nearly 25km and back down to 660m elevation, to Naganohara, reachable around 5PM.  From there, the route involved (1) a 600m climb (steep and with traffic) to Kusatsu, (2) an 800 meter climb on National Route 405 to Lake Nozori, (3) a 373 meter climb on Gunma Route 55, and (4) another 380 meter climb up to the dam above Shima Onsen. So realistically, with 600m up, an hour to stop for dinner around 7-8PM at Kusatsu, and nearly 80kms distance and 1600m of climbing after dinner, we were looking at at very, very late night.

Since we already knew that we would not complete the ride, there did not seem much point. We had already been riding for 11 hours and 3700m of climbing, and we started looking at more direct routes to our lodging.

We descended toward Naganohara, but took a short cut down the last part of the hill (near Furumori Golf Club) and then continued east on Route 145 to Nakanojo. There we ate a decent and well-deserved meal at a yakitori place. Then we did the gradual climb up to Shima onsen. It was only 20kms, and perhaps 350 meters of elevation gain as we would not go all the way to the top of the dam. My stomach was complaining as I rode up that hill right after dinner, so I took it easy. We arrived at our hotel before 9PM and could actually enjoy the onsen, get a decent night of sleep, and wake in time for a second trip to the onsen, a 730AM breakfast seating, and an 830AM departure.

Not bad -- includes entryway, rotenburo, breakfast, and coupons for shopping,
all for 7850 yen, or 3900 yen each. Go to Travel!

Well-rested and ready for day two

We could not see this landmark looming above us when we arrived at night!

Most of the town was closed on a weekday morning.

Descending the "ringo kaido".

Takebuchi ringo-en
(I was recommended to go to Saito ringo-en ...
which it turns out is another kilometer or so down the road.) 

Beautiful Gunma!

After riding back to Nakanojo, with a stop to purchase Nagano-branded apples, we did a gradual climb up to Lockheart Castle.

At the castle entrance


What is Lockheart Castle? It is a Scottish baronial mansion built in 1829 near Edinburgh ... that was disassembled brick-by-brick, shipped to Japan, and rebuilt on the top of a hill in Gunma in 1988 -- near the peak of the Japanese "bubble economy" when life was good, money was free, and Japan was going to party all night long and take over the world.  The castle charges admission for curious tourists, and allows Gunma couples from nearby Numata, Minakami, and Shibukawa the opportunity to get married in a Scottish mansion without leaving Gunma. We did not go inside.

From the official Gunma tourist guide - Gunma Excellence!

From Lockheart Castle, it was a steep descent to Numata, then we turned south for another 45 kms of very slight downhill to get back to Takasaki Station. 

Bet
Between Numata and Takasaki

The first day was a good, hard ride that was memorable, almost epic. And the second day we enjoyed an easy recovery ride. 

Now I need to go back and to the entire SR600. I won't have another chance before winter, but this is on my list for 2023. "More than enough" Gunma? No. Not enough Gunma!

Day 1 Strava track is here.
Day 2 Strava track is here.

25 May 2015

The Almost Perfect SR600 Fuji

I am just* back from the SR600 Fuji, one of two major cycling goals I set for this year.   It was an incredible, near perfect ride.  Just a few photos to start the report:
Grove of trees on the Shirane-san climb.
Snow wall at Shibu Toge -- almost melted now.  Not as impressive as others GW photos.
Sunrise on Day 2 From Nagano Route 62 - starting the Utsukushigahara climb
The classic, Meganebashi on the old Nakasendo climb to Usui Toge and Karuizawa.
Deserted at 820AM on a Friday morning.
Flowers in Fujioka, Gunma
Approaching Shibu Toge from Shirane-san.
Utsukushigahara -- The sign indicates "1959m elevation; please take good care of nature".
Massive Alexander Calder, Noguchi and Henry Moore, among other, sculptures across the way
in ... nature? (... ugly museum building not shown in this picture)
Venus Line looking toward Minami Alps
Venus Line with Tateshina/Chino below and Mt. Fuji in the distant haze
Jerome and Tanaka-san -- two very tired looking randonneurs, at post-goal breakfast.
To everyone at Saitama Audax, thank you!  The SR600 Fuji course is spectacular.

I had ridden the first 60% in one fell swoop before, and much of the rest of it in dribs and drabs over the past 10 years.  But never the entire course, in almost ideal weather.  It showcases many different, really nice places.  An example -- the climb of the Ashigawa from south Kofu to Wakabiko Tunnel then Kawaguchiko ... was I think the best route I have ever taken between the Kofu area and the Fuji 5 lake region.  Bring a good light, as it was pitch dark on a Saturday evening, and very low traffic volumes.

Readers -- even if you do not want to go through the extremes of doing this within the 52-hour time limit, it is well worth registering as a "Touriste" and riding the full course over 3, 4 or 5 days.  Please allow time to stop and enjoy the sights along the way.

What went right, and what went wrong, with the SR600 Fuji this time?

On the positive side:
  • Weather.  The weather was absolutely spectacular.  Dry.  Not too hot.  Not too cold.  A very early morning start allowed me to get all the way to Karuizawa by 930AM on Friday, out of the lowlands before any heat -- which was quite mild in any event, for late May in central Japan.  Mid-day and both afternoons were spent at relatively high elevation in Gunma/Nagano.  The nights and early mornings were surprisingly warm, with my somewhat minimalist gear proving sufficient even at 730AM Saturday when I reached the top of Utsukushigahara (1959m elev), and for the descent from Yamanaka-ko/Yamabushi Pass (Yamanashi) down Doshi Michi (1100m elev) in the wee hours of Sunday morning.
  • Rest.  I had plenty of rest before, and enough during, the event.  This included reasonable amounts of sleep the two prior nights, and I actually managed to sleep from around 4 hours the night of the start before waking at 115AM.  I also got to Ueda on Friday evening by just after 9PM, and so could sleep in a real bed from 10PM until almost 230AM before starting on the last half of the event.  I only felt drowsy (dangerously so -- needing to pull off twice to recover) on that final Doshi Michi stretch).
  • Physical Condition.  This year, given the Paris-Brest-Paris entry requirements, I have already completed a series of 200, 300, 400 and 600km brevets.  More important, perhaps, after a very weak performance on the first 400km ("Attack Nikko/Attack Beef Line"), I rode a second 400km event (Nishi Izu), which was I think almost as difficult, per kilometer, as the SR600 course.  Progress from these endurance efforts showed in the Okitsu 600km brevet on May 9-10.  Yes, less than two weeks had passed since the Okitsu 600, but Okitsu was not particularly punishing, and my body was back at close to 100% by the early morning of May 22.  I was in as good shape as ever for endurance cycling, and legs felt fresh.  At the end of the SR600, I had no hesitance about hopping back on the bike after breakfast for the ride home from Takao.
  • Equipment/Gear.  Everything worked perfectly.  See the note at the end of this blog post, for those interested.
  • Planning.  There continues to be monitoring related to extra volcanic activity at Shirane-san on the climb above Kusatsu.  No hikers allowed on the mountain at all--a huge constrast to the first time I rode this mountain.  And no parking (or stopping) during a stretch where poisonous gases, reeking of sulphur, are dangerous.  There were several manned vans collecting data near the very top of the mountain as well.  The road is closed entirely for a long stretch, from 5PM until 8AM.  I wanted to clear this stretch without feeling any extra pressure -- both entering and exiting well before the gates shut at 5PM.

    Though Jerome and Tanaka-san, our Fleche team leader, also planned to ride the SR600 Fuji, I did not want the pressure of needing to keep up with them.  The conclusion:  I chose a 2AM start. Jerome lobbied for 4AM, while Tanaka-san persuaded him that 330AM would be more sensible. (In the end they were not on the road until almost 4AM anyway!). The plan was that they would gradually eat into my 90 minute head start, catch me on the Shirane-san climb (if not before), and then we could ride together the rest of the way.

    The 2AM start worked out perfectly.  I could ride without pressure the entire event.  I could be careful not to push too hard -- and the result was that I felt good even on the latter part of the event.  An example is the soul-crushing straight, hot incline after Shirakaba-ko toward Suzuran Pass.  Jerome and Tanaka-san noticed it and had the same reaction as I have previously -- a miserable hill because it is straight, boring and reasonably steep, and comes at a point where one has already ridden a long ways and is usually close to breaking.  For me this time -- I just spun up it without a care in the world, looking forward to my planned lunch stop just over the pass.

    I could get all the way to Route 18 in Gunma before running into any significant traffic; I was on the Shirane-san climb just after lunch; I was at my hotel in Ueda just after 9PM; I was almost done with the Venus Line stretch to Shirakaba-ko before the traffic got really heavy with racing groups of motorcyclists on Saturday morning; and I had plenty of leeway in the schedule so I was never in doubt of missing the 52 hour time limit.

    In the end, I stayed ahead of Jerome and Tanaka-san the entire trip.  At the top of Shirane-san, they were just as far behind as at the start, and they reached (and left) the hotel in Ueda more than 3 hours after me. I used some of the leeway on the afternoon and evening of the second day waiting to see if they would catch up, but eventually could wait no longer, needed to keep moving toward the finish.  I ended up at the goal with (only?) 1 hour and 3 minutes to spare, but did not feel rushed at any point.  (Jerome and Tanaka-san finished 1 hr and 10 minutes after me ... so if I had waited and ridden with them, I would likely have just missed my 6AM Sunday morning deadline).

    Riding this course on Friday/Saturday instead of Saturday/Sunday seemed to help in terms of traffic.  The climb past Megane Bashi on old Route 18 to Usui Pass/Karuizawa was deserted and beautiful on a weekday.  The climb from Nakanohara to Kusatsu was much less congested than I remember -- only a few massive tour buses racing by instead of one every minute or two.
  • Connections and Inspiration.  It may seem a small thing, but even though I rode this event alone, I never felt lonely.  Solitude, yes, but loneliness, no.  I took over 100 photographs -- uploading some mid-ride to friends and family so others could see and comment on them.  I even dabbled with Twitter to post a few updates to the Japanese randonneur community and got encouraging responses.  And I could communicate with Jerome via phone/iMessage, so usually had a good sense of where he and Tanaka-san were at any time.  On the second day, I passed through Tateshina, passed the driveway of the house I have gone to for chamber music weekends twice this past year, and pulled in at the adjacent pension for a hamburger steak lunch. The pension's proprietor and proprietress remembered me.  (I would have stopped at the classic cafeteria at Tobira Toge ... but it was still closed when I passed through.  Jerome and Tanaka-san gave my greetings to Mrs. Watanabe).  An SR600 is ultimately a crazy, solitary achievement, very different than riding a brevet with 50 to 100 others, a group ride with friends, or a major event like PBP with thousands. But this time, I felt the friendship and companionship all the way. I felt that this is now solidly my "home" cycling turf.  No, I will never be Japanese (and would never want to try!) but in most ways, I am a Japanese randonneur.  It was a very different experience than my attempt at the Nihon Alps SR600 in the dark and pouring rain last summer.
On the negative side? Well, not much.  

If anything, it was that Tanaka-san and Jerome did not catch up to me so we could ride the second half together. They lingered at the start, then Jerome had stomach issues the first day (been there, done that), and needed extra rest.  Tanaka-san, a busy surgeon, arrived having finished work and driven straight from Nagoya.  He slept 3 hours or so in his car near the start, but could hardly have been well-rested.  Based on mid-ride reports, and seeing them completely bedraggled at the finish, they looked as if they had endured some pretty intense suffering.

More photos -- I have lots, lots more.
En route to the start in Takao from my Hachioji lodgings

Takao Station 1:45AM -- some people actually just exited the gate.
I was too slow with my camera.

The GS Astuto ti travel bike - Voyage Voyage, ready to go.
Note the small Ortlieb front bag -- surprisingly roomy.

Passing through Chichibu City around 5AM.

Leaving Chichibu City

Yamabushi Pass (Saitama) at 420AM.

... just in case that last photo was not clear enough for "proof" of passage.
Tomioka seems transformed by its "world heritage site" designation.
How?  Well, now every vacant lot is officially a parking lot.  100 yen for each 30 minutes.
And lots of new signage directing visitors.
A photo of mountains in west Gunma, in the style of Hiroshige's famous pre-Meiji
Ukiyoe print -- Mt. Myogi and Coca-Cola Machine
More mountains of Gunma 
Lake Usui, on the climb toward Meganebashi (not the "bashi" in this photo)

On the climb to Usui Toge - lush green, and no traffic.
Finally, Karuizawa!  That stylish community where prosperous Tokyoites can go to enjoy nature ...
and some art and good food.
My Karuizawa meal -- 3rd breakfast of the day, just before 10AM after 8 hours on the road.
Not quite as stylish as across the street.  Then again, no dinner jacket required.
Mt. Asama.  No smoke today, and the Kita-Karuizawa climb was much less crowded than I remembered ...
once I got a little way out of town.  Also, the compact crank paid off here.
The climb to Kusatsu.  Still under construction, still not enough shade.
But less traffic and cooler than last time, plus that extra gear -- a piece of cake!

Time for a real sit-down lunch in Kusatsu.
Another 8-10 customers arrived within minute of me.

Non-convenience store food.

On the lower climb from Kusatsu up Shirane-san.  Shade, beautiful trees and sky.  No traffic.
A ski area far above Kusatsu
Warning, poisonous gases.  No parking, etc., etc.
I came from somewhere down there.
This looked much more impressive last year ...

At Shibu Pass, Elev 2172 meters.  A different world.  Very much like the great alpine passes.

I would like a room on the Nagano side of the hotel, please.

In the distance about 20 kilometers and almost 1500 meters lower elevation ... Nakano, Nagano.

A park like area above/in Shiga Kogen on the descent.

The Moon and Venus make an appearance as I climb toward Sugadaira Kogen. Romantic?
Another perspective on first light Saturday morning, Day 2. 
Animal playing string instrument ... in the valley leading to Utsukushigahara

More flowers
Even more
And yet more.  Somewhere I saw a sign in Japanese that called this the "poppy road". 
This side's climb to Utsukushigahara looks mostly like this -- road sliding downhill just a bit.
The famous grove within a few hundred meters elevation below Utsukushigahara.

Looking toward the Japan Alps from Utsukushigahara/Venus Line

Looking north from Utsukushigahara.  Mist in valleys below!
(And there is that ugly museum building in the distance.)

Venus Line.  Loved by motorcycling enthusiasts.

The goddess' viewpoint.  Tateshina.

Route 299 climbing to Mugikusa -- the "Marchen" (fairy tale) route

Second 2000m+ pass of the trip.  Utsukushigahara is so much more dramatic, but just shy of 2000m.

Last light on Saturday -- from Nirasaki crossing the Kamanashi River (釜無川) 
Second Yamabushi Pass (Yamanashi version)
Back at Takao Station -- 4:57AM Sunday morning.
And the route and elevation profile from ridewithGPS.com (my GPS recording was split into 3, and has a gap the last night when I forgot to "start" recording and did not notice until after the unit had powered down automatically ... but this time the Garmin functioned just fine and the fault is mine):
A real tour of Eastern Central Japan!

Elevation profile -- 11,000+ meters climbing ... more than going up Mt. Everest
The 3 highest points are Shibu Toge (2172m), Utsukushigahara (1959m) and Mugikusa (2127m)
I could go on and on ... but life calls.

For anyone still reading, some notes on my gear.
  • Bike.  I rode on my GS Astuto titanium travel bike, Voyage Voyage.  I will use it in Europe this summer, so really wanted to ride it on one of the key preparation events.  It came through with flying colors.  It is not an art object, like the Renovo.  Nor is it as light as the Canyon Shark. Nor does it get the affection of the bike I built--the Yamabushi--which also can take traditional fenders and tires much fatter than 25mm width, about the limit for Voyage Voyage.  This is just a solid, very functional all-around bicycle ... with couplers so that it will fit in a suitcase for travel.

    Gearing -- importantly, Voyage Voyage now has a compact crank (34-50), and a medium cage SRAM Rival rear derailleur that works with a large cog cassette (in this case 11-32).  So I could spin up even the steepest hills sitting, using 34-32 gearing.  The result -- a brevet in which I was actually NOT in my lowest gear on many of the climbs, and when instead of resting, I could always just downshift and keep going with reduced effort.

    Pre-ride Maintenance -- most important, a week before the event I had Hiroshi at C Speed help me properly tighten the Cane Creek integrated headset -- which had had a slight bit of "play" in it that I somehow could not eliminate ever since the last time I assembled the bike.  I think headsets and hub internals were the last areas of the bicycle for me to dare to touch, and I am still a novice with both -- as shown by my inability to get this one fully secure. The better, more secure front-end gave me a lot more confidence descending on the bike at high speeds.

    Lighting -- of course, SP Dynamo (this time SV-8 based front wheel) and the small Busch Mueller light that works best with this bike's cable routing.  I thought about taking the SV-9 ... but decided for the conservative approach of using equipment I have tested over several years.  I will use the SV-9 on other rides this year.

    Wheels -- home/hand-built, with 32 CX-Ray spokes and H Plus Son Archetype rims both front and rear, Dura Ace 9000 rear hub, SV-8 front hub.  As true and equally tensioned at the finish as they were at the start.

    Tires -- I tested the bike by riding it to/from Keio University's Shonan Fujisawa Campus on Wednesday, just before the event.  When I returned to the bike for the ride home, the rear tire was low.  I had a slow, pinprick leak somewhere.  I changed the tube (which had been patched previously so seemed a likely source of the problem -- I could not feel any sharp object on the inside of the tire), but the replacement also developed a slow leak and was low by the midpoint of the ride home.  I searched the tire more carefully ... but still could not find any obstruction. Another tube in ... and yet again, low pressure by the time I got home.  So instead of the Schwalbe 622-25 Ultremo ZX, I swapped in a new Vittoria Open Pave (also 622-25) for the rear.  I have much more confidence in the Open Pave, which has carried me safely to Itoigawa, throughout Tohoku, and numerous other events.  At 80-90psi, with wide rimmed H Plus Son and 622-25 tires, I was very comfortable, even on stretches of rough road.  Of course, once I had removed the Ultremo ZX tire and searched very carefully, bending and kneading it as I moved around the inside, I could find a TINY piece of metal buried inside the casing.  With this removed, the tire probably is good for much more use.

    Balance of System -- Given the nice weather, I rode with Audax vest and short sleeve 3-season cycling gear, arm/leg sun covers, double socks, and in reserve a thin rain/wind shell, warm winter inside-helmet cap, full-finger glove liners and an extra pair of wool socks.  I used every piece of gear that I had, and only briefly (after Yamanaka-ko) wished I had brought anything warmer.  Very light travel gear for a 600 km ride.  To carry everything, I used a Rixen Kaul rear bag that attaches to my seatpost and is easy to take on and off, an Ortlieb mini-front bar bag (which still fits a LOT); and a canister for tools and spare parts that fits in my third water bottle cage.  No rucksack needed.  I may stick with this set up for PBP, since I will have drop bag access.
Any questions?

*Actually, I arrived back home 23 hours before starting this post, but slept Sunday at least 6-7 hours during the day, until just before dinner, and again overnight for another 7 hours.  I know I have told many friends before, but this deep post-Brevet sleep is I think the best sleep I have ever experienced -- complete relaxation and deep, deep slumber.  At this point, I value the post-event slumber enough that I always try to plan an especially long or hard event so that I have not only sufficient rest BEFORE, but also a good 24 hours without anything urgent AFTER the event.