2025 The Great London Scavenger Hunt

Curiously the seeds for this trip were planted in Ireland. I kind of fell for an artist’s porcelain lighthouse-ish tower. But it wasn’t meant to be. One thing led to another and I found another porcelain tower even better.

This porcelain tower had been an art installation at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London called the Tower of Babel.

The Tower of Babel @ the Victoria and Albert Museum. 2015

The tower was almost 20 feet high, and built of 3000 bone china miniatures, each depicting a real London Shop, and each for sale, as part of the concept. 

Installation View. Photo by Thierry Bal

I contacted the artist, Barnaby Barford, to see if any shops were still available. I wasn’t so sure, as the installation had been way back in 2015. But there were a few orphans left. The unloved.

We purchased 6. Bentley & Skinner Below. This miniature porcelain shop is just a tad bigger than the pic below : about 4″ x 5″. Fantastic detail. The front is flat. The flag, the awnings, window displays and shadows, are all just graphics.

To construct the Tower, Barnaby used a foam base into which he stuck the shops using custom skewers off a lift.

Barnaby building the Tower of Babel. 2015. Photo by Thierry Bal

Barnaby bicycled over 1000 miles, visiting every post code in London, photographing shops. The Tower’s 3000 were the ones that made the cut.

Our porcelain shops came with addresses. So we could find them, if we were to go to London.

Which on further thought seemed like a great idea. We could even bicycle to them, just like Barnaby had, if we brought our tandem.

We had a plan. Closing the circle, as it were. We went for it. Our personalized great London Scavenger Hunt. 

And besides we had never been to London. Sights to see, museums to visit and so forth. The big surprise were the Rivers of London. 

The Drive into Town

Deep, our Pakistani friend/driver picked us up at Heathrow Airport 7:30-ish AM. We had flown all night, and were bleary. Nonetheless, Deep took us into London via the slower scenic route, through the heart of the city. He thought it would be good for us. And he was right.

If you are ever in London and need private transportation or need bags moved from here to there. Deep is your guy. https://www.movemybags.com

Deep

As we approached Piccadilly Circus on Brompton Road, it was slow going. The rush hour squeeze. A few brave souls on bicycles wove their way through as best they could. 

One bicycle guy in front of us was thinking about trying to slip his way through between a double decker bus and a van next to it.

Bad idea. He backed off. He might have fit, if he squinched his shoulders, but his handlebars, No. Sharon and I looked at each other. We would be bicycling through here ourselves in a few days.

Deep was giving us a running commentary. Pointing to the side streets:

“See those buildings. Modest on the outside, but another world altogether beyond the front door. Middle Eastern Big Money.” 

The adjoining Mayfair district has a number of nicknames. “Little Doha”, “The Qatari quarter” and my favorite, “Qataropolis.” The Al-Thani family, the ruling family of Qatar,and their relatives and associates owned a quarter Mayfair in 2006. No doubt more now.

We passed Harrods Department Store.

“Famous for being an iconic luxury department store offering an unparalleled shopping experience, a grand and historic Egyptian-style architecture, an extensive selection of high-end and designer goods, and its famous, albeit expensive, Food Halls. Its fame also stems from its reputation for impeccable service, being a global tourist destination, and its symbolic value as a testament to British luxury and exclusivity.”

And who owns this testament to British luxury and exclusivity today? You guessed it, The Qataris.

Moving on ever so slowly, we reached Piccadilly Circus, which as Deep proclaimed, is the center of London. 

Traffic at Piccadilly Circus. Photo by Jonathan Wilson

Why is this square considered the center of London?

Well, it’s a central crossroads where 4 roads meet and the location of a key Underground Station. It’s also in the heart of the city’s entertainment and shopping district and a popular tourist and meeting point. 

And as such was a place to acquire heroin, and was notorious in the 1960s as the center of London’s illegal drug trade. 

We inched our way through. Not a drug dealer in sight. 

In the blink of an eye we passed through Chinatown. 

Deep then swung through a number of back streets like the back of his hand and we were out front of our hotel, the Hoxton Holburn. 

We ended up here though the recommendation of our friend, now manager at the Hoxton Williamsburg, our favorite hotel in NYC, who had passed along a discount code and moral support.

It was a great location for our purposes. A ten minute walk to Covent Gardens and great Indian food. Only a few blocks to the British Museum and a couple of blocks to the John Soane Museum.

We could walk to the Thames River, although it was a bit of a hike, And we could bicycle   north to the Regents Canal and the River Lee. 

And besides, it looked like our kind of place. An ex-telephone exchange building repurposed as a hotel with big friendly, street level public spaces.

Hoxton Holburn Hotel

Deep dropped us off and took off, and we wandered in. The front desk was most friendly, but their computer didn’t show us checking in until the afternoon. Someone had missed something. I got to talking and the manager wandered over, checked her computer and sent us on up to the back side of the 5th floor. 

Where we were very happy, for the next 10 days. It was incredibly quiet and where we had perhaps the best view in the hotel. Out across the rooftops of London to the London Eye in the distance.

Our room’s view across the rooftops of London to the London Eye in the distance.

The British Museum and Shakespeare

It rained and then rained some more. Which wasn’t a problem as the British Museum was only a couple of blocks away and I had a bike to assemble.

We had a plan. We both headed off to to the British Museum.

The British Museum is big. Like big, big. Half again as big as the Met in NYC. And it is beautiful and it is free. Though it is advised to schedule admittance online, which we had done a couple of months before. 

We saw the Hoa Hakananai’a, a colossal ancestor figure from Papa Nui/ Easter Island, and a whole lot more.

Hoa Hakananai’a

After an hour I headed back to assemble the bike. And Sharon took her time and museumed-to her heart’s content.

She brought me back a BLT, dropped into a book and in short order the bike was fully reconstituted. 

We kept Mr. Bike in our room for the whole trip, as no one seemed to care. We could have locked it up off the loading dock. We had management’s permission. But all up, it was easier and more comforting to have it in our room. 

A tight room for a tandem. No problem. We’re all friends

It wasn’t that hard for me to get by on the way to the bathroom. Mantra was butt to the bed. That way I could lean back and neither handlebars or pedals would catch.

The next day we had scheduled our visit to Shakespeare Globe Theatre and the Tate Modern Museum. Sharon wanted to ride in a London Black cab and this was as good a time as any.

The front desk called in our request. 5 minutes. 

15 minutes came and went. I went back in. The front desk laughed,

“Someone else must have grabbed it. There’s another one out front. Why don’t you take that one?”

And we did. Whoever it was for, well they can take someone else’s.

First up was the Tate Modern Art Museum. Remarkable place. A converted Power plant. Very well done. Turns out in the right hands, a sympathetic aesthetic. Monumental spaces with industrial materials and a totally wonderful site on the Thames. 

We had lunch on the top floor of the Tate with quite the view over London. St. Paul’s Cathedral and the Millennium Bridge across the Thames River.

St. Paul’s Cathedral, and the Millennium Bridge across the Thames River from the Tate Museum

Pretty much right next door to the Tate is today’s Shakespeare Globe Theatre. We wandered over for our show. 

This Theatre is the third generation. 4th if you include The Theatre, which was the first successful permanent theatre built exclusively for the showing of theatrical productions in England.

The Theatre was built in 1576 and stood in Shoreditch not too far from our hotel, in what was then, as today, an entertainment district. In 2025 it’s pubs, bars and nightclubs. In the late 1500s it was bear-baiting, taverns and Shakespeare. 

Shakespeare wasn’t considered highfaluntin then. Perhaps the opposite. The highbrow were welcome and had special seating, but they kind-of had to make their way to the theatre on the sly. Shakespearian theatre wasn’t socially-accepted entertainment for the upper crust. More guilty pleasures.

When the Shoreditch lease was up in 1599, the owners of the land on which the theatre stood refused to renew the player’s lease, thinking they would end up with the theatre, and its very valuable oak timbers. 

Wrong. While the landowners were out of town celebrating Christmas, the players and their cohorts took the Theatre apart and moved it close to this site on the Thames.

The Theatre was reconstructed the following year and renamed the Globe. First show: Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. Not a bad way to get up and running. 

This Globe Theatre burned down in 1613, but was rebuilt the next year on the same foundation with same name. This Globe Theatre had a good run, until it was closed by the Puritans in 1642. Two years later it was demolished to make way for housing.

The current Globe Theatre opened in 1997. A faithful reconstruction of the original. Open air, intimate, with remarkable acoustics. We had seats where the upper crust would have been seated, complete with rented , most-welcome cushions. That would be on the first gallery up.

The current Globe Theatre which opened in 1997. A faithful reconstruction of the 1642 original. Image John Tramper

Our show was Twelfth Night. A gender bender to start with. No problem there. Shakespeare knew folks. Our problem was with the current troupe’s improvements, which in this case meant more gender-bending on top of Shakespeare’s. Made it a bit hard to follow. At least for me. 

Why try to re-invent a brilliant original? Maybe I’m just getting old. Then again, maybe I need to re-read Shakespeare.

Most fun, in any case.

After the show we wandered out after returning our cushions. And made our way across the Millennium Foot bridge, by St. Pauls Cathedral and back to our hotel. 

Rivers of London and a visit to Barnaby’s Studio

We had an invite to Barnaby Barford’s art studio. And in the spirit of the trip, we were going to bicycle there. And back.

This first London bicycle ride looked straightforward enough on paper. We’d cut up to the Regent’s Canal and then ride east, take a sharp left and head north on the river Lee. First we had to get to the canal.

But before that we had to get out of the hotel and on the road.

What could go wrong? 

We were on the 5th floor, and pretty sure that our-now-assembled tandem would fit in the elevator, if we took the front wheel off and stood it up. Which it did with perhaps a 1/2” to spare. The front desk was amused when we rolled out on the first floor. Perhaps a first in their world. 

We rolled Mr. Tandem through the extended lobby, full of folks. Remarkably nary a sideways glance.

Outside we loaded the bike up. I went to bring up our route on our bike computer, but the route wasn’t there. I headed back up to our room for a re-install, while Sharon stayed with the bike out front. Internet in our room was dodgy, so I wandered out into the hall for a better connection. I hit gold near the elevators and we had our route.

Back at the bike, I decided to top up our tire pressures. Probably not necessary, but why not?  On removing the pump hose, the rear wheel valve stem came out too. Pressure promptly dropped to zero. 

After re-installing the valve stem and after 3 minutes of high-cardio hand pumping tire pressure held. Thankfully. 

We headed off walking the bike. Lots of traffic and best to be careful. After all, traffic is backwards, and we had two roads to cross. We found a safe launch spot. Got on the bike and waited for an opening in traffic. 

Something was wrong. I looked down. I had Sharon’s pedals, and she had mine. Neither of us were happy, but it would work, we could swap later.

3-2-1 and we were off. 

We had waited for rush hour to clear. Traffic wasn’t Piccadilly Circus bad, and lanes were full, but we soon discovered the saving grace. The left lane was reserved for Buses, Black Cabs and us (bicycles). We ride fast enough to keep up with traffic.

After a bit we turned hard left and headed north for the Regent’s Canal.

Or more accurately the tow paths along the Regent’s Canal. The Regent’s Canal was built in the early 1800s. At that time, horses towed boats on paths alongside the canal. Today these paths have been paved and are used by walkers and bicyclists. They are most scenic and much in demand, as we were soon to find out. 

A tight right turn later we were on the Canal. I hadn’t really thought about what to expect. I had been focused on simply getting to Barnaby’s Studio. He had recommended this route.

The first thing that hit us were the narrow boats tied up along the path. A bustling world unto itself. The tow path was manageable as long as we ducked under the low bridges, were careful to give all the folks with headphones space and watched the water’s edge.

Regent’s Canal. Photo courtesy of the London Museum

No guard rails. We were often riding 16” from the drop-off into the water.

We came up on a guy engrossed in his music. As this was the UK we passed on his right. 

“On your right,” I called out. He jumped right. We hit shoulders. Our mass was greater that his and he bounced off.

Perhaps the diciest moment was when the path dropped hard right under a bridge. There was a tight hard left at the bottom. I hit the brakes as Sharon emphatically suggested we stop. Which we did. On the slope. And a good thing too as we were pointed into a lock filling with churning water. And no guard rails. Sharon:

“My handlebar is scraping the wall. Can I get off now?”

Not surprisingly, given how things were going, we missed our turn north on the River Lee. Our bike computer had given up and we were making do with my phone.

We eventually tried it the old fashioned way, we asked a local. He was sitting on his woebegone narrow boat. The saddest on the stretch. He was missing a tooth or three.

He shared that after he had moved here, he had missed the turn himself a few times. He gave us excellent directions and sent us off with a wave. Good guy. Wish him well.

The last 1/4 mile to Barnaby’s was more of the same. We were navigating by phone, now on low battery. We knew we were close, but my phone didn’t know we could have just slipped between guardrails and virtually been there. 20 minutes later we arrived at Barnaby’s studio. Unit C-1 in Hastingwood Trading Estate, an industrial park.

Hastingwood Trading Estate

Nothing fancy on the outside. But great stuff inside. 

From our pieces and the Victoria and Albert Museum’s Tower of Babel, we knew Barnaby had a love of porcelain. Here we could appreciate, what happens behind the curtain. 

Give Barnaby credit, he is a laid back guy. As we stumbled in, I nearly smashed into the centerpiece of an upcoming show with my bike helmet. 

A wonderful 2 + foot diameter hanging globe built up lovingly of innumerable porcelain shards and figurines with a dash of this and that.

Barnaby quietly suggested that I should be careful. 

Later as I was shooting a video of his studio centered on the globe, Barnaby noted,

“I don’t mind that you take pics, just don’t share them.” Of course, a big upcoming show, no premature unveilings.

A bit of the wonderful 2 + foot diameter 300# hanging globe built up lovingly of innumerable porcelain shards and figurines with a dash of this and that.

A couple of things to note in the above tease pic. In the left foreground is a small detail of the globe, I just about crashed into. Note the table and the exquisite detail of the used place settings and the tipped over wine bottles. In the background right is an early clay mock-up of the Tower of Babel. 

Barnaby’s studio was loaded with porcelain figurines.

Barnaby’s studio was loaded with porcelain figurines. See above. Most come off the internet. Used, and full of life and full of character.

Below is Barnaby and his studio. With assistant Zach building some sort of wonderful 3D printed spiral base. Probably the show’s co-centerpiece once it’s populated with figurines and so forth.

Barnaby and his studio, with Sharon and Zach

We would love to be at the gallery opening for this next show. Another closing of another circle. Vamos a Ver. We shall see. Not out of the realm of possibility. April 2026.

Here is a short video of our ride to Barnaby’s studio and back:

Link to: Rivers of London

John Soane’s Cabinet of Curiosities

The John Soane Museum was only a few blocks east of our hotel. Soane was a most famous English Architect. Some say the greatest.  The museum is his home kept as it was at the time of his death in 1837.

Which itself is a bit curious and has a backstory. Sir John did not see eye to eye with his eldest son, to put it mildly. In those days it was English law that the oldest son was to inherit. 

To get around that, Sir John pulled some strings, and through a private act of Parliament, the museum was born, and his son George got nothing.

We wandered over. No tickets required and free like most London Museums. This is the smallest of the National Museums. Which makes sense as it is simply a house. Or more accurately three row houses made into one. 

Much has been made of the facade, but it was tented on our visit. Restoration in progress. This is what it looks like without the scaffolding:

A lot revealed here of the Soane aesthetic. A curious combination of minimalism popped, with traditional classical elements pushed hard. Note the crazy floating surrealist column capitals. A hint of things to come inside.

There was a short line. When we arrived late morning, the Museum was already full up. Folks could only go in when others came out.

It’s probably safe to say that Sir John was a bit of a hoarder. His home was filled to brim with stuff. 40,000 objects or so they say. Great stuff, but stuff nonetheless. On entering everyone was given a plastic bag for extraneous stuff: camera’s, backpacks, purses and so forth.

We carried these smooth-surfaced bags full of our stuff through the museum so that nothing would catch on all of Soane’s stuff. The museum has tight spaces and narrow corridors.

Soane owned a couple of Piranesi prints. Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720–1778) was an influential Italian artist known primarily as a printmaker, architect and archaeologist. Soane was a fan.

He didn’t own the Piranesi print below, but this one perfectly captures the more-than-full interior aesthetic of Soane’s home/museum.

The Appian Way as it appeared in Piranesi’s imagination (1756)

Sir John, along with many of his contemporaries were fascinated by ruins. Empires crumbling. Buildings crumbling. Past, present and future.

Soane’s biggest architectural project was the Bank of England. At the time of its grand opening, the below remarkable illustration of its ruin was done by one of Soane’s disciples. No doubt at Soane’s direction.

A Bird’s-Eye View of the Ruin of the Bank of England 1830. J.M. Gandy

Perhaps this meditation on ruins was Soane’s anxiety over the future of his achievement or forebodings over its future, or simply contemplation of the passing of all things.

In any case, kudos to Sir John for this image. Perhaps more famous now than the actual building itself. Long gone now.

Barnaby had tipped us off about the not-to-be missed Hogarth paintings, hidden away in the picture room and only shown at certain times. While we were waiting, we asked if we would be able to see them.

“12:30.” Which was great news.

As it was only 11:30 we had plenty of time to poke around beforehand.

During his day Soane had amassed a vast collection of antiquities, furniture, sculptures, architectural models and paintings. Stuff filled every nook and cranny. The collection has accurately been described as a maze without a plan. 

Which is part of it’s charm. If there is a method to the madness, it would be the architectural spaces. Below is a section through the museum from 1818.

Section through the Museum and Breakfast Room

These were the days of natural lighting. The lower you got, the darker it was. The basement, complete with an Egyptian sarcophagus, has been aptly described as:

“A gothic novel in miniature.”

We headed upstairs to the picture room for the Hogarth unveiling. We were characteristically early. 

The picture room was yet another tight space only 13 by 12 feet, but Soane had managed to squeeze in 118 paintings. 

His magic trick: picture planes. Only some pictures were visible at a time. The Hogarth’s were folded away.

We had time to kill and struck up a conversation with the local spirit. I say local spirit because the gallery attendant was a curious man. Middle aged, pretty much nondescript in every way except for the bright blue smooth high-topped leather shoes, which gave him away. 

So I ask him, you’ve probably spent 1000’s of hours in this tiny windowless room:

“So which are your favorite paintings?”

I am thinking the big names, Hogarth, Fuseli Canaletto, Turner, Piranesi.

Au Contraire, his favorites were William Hodges’ 2 picturesque paintings of Indian landscapes, painted in the late 1700s, when traditional India was crumbling in the face of the British.

What our spirit found curious was that today, the wheel has turned again. 

“This time its us. The British Empire has crumbled.”

Below, William Hodges’ Mosque at Fatehpur. More Ruins, though this time old time India.

Mosque at Fatehpur by William Hodges

And there were the magnificent Hogarth’s. Soane owned two series: Rake’s Progress, 8 paintings and The Election, 4 paintings. Below is The Humors of an Election I: An Election Entertainment.

So much detail. I’m going to put it in a slideshow below. First the full painting and then a few closeup vignettes to muse over. This painting is all about what it takes to get elected, and the corruption endemic in the electoral process. Same old, same old.

The composition of the overall painting shown on the first slide, parodies Leonardo da Vinci’s painting of the last supper.

On the second slide, note the little girl slipping the ring off the gentleman’s finger. On the third slide note the mayor collapsed from over indulgence in oysters. He’s being bled for his restoration.

I totally get Barnaby’s appreciation of the Hogarths. Hogarth’s scenes could easily be done with porcelain figurines.

Irani Cafes in London

Indian food in the UK is far far better than what is commonly served in the USA. Like another league entirely. Which makes sense considering the centuries of shared history.  

Our son visited London earlier this year and gushed over Dishoom in Covent Garden only a short walk from our hotel.

Yes, it is that good. We went back for seconds. 

Dishoom Restaurant. Where the line can run the length of the street. Image kake/Flicker.

Dishoom isn’t just Indian, it’s Irani Cafe Indian. Wonderful food with a story. Persian influenced, Indian food tailored for British tastes.

Irani Cafes in Bombay were originally opened by Zoroastrian Irani immigrants to British India in the 19th century. The Qataris kicked them out of Iran.

Fading out now in Bombay, today known as Mumbai , the baton has been passed to London.

Dishoom has self-consciously leaned into the Irani Cafe tradition with 21st century ambitions. Founded in 2010 by Harvard Business School graduates. Now with five sites in London and one in Edinburgh. Soon to make the leap across the pond to the USA and NYC.

As one of Dishoom’s founder’s put it,

“You can eat an Irani breakfast, a Hindu Gujarati lunch and a Muslim dinner here and every single dish will be distinctly from Bombay.”

“Dishoom” is a well-known onomatopoeic sound effect from old Indian films, representing the impact of a punch or a flying bullet. The name is also used informally to describe having mojo.

The place has mojo. Enough to secure an investment deal with private equity valuing the company at approximately $400 million.

Our waitress told us that if she worked 5 years at Dishoom, she would get an all expenses paid vacation to Bombay. She was counting down. 

Our son was right. The Black Daal is to die for.

We might have to go back to London, just for the Dishoom breakfast menu.

The Great London Scavenger Hunt

The big day had arrived, and we had a plan. We were riding Sunday morning at dawn. Up and at em early on the least-traffic day of the week. 

Our six shops were our six destinations. 4 were in Quataroplis (Mayfair) or very close. These were the high end. Then we would do the outliers. Coco Kingdom in Kensington West beyond Hyde Park. And then back to our hotel and if all was going well, Northwest to Islington and the shop where Flight Centre had once lived.

Barnaby had designed his tower of Babel with the most exclusive shops at the top and the most so-called derelict at the bottom. All part of the concept of London’s hierarchy of consumption.

Curiously and totally by chance the route dictated by our shops was a spiral down Barnaby’s tower. From ultra high-end to work-a-day. Lots of life at the bottom of the tower.

This promised to be a most entertaining and educational ride.

****

Our pedals were swapped back, our bike route confirmed, our tires topped up for pressure. The day was dawning nice and we were off. 

Everything that went wrong on our first ride, went right on this one. Bike computer was great. Traffic was good. The fates were with us.

Our first two shops were just outside Piccadilly Circus. Bentley and Skinner looked just like our porcelain miniature, with a couple of bays added. 

We got turned around looking for Trickers.

We had most entertaining conversation with door man on cigarette break who got us back on route. And then another entertaining conversation with a garbageman, who was a smart foreigner, who found us amusing.

Trickers, again looked just like our miniature.

Our Tricker Miniature, which looks exactly like the real thing. We knew it instantly, when we saw it.

Two down and we were off to Quataroplis proper. Our shop Mathew Williamson had been replaced by IRO, the London flagship store for the French luxury fashion brand:

“Born in Paris, and inspired by the 70’s & 80’s American rock scene, IRO is driven by the desire to build a simple and strong wardrobe composed like a soundtrack.” 

We then rode around Berkeley Square’s pleasant loop and peeled off on Davies Street, where we spotted a full-sized Tyranasaurus Rex headed to the park sans flesh. 

We pulled up hard. This Dino was a show stopper. Very cool and impressive, and as is usually the case with such, there’s a backstory. 

Chomper

This guy is affectionately known as “Chomper” after the baby dinosaur in the 1988 cartoon, “The Land Before Time.”  Unearthed by the third-generation cowboy Clayton Phipps in 2019 in Montana, the real bones once resided in the nearby David Aaron gallery. Real-bones Chomper went up for sale for $20+ million in 2023. After which the trail goes cold. Likely purchased below the event horizon. 

Only a block hence we arrived at our next shop, Bluthner Piano Centre. Now doing business as Bacchanalia Mayfair. 

With shop #4 checked off, we headed to Kensington via Hyde Park to look for Coco Kingdom in Notting Hill. Coco Kingdom is perhaps my favorite of our porcelain shops. Character in spades. Morning was still early and traffic was light. 

Alas, Coco Kingdom Fashion Boutique is now just a memory. Living on as our miniature and the Alamy Stock Image below.

Coco Kingdom in it’s day

We headed back. Arriving at our hotel no worse for wear. It was still early-ish and we had the energy so we headed to Islington and our last shop: Flight Centre.

Flight Centre too had moved on, replaced by the Thai Therapy & Spa. Sharon made a couple of off-color jokes about what could actually be going on. And I’ll leave it at that.

Flight Centre is no more

If you look carefully on the left, you’ll see a guy on a ladder replacing lights. After we got his OK on the bike photo-op placement, I say,

“Nice day, too bad you have to work on a Sunday”

He laughs,

“I’m just happy to have a job”

And that was that. Our great London Scavenger Hunt was complete @ 244 Upper Street @ 8:52 AM on Sunday September 7, 2025.

Here’s the video if you’re interested. One of my favorites. Music is Ry Cooder and Manuel Galban; Los Twangueros; 2003; from the CD- Mambo Sinuendo 

The Great London Scavenger Hunt Video

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Looking back, it seems so improbable that a porcelain lighthouse, tucked away on a ledge in a stair, in a hotel, in Kenmare, Ireland, would have precipitated this trip. But that’s the Goen of this one. Chance, fate and interconnectedness simultaneously at work.

Goen. Actually En. The Go not shown, is just an honorific. Fate and Chance. One and the same.

So, if we leaned into it, what would be next?

Barnaby’s show is April, 2026. Perhaps if we ask nicely, we can snag an invite. And at the same time work a bit more on our London-to-do-list. Epping Forest might be calling too.

Vamos a ver. We shall see. 

2023 The Laurentians

In June 2023, we bicycled the P’Tit Train du Nord Rail Trail, North of Montreal Canada: 120 miles from Mont Laurier to St Jerome, through the heart of the Laurentians. Considered by many as one of the top 5 or 10 bicycle rides in Canada. 

We drove to St Jerome, parked in the lot next to the caboose, caught the bicycle shuttle to Mont Laurier and bicycled back. We lucked out on the rain and the wildfire smoke. 

Beautiful country, nice folks, good trail, great food, lots of history. No complaints. Highly recommended.

The Rail Trail is a work in progress. In 1994 the rail corridor was purchased from Canadian Pacific Railway. The rails were torn up, and the old stations turned into museums and cafes, and gradually the trail has been paved. 

As a rough guess, I’d say 75% is asphalt, with the remainder gravel/crushed stone. We swapped out our narrow road tires for wider mountain bike tires before the trip. A good call.

As a rail trail, this is easy riding. Nothing more than 4%. The longest climb was from the Red River watershed to the North River watershed. Close to 900 ft vertical, but over many miles.

Today the P’Tit Train du Nord Rail Trail is referred to as a Linear Park. Rightly so.

As this is Quebec, French is spoken here.

My solution, my swiss-army-knife-of-languages wife, who didn’t disappoint.

Inspiration

This trip was precipitated by a brilliant New York Times story from 2019: 

“Bad Health and Worse Luck?
Time for a Family Bike Trip

Three generations tempt fate on a four-day cycling trip through the Laurentian Mountains in Quebec.

By Jake Halpern

One-armed and and one-eyed grandmother Barbara crashes and one-legged Grandfather Mirek perseveres.” 

Although we are 16 tandem years older than Barbara and Mirek, we are in better health, more-or-less.

The less being Sharon’s 2 artificial hips and twisted ankle, and my sore ribs courtesy of an ill-advised new-mountain-bike-tire test run on our tandem down a dirt trail under the power lines in Conway NH.

“Mark, Mark, get off the bike”, our friend Greg shouted from below.

Mark to self, “We can do this.”

Which would have been true had it not rained the night before, which softened up the sandy stuff where I tried to make the turn.

As we were lying on our side,

Greg, “Don’t move!”

Sharon, “Good Fall”

Self, “My Ribs hurt.”

And then there were the Wildfires. 

Quebec was burning. Quebec smoke blocked out the sun in New York City. I contacted our Inn-who-answered,

“No problem, up here, prevailing winds are blowing our smoke down south to you.”

 Which was good enough for me. Sharon was not convinced. 

As it turned out smoke was not a problem, but that didn’t stop Sharon from worrying. Each day, she had her mask at the ready.

The key was rain, which scrubbed the air clean. 

And the fates were kind, it only rained at night and on our day off.

Crossing the Border

It was a very very, very, very close call at the border.

I was convinced our MA real ID chip driver’s licenses would suffice. After all with enhanced drivers licenses, no passports are required. I even called AAA. Yep, with an enhanced driver’s license, no passports required. 

In my mind real ID chip driver’s licenses = enhanced driver’s licenses. 

Wrong. 

The Canadian border guard, politely explained the distinction. One had a hologram on the backside and one does not. So he asked for our passports.

Which we didn’t have, because I was so sure we didn’t need them. Border guard: Dead eyes. He asked for our passports again.

We thought we were toast. He treated us as toast, and had us pull over next to the u-turn back to the USA.

Ultimately we were let through. Sharon asks, “What if someone asks for our passports”

New Border Guard at the pull over, “No one will, after all you are paying customers.” Big smile.

So I ask, “Will the USA let us back in?”

Big smile. “Of course they will. You are are US citizens.” 

Have you ever had a border guard smile?

Who knows the why they let us into Canada. They didn’t tell. We didn’t ask. The fates smiled.

The Laurentians

The Laurentian Mountains are fondly referred to as “Up Country” or “Up North” in Montreal. We’re not talking ragged peaks like the Sierras or Rocky Mountains. More really big rolling green hills.

The Laurentian Mountains. Borrowed from National Geographic

The Laurentians feel well worn, which makes eminent sense as they are really, really old. Like a billion years old. One of the oldest mountain ranges in the world. When they were formed, the Laurentian Mountains were estimated to have had an average height of 39,000 feet – 10,000 feet taller than Mount Everest today.

Those days are long gone. The highest “peak” we passed was Mont Treblant Elevation 2871 feet.The highest in the range is only 3280 feet.

Ground down glory. Time will do that.

But they are very, very green, at least in June. After all, this is part of the Boreal forest of Quebec: A bit on the rainy side: springs, streams, rivers and lakes; pine, fir, hemlock, aspen, lots of ferns, moss, and lichen.

Felt like Indian country, which it was: the ancestral territory of the Weskarini Algonquin.  

To Lac Nominingue

See video: https://youtu.be/ESNBA0MkSTY?si=bCA45XMBOjOLZw7x

The morning of our departure, it was pouring rain in St Jerome. We needed to be at the shuttle by 7:15, which wouldn’t have been a problem, if the hotel restaurant hadn’t been short staffed. We made it but not by much. And Sharon was definitely not happy. Someone dragged her out the door, before she could brush her teeth.

While Sharon dealt with the luggage transfer I paid for parking. A public lot with an old tech machine, in French, in the rain. What could go wrong? 

On the second time around, with a little help from the slightly-impatient guy behind me, the machine spit out my dash printout. I headed back to the car, fingers crossed. 

Lots of bikes were already on the trailer. Our tandem was just going on. I averted my eyes, as they zip-tied it to the frame. 

The trailer was full. The shuttle bus was full, and we were off. 

Our driver must have been a semi driver in a past life. He was fast and he was confident. We wove in and out of traffic. Trailer be damned.  Gradually the rain let up. 

And just like that we were in Mont Laurier. Skies were clearing. We packed our bike, waved to the shuttle driver, walked up the mini-hill, and rode south.

Once out of town, it got really quiet. Northern-Provinces-of-Quebec quiet. No road sounds, no people sounds. Just birds, wind, and rustling leaves.

Sharon called out, “Beaver Lodge,” as we rode along a meandering stream. A perfect photo op. Did I stop? 

No.

Do I regret it? Yes. It was the one and only beaver lodge we saw. 

A couple of hours of pretty great riding later we pulled into Auberge Chez Ignace, our lodgings for the night on the shores of Lake Nominingue. Our kind of place. Great food, nice folks, a bit of funk and a backstory.

Dinner was escargot gratinés, Salade d’été, Saumon fumé or Porc, creme, citron et romarin, with flan au sirop d’érable for desert.

Magnifique! 

Best dinner of the trip or for that matter, the best dinner I’ve had in years. Which seemed a bit unusual for Quebecois in the middle of nowhere. Then I remembered the NYT article. 

Tony and Cécile Canot, owners of Auberge Chez Ignace are French expats. They own vineyards in France. If I had been on my game I would have ordered one of their wines.

Next time.

To Mont Treblant

See video: https://youtu.be/s1d8ooZiUMo?si=OCkLIvbhGTNpUUAx

The next day’s ride to Mont Treblant was scenic, smooth and for the most part level.

In a quiet, lonely stretch a fox stepped onto the trail and gave us a long measured look. 

We were riding through the Rouge River watershed. Once the homeland of the Weskarini Algonquins. A nation that is no more. In 1653, the barely armed Weskarini made a last stand on the shores of their sacred lake, Nominingue, where all were massacred except an old man and a child.

Their traditional enemies the Iroquois, had settled things once and for all. The Iroquois were well organized and had guns courtesy of their allies, the English. The French, the allies of the Weskarini, had been reluctant to arm their friends. So it goes. Good intentions led the extinction of a nation.

While the Weskarini Nation may be gone, their place names live on: Both Nominingue and Mont Treblant, or “Trembling Mountain”, come from the Weskarini.

We pulled into the town of Mont Treblant early afternoon. Our rooms weren’t ready, so we hung out on the front porch, recuperating, and watched the trail traffic roll by. 

We were close to the historic Railway Station. Now a cultural center where local artists work and exhibit their works. Built in the late 1800s, the railway originally primarily hauled lumber, but transitioned in the early 1900s to tourists, as the forest reserves were exhausted.

Today Mont Treblant is a tourist magnet. Mostly from Montreal and Ottawa, but also from the USA and Europe. The real estate market is hot. High-end second homes are featured in the New York Times. Martin, the owner of our inn, had 12 condos, he was renting out. 

The Weskarini had a tale about how the great spirit Manitou was particularly present on Mont Treblant. The warning was that if people upset the natural order, Manitou would cause the mountain to tremble and shake. 

In the 1990s a category 5 earthquake hit the area. The cause of the earthquake is not well understood scientifically. Seismic activity in the area seems to be related to the regional stress fields as opposed to traditional fault lines. 

These are really really old mountains. 

To Sainte Adèle

See video: https://youtu.be/KxfKDbi9GQc?si=I_vJptF5y4UNvmZk

On the way up and out of the Rouge River Watershed we passed by the most brilliant bird house installation I have ever seen. The highest of Art.

On the side of the trail, in the middle of nowhere, was a collection of antique farm equipment on display. To one side were two poles. On top of one was a quaint church birdhouse. 

On top of the other was the the Pièce de Résistance, a carousal of birdhouses. The birdhouses were hung from a good-sized antique wooden spoked wheel. The airplane birdhouse was especially special. Kudos. 

We almost missed our Inn for the night. A faded sign and an overgrown single file footpath to led off to the left. On recounting this story to a friend, she started making haunted house sound effects. 

We parked our bike and opened the squeaky door. No one was around. We rang the bell, no one answered. We settled in on the porch. Paint was peeling and the grass could have used a mow.

After a bit, a tattooed woman appeared. She didn’t know we were coming. 

She showed us up to our room. Which as it turned out wasn’t our room. A gravelly voiced guy helped us move to the room we had reserved. 

Turns out, he was waiting to die. Metastasized cancer. He had three brothers. One shot himself and two hung themselves. His mother did herself in with prescription pills.

Truth-be-told, no haunting here, or at least no more than usual.  The new management were simply finding their legs.

The tattooed lady was most sweet. It was clear to me that she had a story, but don’t we all? 

I am guessing it was her children who served us dinner, all on their own, and in English-ish. They marched in. Plates held high. Most charming. We were the only guests.

The guy waiting to die was also great. Friendly, helpful, Seemingly at peace with his fate. Sharon’s bud. He didn’t share with me. 35 cents in his bank account. Literally.

To Sainte Jérôme 

See video: https://youtu.be/Dc-NV0w8H6U?si=9eLE1blDt2k9lhkh

The ride to Sainte Jérôme was easy peasy. It felt like cheating. We coasted and coasted. Pedaled a little, and coasted some more. 

We were riding along the North River now. Closing in rapidly on the end of our adventure. 

We passed through a long, high and wide tunnel covered in high-end graffiti. Beaver lodges, a distant past.

Around about noon, we pulled up to our car in the parking lot in Sainte Jérôme, unpacked and headed over to the caboose to check in. Sharon announced our return in her special way. Yuks all around. This trip was a wrap.

Theme Music

This rail trail has its own theme song. Kind of. At least the train did. Memorialized in 1951 by Félix Leclerc.

“The Train of the North”.

A cheerful, haunting, surreal song.

I had hoped to use various renditions of the song as sound tracks for the videos. But decided to let the Ronnie Earl stand. There’s always next time. 

Leclerc was an iconic figure in Québec music. Kind of like a Canadian Woody Guthrie with a dash of Stephen Sondheim. A French-Canadian singer-songwriter, poet, writer, actor and Québécois political activist.

He foresaw that there would come a day when the train line would be no more, 30 years before the fact, and used it as a metaphor for endings.

“The conductor and then the driver 
Have decided to disembark 
And the train alone continued

The train to St-Adèle 
Reached the end at Mont-Laurier. 
No one could stop it. 
Looks like we saw it spinning 
In the sky last night. 
Oh ! the North train”

What happens to the soul of a train, or a person, or a world for that matter, when it’s day is done? It spins (lives on) in the sky with no one aboard.  

I am particularly fond of this cover by Veranda, a Québécois duo.

Back to the USA, Crossing the Border (Part II)

So we pull up to USA customs. Hand our drivers licenses to the tough cookie in the booth, .

“No passports.” Scowl.

“They let you in without passports?” Scowl.

“Well, I didn’t understand the difference between enhanced driver’s licenses and real ID driver’s licenses. It really isn’t clear… blah, blah, blah…”

“You and a lot of other people.” Hint of a smile.

“You’re not the first and won’t be the last.” Rolls eyes

“That’s the government for you.” Stares off into the distance as she waves us through.

2019 Shikoku Pilgrimage 5: Kagawa

The Shikoku Pilgrimage is unique in that it is a circle. When you finish, you are back where you started. Lots of symbolism there.

Kagawa was something else altogether. It was the smallest of the prefectures, but there were plenty of temples. 23 if you’re counting. Roughly 1/4 of the pilgrimage’s 88.

Kagawa’s journey is traditionally symbolic of entering of nirvana (涅槃 nehan).

So what was the difference in training for enlightenment (Ehime Prefecture) and training for nirvana (Kagawa)?

Let me rephrase that, What was the difference between a reality sandwich and a coin spinning so fast that both sides are visible at the same time?

No answers here, but we did learn how to make Udon noodles from scratch, and the past tense of “I’ll try my best.”

Shikoku Pilgrimage Route with Temples. Kagawa, numbers 68 – 88 + number 1

Day 29. November 5 Tuesday;  Mitoyo to Udon House. 2 temples

68 Jinnein 神恵院 Kanonji, Kagawa
69 Kan’onji 観音寺 Kanonji, Kagawa

We were in for a full day. Not far to go, but lots to do.

First up was Kotohiki Park famous for its coin-shaped sand-sculpture dating to 1633 ±. It was featured in our pilgrimage book, and not far off our route, so we swung by.

From the viewing platform on the hill called Mt. Kotohiko, we could see the super-sized sculpture below. It was big. Really big. The photo below doesn’t do it justice. Those are really big trees in the photo below.

Built entirely of sand from Ariake beach, beyond. It only needs repair twice a year. And it is perspective corrected to look round. Much longer in length than width.

They say that by looking at this sand coin, you can ensure long life, and luck in money matters. Long life has yet to be determined, but shortly thereafter we did invest in Nvidia.

We had to swing back around for Temples 68 Jinnein and 69 Kan’onji. Side by side, they couldn’t be more different. 68 Jinnein is a fairly well done modern concrete box, whereas 69 Kannonji is wooden, earthy and traditional.

They begrudgingly share a temple office. A bit Hatfield – McCoys. Over centuries.

Our inn for the night was the Udon House, where we would attend a so-called master class in Udon noodles.

We arrived late morning with time to spare, before orientation, noodle history and the basics.

Why Udon noodles in Kagawa? Well, Kagawa is ground zero. If you are into Udon noodles. Kagawa is the prefecture for you.

We were just passing through, but why not?

After all, foodies make pilgrimages here just for the noodles. And that would be Sanuki Udon, thank you very much.

Square cut, firm, and supple. Main ingredients are wheat flour and salt. The ingredients take care of themselves, if you are in Kagawa. The magic is in the making.

Curiously the dough is kneaded standing on the dough. Weight is needed to develop the characteristic chewy texture of the noodles.

Photo Courtesy of the Udon House

Next up was a farm tour.

Our farmer/host used to live in the big city but moved to Mitoya to farm. As we were digging up sweet potatoes out in the middle of his field, he and Sharon struck up a conversation about the pilgrimage. He had done it on foot in his youth. He was fast.

One thing led to another and soon they were discussing the Diamond Sutra.

The Diamond Sutra, like the Heart Sutra, is considered a core Buddhist text. Same stuff, but another angle. Essence of the essence & the world’s earliest dated printed book.

Our farmer host was a bit stunned. But Sharon was on roll, and not to be denied.

“All conditioned phenomena 
Are like a dream, an illusion, a bubble, a shadow, 
Like dew or a flash of lightning;

Thus we shall perceive them.”

One of my favorite moments on the pilgrimage. In the middle of a field in the middle of nowhere. Mud on my feet.

Back at the Udon house, it was time to cut up our noodles. The chopper was wicked. The dough stayed still and the chopper slid. Oh so sharp.

Sharon went a bit Latina, shaving off a couple of finger prints. Just a bit of blood. No harm, no foul.

At dinner, we had a most interesting and poignant conversation with a young Japanese woman, concerned about Japanese resources only going to the elderly, leaving little for her generation.

“What will be left for us?”

The next morning we brushed our teeth with the staff on the first floor, packed up the bike and bid a sad, reluctant farewell. It had been a fun stay and far too short. And we were missing the Udon restaurant tour included.

We could have had Udon noodles for breakfast at the best places in town, but we had a full day ahead and someone hadn’t left enough morning time in Mitoyo.

Below is a 2 minute Udon House video, which pretty much tells their tale.

Day 30. November 6 Wednesday; Bicycling Day 23; Mitoyo to Tadotsu. T70 to T78. 9 Temples

70 Motoyamaji 本山寺 Mitoyo, Kagawa
71 Iyadaniji 弥谷寺 Mitoyo, Kagawa
72 Mandaraji 曼荼羅寺 Zentsuji, Kagawa
73 Shusshakaji 出釈迦寺 Zentsūji, Kagawa
74 Kōyamaji 甲山寺 Zentsūji, Kagawa
75 Zentsūji 善通寺 Zentsūji, Kagawa Kukai’s birthplace
76 Konzōji 金倉寺 Zentsūji, Kagawa
77 Dōryūji 道隆寺 Tadotsu, Kagawa
78 Gōshōji 郷照寺 Utazu, Kagawa

Another big temple day. You’d think we’d get tired of them, but we never did. Big, small; high, low; Modern, traditional. No matter. Mostly we just didn’t have enough time to explore and appreciate each.

Doryu-ji Temple

Our innkeeper that night at Vtangura was a widow. When her husband had died, she lost her license to serve meals and she lowered her prices to compensate. The place was hopping. It was bring your own. Microwave provided

There was a young German guy who spoke Japanese, a Japanese nun a few others.

The German was bemoaning the fall of the Berlin Wall. He was all in for full state supported study. Which had been provided in East Germany, or so said his parents.

Our landlady on hearing our mode of transport cut right to the chase,

“Don’t you argue?”.

“Well no, we worked that one out long ago. Sharon’s always right.”

Afterwards, the landlady gave me a sideways glance, and added

“I’m lonely.” I let that one go.

Day 31. November 7 Thursday; Bicycling Day 24; T79 to T83 Tadotsu to Takamatsu. 5 temples

79 Tennōji 天皇寺 Sakaide, Kagawa
80 Kokubunji 讃岐国分寺 Takamatsu, Kagawa
81 Shiromineji 白峯寺 Sakaide, Kagawa
82 Negoroji 根香寺 Takamatsu, Kagawa
83 Ichinomiyaji 一宮寺 Takamatsu, Kagawa

Japan has more than its fair share of weird creatures. Temple 82 Negoroji is, or rather was, the home of the Ushi-oni or devil cow. Some 400 years ago this Ushi-oni was terrorizing the locals. A famous archer of that day, Takakiyo, killed the beast. Some today think it might have been an orangutan. But that doesn’t explain the horns

This Ushi-oni’s horns are said to be in box in the temple. The statue stands out front below.

Ushi Oni

Temple 82 Negoroji is high and the descent was steep. Unfortunately we took the wrong fork at some point and soon found ourselves way off route, with no sensible way of retracing our steps.

As things leveled out, we pulled up next to a 6 lane expressway to regroup. We tried asking a most accommodating fellow directions. He spoke no English and even if he did it would have been a lost cause. Suspect temples weren’t a big part of his world.

We headed off along the frontage road and eventually found Temple 83 and from there our inn for the night Sasaya Ryokan.

Day 32. November 8 Friday; Bicycling Day 25; T84 Takamatsu to T88.  5 temples

84 Yashimaji 屋島寺 Takamatsu, Kagawa
85 Yakuriji 八栗寺 Takamatsu, Kagawa
86 Shidoji 志度寺 Sanuki, Kagawa
87 Nagaoji 長尾寺 Sanuki, Kagawa
88 Ōkuboji 大窪寺 Sanuki, Kagawa

We were nearing the end. Today we would reach Temple 88. The end of the pilgrimage for many. But we would continue on the following day to Temple 1 to close the loop.

Temple 84 Yashimaji was high above Takamatsu and the site of a major battle between the Heike and the Genji clans during the 12th century. We took a taxi. Fabulous views. Fabulous back story.

Temple 85 Yakuriji was high as well and had a cable car or funicular, if you were. Sharon struck up a conversation with a very entertaining monk. Out on his own, visiting temples, having fun, with no senior monks looking over his shoulder.

Note staff

Temple 86 Shidoji stopped my mind. It all started innocently enough. We were wandering through the grounds admiring this and that. Especially the shrunken heavy earth moving equipment painted in pastel colors.

Sharon wanted so much to hop on start it up and drive around. I restrained her with empty promises of heavy equipment joyrides. Then again you never know. Even old dogs can learn new tricks.

Just about then a very excited elderly Japanese gentleman came running up to us. No much English, but we got his general drift. He all but pulled us along the path, and then back behind some buildings and through narrow gates. He had just finished raking the karesansui or dry landscape style garden. And wanted to show someone. We were it.

A detail below. Check out that rake work. And the focus that must have taken not to leave footprints. He was right to be proud.

This dry garden was fabulous. Not on the regular tour, but famous in its own right. A collaboration between the renowned garden designer Mirei Shigemori and the Japanese-American sculptor Isamu Noguchi. Noguchi has been one of my favorites for a while now.

One of Noguchi’s things was rocks. I attributed the character of the dry garden rocks to him. On second thought perhaps I was jumping to conclusions.

Before the dry garden, Mirei Shigemori rebuilt another garden on the temple grounds – with his own “modern twists.” This garden dates back to the 15th century. How about them rocks:

Rocks were apparently a Mirei Shigemori thing. Below is a photo from his private garden in Kyoto. On my bucket list. What more could you want?

We walked back out front to Mr. Bike. The phone rang. A call from the USA. It was our daughter-in-law.

Our son had just had a seizure. He was in the hospital, and OK-ish. She passed along that he wanted us to finish our trip. My mind stopped. The wheels spun. A Go-en moment.

Go-en means both fate and chance. Considered 2 sides of the same coin. Spin that coin fast enough and it’s Go-en.

In Buddhist speak, we’re talking dependent origination. Everything arises in dependence with other factors. We’re talking simultaneity. Nothing exists independently. Everything is interconnected. Or something like that.

You’re never going to conceptualize Go-en or explain it. But you know it when you see it. Think the guy who misses his plane which then crashes with no survivors. Call it fate. Call it destiny. Call it chance. Call it whatever you want.

Goen. Actually En

A tip of the hat to the French filmmaker Emilie Berteau and her movie 88. We emailed her. & She explained the specific concept of Go-en for us, and she passed along a Japanese proverb:

Japanese “GOEN” is the spiritual expression of Relationships or Connections. Here is a famous Japanese proverb;袖触れ合うも多生の縁 (Sode hureau mo tashou no en) = ”Even a chance acquaintance is decreed by destiny.”

We pulled into Temple 88 late in the day, and parked the bike. We walked by a beautifully designed stainless glass enclosure for pilgrimage hiking staffs. Those who have finished the pilgrimage can leave them here, where they will be burned in a special ceremony, twice a year.

On closer inspection, virtually all the staffs looked hardly used.

The explanation- bus tours. It is said that upwards of 150,000 folks make the pilgrimage every year or at least “embark on the journey.” Of these, some go by car; Some motorcycle; Some public transportation; Some helicopter, but by far the biggest percentage are the chartered bus pilgrims.

By bus, they can do the pilgrimage in 2 weeks and don’t wear down their staffs. 40 pilgrims to a bus plus a priest and a guide. We learned early on, you don’t want to get stuck at a temple office behind a guide with 40 books needing stamps and calligraphies.

Perhaps only 1500 people walk the pilgrimage every year from start to finish. I am guessing a few bikes make it to all 88 temples. And then there was us. Senior USA citizens on a tandem.

As we entered the Temple proper, there was a Japanese guide holding forth to a group of what looked like extremely wealthy Japanese businessmen. Perhaps a pilgrimage highlights limo tour?

Finding our inn was easy. It was across the street.

Day 33.  November 9 Saturday; Last Bicycling Day 26 T88 to Tokushima. 1 temple

T1 Ryōzen-ji 霊山寺 Tokushima

We slept well. A hot soak, good food, and good company will do that.

We were pretty much done. Or so we thought.

I went out to load up the bike for our last riding day. A tire was flat and it was cold. Like put-on-everything-we-brought cold.

Within the first mile we had a monkey dancing down the road in front of us. Curiously archetypal. In these parts, monkeys are messengers of the old Gods.

As we descended, mists were rising from the rice fields.

We had a climb back up and over to Tokushima. Back in the day there had a guarded check point here between prefectures. Today it’s a back road which crests up and over.

I vaguely remember a small sign indicating the remains of a long gone guard post, up a foot path, up the hill to the right. Though that could be a false memory. In any case we pushed on. No traffic. We were far off the beaten track.

I do remember quite vividly a very small unassuming Shinto Torii gate indicating a local spirit who dwelt thereabouts.

The descent to Tokushima was easy and quick. In no time we were back at Temple #1 Ryōzen-ji.

The Koi were still lolling about. We paid our respects and headed to the temple office. A new stamp and a new calligraphy was added at the end of each of our books. See below.

The best I’ve been able to sort it out, this last calligraphy gives the temple name, the date, confirmation that the pilgrimage was completed and a comment to the effect that “The Buddhist practice you’ve longed for since your previous life has been fulfilled perfectly”. At least, that’s how a monk explained it to someone else.

We had learned the concept of trying your best throughout the pilgrimage. Folks, usually bus pilgrims at temples, would take a look at us and our bike and say “Ganbatte.” Which translates roughly as “Hang in there” and/or “Don’t give up.”

Our response, was the traditional, “Ganbarimasu.” I will do my best.

During my conversation with the perhaps-monk working on my book that day at Ryōzen-ji, I said “Ganbarimasu.” Meaning “I do my best.”

He corrected me, “Ganbarimashita.” Past tense. Meaning “I did my best”

Emphasis on the past. We were done. It was official.

From Ryōzen-ji, it was a short familiar ride to our inn, Morimoto-ya. Like coming home. Which it was. Morimoto-ya was our home-away-from-home. Mimasan, the proprietress, had picked us up at the airport, stored our luggage, waved goodbye when we took off in the typhoon, and sent us re-supplies when we were on the road.

We pulled in, stashed the bike, took a hot soak and kicked back. Mimasan had cooked us a special dinner in celebration of our return. We even got our own table and our own dining space just off the main dining area, where several pilgrims were already eating.

They were curious about our special treatment. Mimasan:

“They just finished the pilgrimage, on a tandem bike! And they did it all in only 21 days!”

An exaggeration which we didn’t correct. It was her story and she was sticking to it.

Day 34.  November 10 Sunday; Bike Packing Day.

Mimasan was a bundle of energy. She ran the inn. Kept her family in line. Had a side company making candles in the mountains, and was a dancer. She might play a couple of musical instruments too, I don’t remember exactly, but it would be completely in character.

Not surprisingly, She and Sharon became buds. So when she wondered if Sharon might like to go see the recycling center, Sharon was on it. Off they sped in Mimasan’s micro van.

Did I mention that Mimasan drove fast?

I slowly packed up the tandem out front. An elderly bonzai-tree type gardener was trimming up a remarkable limb overhanging the entrance, near where I was doing my packing thing. An elderly woman came out of the inn walked over to the outdoor vending machine next to me.

She bought a can of something or other and brought it over to him. I don’t remember any words being exchanged. It was a slow dance.

Sharon had a great time at the recycling center. Mimasan wanted to know if we were up for conveyor belt sushi. But of course.

We sped off. The establishment was in a mall. Like any mall anywhere.

You could order your sushi off a tablet or just grab one off the conveyor belt running by the table. Bill was figured up afterwards from the color coded pile of dishes. We had a tasty great time. And a very high pile of dishes.

Day 35.  November 11 Monday; Buffer Day; 1 Temple

T5 Jizō-ji 大日寺 Tokushima

To my credit I had scheduled a buffer day. An extra day to absorb planning snafus or whatever. We were all caught up, so we asked Mimasan for ideas.

“Well, you could walk up the hill to Jizō Temple. There’s a lot there”

Yes. Deja vu and a whole lot more.

Our first visit was about a month ago. It had been raining. We were disoriented and in a rush. A woman in the temple office had saved us. We stopped in to give her our regards.

She was pleased that we had made it and survived. Suspect she was a bit surprised, but she never let on. Since we had time on our hands, she suggested we visit the 200 Arhats who had their own temple building up the hill,

Arhats are disciples of the Buddha, who have attained the highest level of ascetic practice.They are considered to be protectors of the teachings and could use magical powers to assist the faithful. Often portrayed with individualized facial expressions, suggestive of an extreme ascetic lifestyles and honored as examples of the individual spiritual quest.

The Arhat hall was musty, modest and magical. These Arhats were life-size. A bit worn for wear, but after all they are well over 200 years old and hadn’t led easy lives. Some had travelled all the way from China.

They found a home here in 1775, when two temple priests (brothers) built them a hall. All was well until 1915 when a careless visitor started a fire and burned the hall down. 300 Arhat brothers were lost. The current hall was built in 1922, and today’s 200 Arhats moved back in.

These guys are survivors.

Today Jizō Temple, feels modest, but it wasn’t always so. It has a history and then some. Game of Thrones stuff.

Things started with a bang in 821 when Emperor Saga ordered Kukai to found the temple. Emperor Saga and subsequent emperors and warlords provided the support to make Jizō Temple an extraordinary extended world on Shikoku.

At its height, Jizō Temple had more than 300 branch temples. On this site alone there were 26 pagodas. All long gone now.

So what made Jizō Temple so special that emperors and warlords would become patrons?

That would be Shogun Jizō.

Shogun Jizō @ Jizō-ji Temple

Jizō is an important Bodhisattva or “Saint” in the mainstream Buddhist tradition. Primarily known today as a protector of children and travelers. A typical Jizō is depicted as peaceful, and highly likable. Almost cuddly.

Then there is the dark side of days gone by: Shogun Jizō. Victorious Jizō, Protector of Warriors. In battle, he’d take a hit for you. Help you prevail. A battle-field protector.

The monks of the old Jizō Temple weren’t warrior monks, but monks who gave magic to warriors.

This being Shingon, there were secret transmissions, visualizations, mantras and mandalas. A secret doctrine for those who could pay the price.

Today’s Shogun Jizō is described as a much nicer guy. He drives out wrongdoers and prevents disasters.

After our self-guided tour of the Arhat Hall, I was in a contemplative mood. We wandered back down the hill. I sat down on the stairs to admire the view. Temple on the left. Graveyard on the right. Path descending between the two. Town and Mountains beyond. Photo below pretty much says it all.

So what would be next?

That would be Covid. The first cases were already in Japan, but we escaped unscathed.

Four months later at the height of Covid panic, we would be walking through empty airports on our way to Florida to help out family. Again we emerged unscathed.

Dumb luck, or fate? Or both at once? Go-en. The coin spins.

2019 Shikoku Pilgrimage: Kochi

The second leg of our pilgrimage took us through the Kochi Prefecture. Not a bright lights/ big city experience, as befits the pilgrimage stretch traditionally known for teaching the value of Austerity & Discipline, or Ascetic Practice.

Shikoku Pilgrimage Route with Temples. Kochi, numbers 24- 39

We liked Kochi. Not everyone does. 

Long stretches of road with nothing but ocean on one side and mountains on the other. Locals in Kochi have the reputation for being blunt and no nonsense. Worked for us.

Not a tourist destination. No through traffic, famous places or big cities. By and large, hard-working rural coastal folks. 

Curiously I felt right at home in this landscape. Crashing Pacific waves. Rock cliffs to the ocean. 

We could have been on the Northern California Coast. Which accounting for continental drift we kind of were.

We would spend 8 days in Kochi. We would ride west and south along the Pacific Ocean in two sweeping arcs. The first ending at Cape Murato and Temple 24. And the second ending at Cape Ashizuri and Temple 38, the southernmost tip of Shikoku Island.

From there we would head north cutting inland to Temple 39 and emerging once again on the ocean. Not the Pacific but the Bungo Channel leading to the Uwa Sea between Shikoku and the Japanese island of Kyushu.

No longer newbies, we had settled down. We pushed through as best we could. Ascetic training, if you will. Ate our share of humble pie.

The temples were fantastic, but just as important were the roads from one to the next. And that experience, for better or worse.

Lao Tzu put it another way,

A good traveler has no fixed plan, and is not intent on arriving”

So hard to accept.

We kept to our schedule in the big picture, but only through the kindness of strangers and a bit of blind luck. Kobo Daishi’s specialty.

Day 11 October 18 Friday; Minami Town to Minshuku Tokumasu. No Temples.  

After an early breakfast we loaded the bike in our rear garden. 

We wound our way back through Minami town to highway 55 and turned left at Yakuoji, Temple 23. 

Wayfinding would be easy for a few days at least. Stay on 55. Ocean to the left. Mountains to the right.

Some pretty remarkable scenery

Below is a well-cared for shrine perhaps 10 feet off the road. Main guy is Avolokiteshvara, the embodiment of compassion and mercy. 

We were riding through a Tsunami Inundation area. Which meant, if the big waves are on their way, you better run- Uphill ASAP – or kiss your ass goodbye.

Weather had been threatening, but we were spared, at least for today. Tomorrow and the next day, we weren’t so lucky. Another typhoon was on the way. 

We pulled into our inn for the night, Minshuku Tokumasu, on schedule, late afternoon. 

Great place. Great folks. The 98 year old great-grandmother was special. She kept the veggie garden, worked the laundry and still used her bicycle to get around. 

Her grandson was a surfer and all-round good guy.

His wife, Chisato had been doing the pilgrimage and they fell in love and married.

Previously she had been working for JP Morgan in Tokyo. Good English. Charming.

Family Foto below

It was Red Snapper for us for dinner. From that day’s catch. They hoped we would like it. Sheesh. Best I’ve ever had. Veggies from Great Grandma’s garden.

Day 12 October 19 Saturday; Minshuku Tokumasu to the Tonohama area. 3 temples.

24 Hotsumisakiji 最御崎寺 Muroto, Kōchi
25 Shinshōji 津照寺 Muroto, Kōchi
26 Kongōchōji 金剛頂寺 Muroto, Kōchi

Sharon says it rained all night. I wouldn’t know I was out. At dawn the rain had let up and the sky seemed to be clearing. 

That didn’t last long and by breakfast it was pouring once again.

Chisato tried to talk us out of riding, but we knew our schedule was tight. We loaded up the bike, put on our rain gear and headed out the door. 

We took a long pause under the overhang at the front door, waiting for a break in the downpour. 

When we got to drizzle, we waved goodbye and were off. 

Our first stop was Meoto Rock, or Couples Rock. Judging by the debris, the relationship hadn’t been smooth sailing. 

Our first Typhoon had hit this area hard. Chisato had told us that waves were washing across the highway. Great Grandmother had said she had never seen that in her lifetime.

We had some shots of blue sky as the storm seemed to pull back.

Jean Phillipe back in Minami Town, had told us to keep an eye out for a graveyard dedicated to men lost at sea. One of his memorable places and not marked on maps. We found it, stopped and spent some time. 

The guys below are looking out over the water. Quite soulful.

After Sharon passed along snacks to the stray cats hanging out, we were on our way.

Skies were clearing by late morning. Roads were smooth and traffic was light as we approached Cape Muroto and Temple 24, Hotsumisakiji, at the tip. 

Cape Muroto is known for its high winds, big waves, tropical plants and geology – uplifted marine terraces and active thrust faults. It’s also known for the place that Kukai reached enlightenment and took the name Kukai. The temple was founded in 805.

The road up to Temple 24 was switchbacked steep, perhaps a 1000 ft above the highway. We were expecting the climb, the road was in good shape and the views were spectacular.

The Temple itself was pretty great, but we didn’t linger. We paid our respects at the halls, admired the pagoda below, banged on the ringing rock and headed for the temple office.

It was a quiet morning. The guys were kicked back and enjoying themselves. Our books taken care of, they admired Sharon’s shoulder bag water proofing. 

“Nice tight plastic bags. Well done”

After tightening up our brakes we descended back to highway 55. Next stop Temple 25, Shinshoji.

First though we had a bit of riding up the coast. This was an ocean-oriented world.

Temple 25 was an easy approach. No 1000+ foot climbs. We just rode right up. 

After passing through the main gate, and washing purification at the wash basin, we looked for the bell to mark our arrival. But it was nowhere to be seen. 

On the way back down from the main hall, we found the bell. It was upstairs in that red gate behind Sharon in the photo above.

Here’s the view from up there.

Back on highway 55, we headed to Temple 26, Kongoshoji, not far up the road. Another steep switchbacked climb.

Late afternoon we rolled into our inn for the night, Minshuku Tonohama, the least elegant of our inns. As Jean Phillipe said when he made our reservation, there aren’t any good choices in Tonohama. 

Minshuku Tonohama had its own charmless charm. A most helpful host making the best of an inn recently inserted underneath what had been a un-inspired generic wedding hall. 

Complete with traditional Japanese floor toilets.

Traditional floor toilet in far alcove

We were comfortable enough, not being particularly proud or picky, but I was worried about the next day. Not only were we facing the tough climb to Temple 27 right off, but then we had another 5 temples and 50+ miles on top of that. 

No way we were going to make it. Not a chance. A failure of planning – on my part.

The solution- a Taxi. Up to Temple 27, Konomineji, and back. And then we would ride. 

Even so the next day would be an adventure. 

Day 13. October 20 Sunday; Tonohama to T33. 6 temples.

27 Kōnomineji 神峰寺
28 Dainichiji 大日寺 Konan , Kōchi
29 Kokubunji 土佐国分寺 Nankoku, Kōchi
30 Zenrakuji 善楽寺 Kōchi, Kōchi
31 Chikurinji 竹林寺 Kōchi, Kōchi
32 Zenjibuji 禅師峰寺 Nankoku, Kōchi

We were up early and after breakfast, our innkeeper arranged for a taxi. The taxi driver was a good guy and most entertaining. All started off well. He jumped out and held the door for Sharon.

And up we went.

Our taxi driver agreed to wait in the parking lot. We headed in. Here’s Sharon getting ready to wash her hands.

After purification rituals, we headed up again.

The Temple was well cared for. We paid our respects. 

and headed back down.

Back in the taxi, we descended.  We had to wait for this van to three-point the turn. Too steep, too tight.

Perhaps this was the section that Jean Phillipe back in Minami Town said the front wheels of his camper came off the ground. His advice was spot on, no need to try this one on your tandem.

Back at Minshuku Tonohama, we loaded our bike and headed up the coast. Soon we were passing Tsunami Evacuation Towers like this one.

After the Great East Japan earthquake in 2011, the Kochi government constructed many. Kind of sobering to imagine the waves washing over the town, while those who made it to the top deck watch their world wash away. 

That said, better than the alternative. 

And this could happen at any time. Not lost on us.

As we rode up the Coast we had sections of smaller roads off highway 55. Good stuff. The photo below is two way. FWIW, our experience was that Japanese drivers were courteous and careful negotiating such. 

Taxis were another matter altogether. They just blasted through. Best to just pull off. 

Mid-morning in Aki City we hit the Cycling Road along the Tosa Bay to Konan. Great ride. A Japanese rail trail. Sharon found Prickly Pear Cactus fruit, which pleased her no end.

Wide open beaches.

Complete with what we think was a Shinto event.

And what looked like a Japanese variant of Bocci Ball.

Around noon we were at Temple 28, Dainichiji.

Now this is a manhole cover.

Next up was Temple 29, Kokubunji.

And then Temple 30 Zenrakuji. Altho the photo below is of the Shinto shrine, Tosajinga, next door.

We don’t have any photos of Temple 31 Chikurinji. Time was slipping away and we still had another Temple to go before 5 PM when the temple offices close.

We raced for Temple 32 and made it with just 5 minutes to spare. On the way out we turned on our headlight. It was getting dark.

In my frazzle, I had forgotten about our ferry crossing. We swept up next to Urado Bay. Sharon started shouting, “Turn right, Turn right.”

Couldn’t be right, right was just water.

Well actually, it could be “Right”, if you were on a ferry.

We looped back and waited for the ferry with a charming young couple with dilated eyes. Perhaps 16 or 17. He lived on the other side of the Bay. She was seeing him off. They held hands.

The ferry, no cars-allowed, eventually arrived and we headed across. Remarkable transition from twilight to night.  

It was night when we reached the other side.

A mile or so later we were at our inn, Kochi-ya, directly opposite from Temple 33, Sekkeiji.

When we checked in, the question was bath or food, first? Dinner was in full swing. 

Food trumps presentability.

So we sit down and start in on yet another great meal. We start chatting with another pilgrim, a European woman sitting next to us. 

It soon became clear that we had crossed some indefinite line and now had pilgrimage cred.

“So where did you start?” 

“Tokushima?”

“When?” 

“ Eight days ago”

“On a bicycle?”

The rest of the table looked up.

“Yep”

After dinner, after our bath, Sharon was pleased with her Yukata and warming vest. Weather was turning colder. After all, it was October 20. 

Day 14. October 21 Monday; Temple 33 to Susaki City. 4 temples.

33 Sekkeiji 雪蹊寺 Kōchi, Kōchi
34 Tanemaji 種間寺 Haruno, Kōchi
35 Kiyotakiji 清滝寺 Tosa, Kōchi
36 Shōryūji 青竜寺 Tosa, Kōchi

This was the day of the Cat Lady’s Inn, though we had 4 temples to visit, before arriving.

First we visited Temple 33, Sekkeiji, across the street. Photo below from outside our door on the second floor of our inn. 

Next up was Temple 34, Tanemaji a bit before 10 AM.

Along the way to Temple 35, we passed this front yard extravaganza.

Pretty amusing and lots going on. There was a real dog just behind the turntable. He was barking to us. Sharon really wanted to walk across the yard and make friends. I knew from experience that this would involve petting and scratching. I always imagine the worst.

I’m sorry now I lobbied against the move, and that she listened to me. Mr Dog probably was mostly harmless and friendly.

It was another narrow, steep, switchbacked climb to Temple 35, Kiyotakiji. 

We arrived a shade before noon. The Temple was great. Lots of character.

But the big hit was the antique fully operational Fire Truck. Temples are mostly wood. Lots of open flames about such as candles. Fires are an ongoing problem.

We chatted some with a Japanese Pilgrim, we had gotten to know on the road over the last few days. A good guy. He was fast, but ultimately we were faster, even with our day off.

We descended and rode along the coast towards Temple 36, Shoryuji. A pretty Temple,

With a long stair.

The photo below was taken around 4 PM on our way into Susaki City and our inn for the night. Weather had been spitting, but all was well. We were going to make it with time to spare.

We crossed the Sakura River and turned left. Our bike computer had decided to send us into the heart of the main port proper and I never corrected that. So we had an up close ride along really really big ships and really really big cranes, and mountains of logs, literally.

A right turn and a couple of blocks later we knew we were close to our inn, but couldn’t get oriented. 

Sharon asked a gas delivery guy, who indicated we should just follow him. So we drafted up tight as he roared off, and a few turns and a few blocks later arrived at Guest House Doubutso Sudomari, home of the Cat Lady.

We weren’t entirely sure though that we were there. Neighbors were about so we asked them. Yep, we were in the right place.  

Mom and her 20’s/ 30’s son in a wheelchair. They were clearly bored, and we were a welcome diversion. They knew all about the pilgrimage and were into it and into our journey. Offered us cash osettai. We accepted, bowed and Sharon gave the proper response in Japanese. Good Folks. 

Jean Phillipe back in Minami Town had made our reservations for this night. He had given us the heads up that our hostess might not be home when we arrived, and that we should just go on in and make ourselves at home.

So we did.

First step was to introduce ourselves to the cat on the first floor. 

We found our room and settled in. 

It wasn’t long thereafter that the Cat Lady, Mayuyu, arrived home from work. 

Mayuyu was great. Shortly thereafter she and Sharon headed off for the grocery store. We had the first floor guest kitchen to ourselves and Sharon put together a great dinner.

And we ate off of Cat Plates and drank from Cat Mugs.

We were especially impressed with her Tiny Cat reading Sutras.

Mayuyu explained that she had received Ms Cat and her Sutras, as a gift from a pilgrim who had stayed at her inn, and then asked if we would like her. 

Of course!!! Great stuff. 

Today Tiny Cat reads her Sutras on our kitchen vitamin carousel between the Carnitine and Boswellia. An example for us all.

Day 15. October 22 Tuesday; Susaki City to Kuroshio. 1 temple.

37 Iwamotoji 岩本寺 Shimanto, Kōchi

On our way out the next morning, Mayuyu told us that one pilgrim had left their Sedge hat and never returned for it. So Sharon tried it on. 

And I got to confirm, that yes, my initial idea of somehow bicycling with a sedge hat over a bicycle helmet was indeed goofball all the way down. 

Mayuyu brought a favorite cat out to see us off. It has taken me a while to warm up to the photo below, but today I find it hilarious. 

Mayuyu is into it. Sharon is smiling, though resigned, I’m worried about Nanako Pass, and the tunnels ahead, and Ms Cat is seriously not happy about any of it.

Our ride for the day would take us inland up over Nanako Pass, along a high-ish plateau to Temple 37, followed by a descent back to the Pacific Ocean.

It would also be our first day of serious tunnels. Not a problem that day or any day.

All up, I am guessing we must have passed through well over 25 tunnels on this trip.

As it turned out these tunnels were great blessings. I had been worried, but I was wrong. Tunnels truly were our friends. 

Tunnels took us through the mountains, we otherwise would have had to climb over. 

It felt almost like cheating. Our bike computer didn’t do tunnels, it just said big climb ahead as we approached. As we rode, or walked, through the tunnel, Mr. Computer would show the profile of the mountain above. What’s not to like?

That’s not to say there weren’t dodgy moments. But we were careful and prepared. We had lights, front and back , and extra frame lights as insurance for the really dark, long, tight tunnels. 

First up was Kadoya Tunnel just out of Susaki City. We just rode through this one. Only a 1/4 mile or so. Traffic was relatively light. 

Next up was Yakezaka Tunnel, about a 1/2 mile in length. As I recall it was really dark, there was a rail and to be safe we walked most of it. 

We also wore the reflective vests provided in the box at the tunnel entrance. An honor system. Take one out on one side. Hang it back up in the box provided on the other side.

Nanako Pass was manageable. We were riding on Highway 56, and the grades were Highway grades, not crazy steep Mountain Temple grades.

We arrived at Temple 37, Iwamotoji early afternoon. Before heading in, we stopped for treats.

Temple 37 was an interesting collection of buildings – all shapes and sizes.

The Main Hall has 575 pictures on the ceiling.

Shortly after Temple 37, we stopped for lunch at a convenience store.

Once again, I was a bit worse for wear. We had parked Mr. Bike, and I was sitting on a curb when this pick-up pulls up. A middle-aged Japanese guy jumps out, hustles around to his cooler in the back, pulls out a couple of beers, strolls up, and offers them to me.

It took me a moment to realize what was going on. I was stunned, like pulling the arm of a slot machine and watching the wheels spin.

Then I got it. 

Osettai!

Very 21st century, and very appreciated. 

I could tell he wasn’t so sure about me. But when I bowed and mumbled, “Namu Daishi Henjo Kongo” three times. He nodded and laughed, hopped back in his pick-up and was off.

“Namu Daishi Henjo Kongo” translates roughly as “Homage to the great Teacher brilliant shining Diamond.” Or Homage to Kobu Daishi. And is the proper response on accepting Osettai.

We received many gifts as Osettai. Candies, meals, fruit, money, handwoven gloves and so forth. These beers were my favorite. 

It was clear we were pilgrims, as we were wearing the traditional white vests. Hence the Osettai.

Two things are going on with Osettai from the givers point of view. First, Ossettai gifts are kind of like giving alms. Helping the needy. 

Secondly, and most importantly, such gifts are symbolic gifts to Kobo Daishi, who symbolically, would bless the giver and give them a virtual third seat on our bike, now a triple. Or maybe it’s a quad, as Kobo Daishi has a seat too.

Our pilgrimage would become their pilgrimage with Kobo Daishi’s blessing. Great tradition, with the magic, living on into the 21st century. 

Even Kirin Beer works as Osettai.

Best not consumed while riding though. Appropriate though for sipping and watching the afternoon siip away and sun set into the Pacific Ocean, which is how it went at the end of the day at Hotel Umibozu, after the Yokohama and Inomisaki Tunnels.

We weren’t alone, Mr. Pick-up guy and Kobo Daishi seemed to be enjoying it too.

As was often the case, we had remotes for both our AC and lights.

Perfectly clear. Right?

“Hey Sharon. Can you get these to work?”

A grumble later, the AC and the lights were on.

Day 16. October 23 Wednesday; Bicycling Day 11; Kuroshio to Oki.  0 temples.

By now we knew our way around the Japanese Inn breakfast. A key move, immediately after retrieving the steaming rice, break the raw egg on top and stir it in. Don’t dawdle or it won’t cook.

We loaded up the bike and were on our way.

No Temples today, just a relatively level ride along the Pacific towards Cape Ashizuri. 

First we rode along a scenic stretch of beach with surf shops and surfers. Hello California.

We stopped for snacks mid-morning: Ice cream, potato chips, nuts & raisons, ice coffee and juice. 

Next up was the Shimanto River, the longest river in Shikoku and also the last undammed river in Japan. The river was wide and quiet when we crossed just before noon.

We met Lee Han Kok, a pilgrim from Singapore, at another convenience store on our early afternoon lunch break. He was about to head home. He could only get away for a short time.

A good guy. Sad story. Disabled brother. Parents with cancer. He was taking care of everyone, and exhausted on many fronts.

Lee said he was doing his pilgrimage for his family. We suspected he also desperately needed to get away for his own sanity. 

He had fallen on a trail, his phone was dead and he was lost. We did what we could to help.

We were making good time. Mid-afternoon we arrived at our inn for the evening, Minshuku Iburi Bar. 

Basically Iburi Bar, was a first floor spare room. And it came with a sprightly cat, Sophia, if you cared to host her, which of course, we did. Sophia had a sidekick Blackie, but he wasn’t interested in us.

Another Typhoon was bearing down on us. Perhaps it would miss us.

Perhaps not.

Day 17. October 24 Thursday; Bicycling Day 12 Oki to Tatsukushi. 1 temple.

38 Kongōfukuji 金剛福寺 Tosashimizu, Kōchi

We ate breakfast and lingered, hoping that the Typhoon would let up.

No such luck. This was a Florida+ rain. Florida rains are the heaviest I’ve ever seen. A Japanese typhoon rain is the next level up.

I didn’t see any alternative to just riding. Torrential rain and all.

Our hosts were appalled. And had a better idea. They knew a guy, who for a modest sum would drive our bike ahead to our next hotel in his pickup.

While our host would take us and our luggage. But first he would take us out to Temple 38, Kongofukuji. 

Thus our sorry asses were saved on Cape Ashizuri.

Temple 38 was pretty great. The rain only added atmosphere. 

We also visited the observation platform on the point of the Cape itself.

 And a local bike shop in the town of Tosa-Shimizu, just in case they might have our brake pads. No luck there. The owner was really old.

Our host told us the town was dying. Every year there are thirty people ± fewer.  

We were dropped off at our next hotel, Nangoku, early afternoon. I spent the afternoon snacking, sipping beer, watching the rain fall, contemplating the kindness of strangers, and wondering about what I had gotten us into.

And did I mention that the Nangoku Hotel was haunted?

We were the only guests and had been given a very nice room on the top floor. When I was ready for another beer, I’d wander downwards, stepping over extension cords which went who knows where. 

Pictures on the walls were faded and never quite level. Piles of this and that had been set down on tables or chairs in passing perhaps years ago and never moved again. 

The stair landed in the front lobby. Each time I came down, there were one or two elderly folks dead asleep in chairs. At least I think they were asleep. 

I’d head to the dining area and linger. Eventually a most elderly Japanese woman with sparkling eyes would appear soundlessly. 

I’d whisper the magic word, “Beeru”. She’d disappear and then re-apparate with a Kirin and a knowing smile. I’d make my way back past the dead asleep, and then up through the empty haunted halls and stairs to our room. 

The rain fell relentlessly. Light was dim.

Day 18. October 25 Friday; Bicycling Day 13 Tatsukushi to Sukumo. 1 Temple

39 Enkōji 延光寺 Sukumo, Kōchi

We woke the next morning to a bright new day. The storm had passed. View from our room below.

We headed downstairs for yet again another great breakfast. No bodies in the entry. 

We loaded Mr. Bike and headed out. Stopping for a pic of Hotel Nangoku in the sunshine. No ghosts in sight. Our room had been top right. 

We would be heading inland with climbs and roads off the coastal pilgrim route to Temple 39, Enkoji in Sukumo City. 

First we rode up along the Soro River. 

And then headed up through forests of tall conifers.

We had to wait at checkpoints before riding forward. There had been landslides and construction of new retaining structures was underway. My fear was that we would be told the roads were closed. 

But at each checkpoint we were waved through, eventually. 

As we continued climbing, we found ourselves alone in the forest. We were probably the first through here since the last typhoon. This road didn’t see a lot of traffic.

Eventually we crested and left the forest behind, as we descended back to civilization. Not much traffic though.

That would change once we took our left on highway 21.

First though, Sharon had to pet some goats. I averted my eyes.

Late morning we arrived at Umenoki Park. 

Early afternoon we arrived at our inn, Tsuruno-ya. We checked in, dropped off our bags and headed on to Temple 39, Enkoji. It was only a couple of miles down the road. Interesting place. Turtles all the way down.

Or at least a lot of turtle statues commemorating the turtle who, in 911, purportedly brought a red bell to Enkoji on it’s back from the ocean. 

As we walked though the gardens, all was quiet, except for a tiny voice wailing. A snake had a frog in its mouth. The frog was not going gently into its good night and was trying mightily to pull itself back out.

The frog didn’t make it and the snake slid away.

We paid our respects at the Main and Daishu Halls, and were moseying back to our bike, when a Japanese woman sweeping the gravel, pulled Sharon aside. 

I tagged along, first to the sacred 400+ year old juniper tree.

And then to the exhibition hall with Buddhist Art. This exhibition included both student’s and teacher’s work. Sharon’s new friend had a piece exhibited. 

Back at our inn, we settled into our room, took a shower and tub soak, and had yet another great dinner. 

The next day we would leave the prefecture of Kochi and start our journey through the prefecture of Ehime.

We were halfway through our trip. Our brake pads were getting rather thin. Our half-assed plan was Matsuyama City or Bust.

Matsuyama City was 8 days, and 20,000± feet of ascent and descent, away.

Link to next Shikoku Pilgrimage Post: Ehime

2019 Shikoku Pilgrimage: Tokushima

Our bike was assembled. Our test runs completed. Our GPS was up and running. We had our pilgrim gear. Our bike bags were packed.

Time to say goodbye to coziness and hit the Temple Road for real. If all went according to plan we’d be back in in a month, our 750 mile pilgrimage loop complete.

But, a typhoon was bearing down on Japan. A really big typhoon. Tokyo looked like a direct hit. But Tokyo was 300 miles away. Maybe we’d luck out.

Maybe not.

Day 5 October 12 Saturday; Departure & Temples 6 – 11

6 Anrakuji 安楽寺 Kamiita, Tokushima
7 Jūrakuji 十楽寺 Awa, Tokushima
8 Kumadaniji 熊谷寺 Awa, Tokushima
9 Hōrinji 法輪寺 Awa, Tokushima
10 Kirihataji 切幡寺 Awa, Tokushima
11 Fujiidera 藤井寺 Yoshinogawa , Tokushima 

2:00 AM. No rain. 

4:00 AM. No rain. 

6:00 AM. Rain. 

Sharon and I took turns checking the weather. Sharon would report on the devastation of Tokyo. I’d check my local weather app which showed rain clearing in the afternoon. 

At breakfast we asked Mima-san who ran the inn what she thought about the weather. Shrug. Which I interpreted as: clearing in the afternoon, and Sharon as: we were headed to our doom.

We headed out at 8 AM or so in full rain gear. It was pouring. Mima-san took pics. She was laughing. Crazy Americans ride off on a crazy bike into a Typhoon. Great stuff for a new Morimoto-ya Japanese facebook post. Which indeed was how it turned out. 

Ready, Set…
Go!

Temples 6 & 7 were cold, wet, and empty. No other pilgrims.

When we turned up the hill towards Kumadaniji – Temple #8, Bear Valley Temple- just before noon, the rain was still heavy. 

The temple parking lot was deserted. I took refuge in the temple office while Sharon headed up towards the Temple proper. The Temple office was large and deserted. I stood there dripping while this young-ish woman added the temple calligraphy and stamps to my book.

She offered me a cup of instant coffee. The perfect antidote to my dreariness. It tasted, well, like the best coffee I’d ever had.

Sharon re-appeared, and a cup of instant and a stamped caligraphy later, she and the Temple office lady were chatting merrily, huddled over phone pics.

The lady did have very cute dogs. 

From Temple 8 we headed down and out across the valley. The weather was breaking. Soon we pulled up at Temple 9. We did our temple thing and left some of our beloved-cat’s ashes in the temple cemetery.

Traditionally Japanese don’t feel like you need to buried in just one place, a little here and a little there works just as well. We feel the same. Yellowboy’s ashes have now been spread from Finland through Shikoku. 

We look for a place where he would be at home. Temple 9 was one of those. 

Although the clouds looked ominous, as we continued across the valley, the rest of the day was dry-ish We pulled into Temple 11, Fujiidera, mid afternoon. 

Temple 11 is the last stop of the easy first stretch. For walking pilgrims and for bicyclists. The mountains loom.

A Japanese pilgrim motioned around a corner of the Temple Hall. The beginning of the infamous hiking trail to Temple 12. He had a home-made convertible cart-backpack and knew what was coming. We’d meet him again in the days ahead, many times.

The walking pilgrims’ route was clear in our book. What wasn’t clear was how you get there from here, on asphalt, on a bike. I had decided in early planning that we would go the way less travelled. For better or worse. 

Our route wasn’t the tour bus route, or as it turned out, just about anyone else’s route, but I had programmed it into our bike computer and thus, we had cast our lot. 

At the very top of the long monster climb out of the valley, in the middle of absolutely nowhere –  we hit our first dolls. And they were pilgrim dolls. 

Doubt we had seen a car or anyone else for at least an hour. The road couldn’t have been more the ten feet across. 

But here at the pass was a pilgrim shelter complete with a bed, a Coca Cola vending machine, and life-sized, fully-clothed pilgrim dolls. We knew what we were seeing and it was perfect. The real deal.

The backstory: Once upon a time, say 20 or so years ago, a Japanese woman, Tsukimi Ayano, moved back to her hometown Nagoro on Shikoku, to care for her father. Her hometown was dying – down to 30 some odd inhabitants, from over 300. 

The town was still there. Buildings, schools, and homes had lasted. The people hadn’t.

Tsukimi had plenty of time on her hands. She decided to make herself a scarecrow or doll if you will. She made it in her father’s likeness, clothed it in his clothes, and put it out in his field. 

Folks thought it was him. 

I could relate. Way back in the day, say 1971, I had an organic garden, which I thought needed a scarecrow. So I took some of my old clothes and stuffed them. Those being the days, I put my scarecrow into the garden upside down, head-in-the-ground, which is kind of how I felt at the time. I thought the shoes waving in the air were a nice touch. 

A couple of days later I was relaxing on the porch, when this woman comes screeching up the driveway.  She jumps out of her car and runs up to me in a panic, shouting, 

“There’s someone in your garden. And his head is stuck in the ground!” In her mind this was a life or death moment.

I smiled, and tried to explain it was just a regular scarecrow, but upside down.

She wasn’t having any. Livid, she started yelling and in no uncertain words, told me exactly what she thought of my “joke”, stormed back to her car, slammed the door and roared off.

Over the years, I have wondered about the intensity of that moment. A Scarecrow is just a Scarecrow except, when it’s much more.  

In Nagoro, if Tsukimi had left it at one doll, it would have been simply a perfect local moment. 

But she didn’t. One doll followed another and Nagoro slowly re-populated. Folks gone-by came back as dolls. In the places they lived, in the places they worked, in the places they just hung out. 

Beyond brilliant, here we’re talking the truly remarkable. Genius if you will. The big leap. On her own, Tsukimi slowly created a real time, fully-scaled Art installation.

Nagoro, was perhaps fifty miles off our route. Too far to justify a visit. 

As it turned out, fifty miles was close enough. The dolls had come to us.

On the way down the backside of Temple 12, a day later, we hit Dollsville again just before our inn for the night.

But that’s jumping ahead.

Temple 12 is a mountain temple. And not just any mountain temple, it’s the first “Henro-Korogashi” mountain temple, which means it’s a really tough one. A route where “pilgrims fall down”, or in our case a route where pilgrims push their bikes up +20% grades.

We knew we weren’t going to get there on this first day.

Our plan was to do part of the climb, and then make the big push the next day. 

On our descent from the pass, we almost missed our inn, Misato no Yu up and off to the right. Misato no Yu was a relaxed hot springs inn with dining. Their Japanese/French cuisine was pretty fabulous. We had western beds and even a hair dryer to dry our shoes.

I really don’t think the Inn owner thought we’d make it to Temple 12. He had this little smirk on his face when he pointed up the mountain and told us how far up we had to go. 

I basically ignored him, easy enough to do when he’s using meters and you don’t want to ask your wife for the conversion. Besides one way or another I had no doubt we were going to get there. I’d long since gotten over the “too proud to walk” thing.

Day 6 October 13 Sunday; Temple 12

12 Shōzanji 焼山寺 Kamiyama, Tokushima

After leaving Misato no Yu, we rode the first stretch, up along a splashing stream and then we turned off, got off, and pushed. Our bike computer said the max grade was 32.7%, which probably is impossible.

But metaphorically about right.

There was virtually no traffic on the narrow road. Every now and then, a micro-pick-up truck would pass us. I had fantasies of one stopping and offering us a ride. We could wedge ourselves in the back with our bike. The rear wheels might stick out, but it would work. 

No one stopped. Not surprising, as these were working folk with better things to do than save crazy foreigners from their own schemes.

In a somewhat ironic twist, we descended to Temple 12. For the other 99.999% of visitors it was the top.

There’s a moral here somewhere. I should probably add, this would not be the last time, we descended to a mountain temple.

We pulled into the Temple 12 parking lot just before noon, walked our bike up the carefully-graded, newly-engineered path to the base of the traditional stone stair. We locked our bike and headed up.

Temple 12 didn’t disappoint. Our first real-deal mountain temple. Sure, most visitors just drive up now. But past magic lingers. 

Most easily detected on the Shinto side. An alien mindset, ebbing away in the 21st century. Photo below.

Buddhism and Shinto have co-existed in temple locations, side-by-side for centuries and centuries, taking turns in favor.

After the Second World War, Shinto fell on hard times. The Emperor and the Shinto establishment were held responsible for the crushing destruction of Japanese culture and society in second world war. 

Rightly so. 

So who should we run into? Our charming German friend Anika.

She had made the climb on foot from Temple 11. She was lingering, hoping to meet up with a hiking companion still back on the trail.

Back at the bike, ready for our descent, we had our own issues. 

Our bike computer had gone on strike. No GPS connection. Our back-up in such situations was our phone, but Mr. Phone was dangerously low on charge. Breathe deeply.

Ah … the back-up battery, that came with our Japan Wireless pocket Wi-Fi gizmo. Yep, the cable fit and we were up and running again. Google Maps showed where we were, where we wanted to go and what turns we needed to make to get there.

The descent was smoke’n fast. In less than an hour, with no wrong turns, we were out front of what we thought was our inn for the night. No one was answering the door, but then Sharon noticed a guy puttering, doing something, a couple of doors down.

Yes, we were home. And soon a friendly face appeared and showed us to our room.

We had the place to ourselves. After a shower and soak, our young female host kind-of burst into our room, to get our laundry.

All I had on was my underwear. She couldn’t have cared less. Not an issue for her, well, not an issue for me. 

After she left, I threw on my Yukata, kicked back and relaxed.

We had passed our first real test on the road. Temple 12 is infamous for its challenges, both physical and psychological.  From here it was downhill for Temples 13 – 17, but next up was dinner and it was feast! 

Day 7 October 14 Monday; Temples 13 – 17

13 Dainichiji 大日寺 Tokushima, Tokushima
14 Jōrakuji 常楽寺 Tokushima, Tokushima
15 Kokubunji 阿波国分寺 Tokushima, Tokushima
16 Kan’onji 観音寺 Tokushima, Tokushima
17 Idoji 井戸寺 Tokushima, Tokushima

We slept well and after a full Japanese breakfast, we headed out. Our bike computer was happy to be fully charged and our GPS signal was good. Weather was co-operating and we were off.

At less than 20 miles, this was a short day distance-wise, but with five temples, we knew it would be full. 

Dainichiji Temple
Dainichiji Temple
Kanonji Temple

Late afternoon, right on schedule, we pulled up in front of our hotel in the heart of Tokushima. 

The twist was that the lobby was on the fifth floor. I had known this was coming. After a most-pleasant email exchange, we had been cleared to bring our bike up in the elevator. It would be kept in a hall behind the front desk. 

The hotel had done their homework. Our tandem was indeed too long to be accommodated in the underground bicycle parking nearby. 

We wiped down our tires rolled across the pristine lobby and waited for an empty elevator. We rolled in, lifting our bike carefully, vertically. No problem, an inch or two to spare before hitting the ceiling. 

After checking in we found our room. No sleeping on the floor tonight. We had a western bed, and our bathroom was wonderful. Something right out of a space station.

This was most definitely 21st century Japan.

After showers and soaks, we ventured out for dinner. We didn’t have to go far. There was a 7 Eleven opening off the first floor lobby. Thus we were introduced to the wonders of Japanese convenience stores. 

We loaded up, dinner, road snacks, the works, and headed back up to our room for a most-tasty picnic.

Day 8 October 15 Tuesday; Temples 18 – 20 Tokushima to Tano; [22 ± miles.]

18 Onzanji 恩山寺 Komatsushima, Tokushima
19 Tatsueji 立江寺 Komatsushima, Tokushima
20 Kakurinji 鶴林寺 Katsuura, Tokushima

We had signed up for breakfast when we made our room reservation. Good decision. 

A far cry from our inn meals. Not better, just very different. Urban entertaining. We ate our buffet breakfast at a table – with chairs – on the second floor overlooking the central Tokushima  subway entrance and, I think, the underground bicycle parking. 

Outside below, folks were rushing to work and uniformed school children were rushing to school. A mass of humanity flowing this way and that.  Inside, our breakfast compatriots were mostly business folk. Composed, but focussed. Rushing this way and that.

Sharon was having her own private food fest with everything exotic available. Which was a lot. 

I was lingering over my coffee, wondering what the day would bring. At 22 miles, it wasn’t a particularly long day, but it promised to have its challenges.  First we had to navigate out of Tokushima, then visit a couple of temples before #20, another Mountain Temple which looked pretty serious, then a descent and a river ride to our inn at the cable car base station for Temple 21.

On the ride out of Tokushima, we played a game of: Guess the Love Hotels.

Love Hotels are hotels catering to folks interested privacy for doing the deed. A somewhat Japanese institution. Makes sense in world of paper thin walls. Purportedly compete with anonymous check-in, double-blind pizza delivery, and in-room sex toy vending machines. And themed rooms which well, run the gamut.

You know you’re at a Love Hotel, if rooms are rented by the hour.

One might think that Love Hotels would be discreet and hard to identify. Au Contraire. The exterior aesthetic is look-at-me Disney.

Borrowed Photo- Love Hotel Chapel Christmas Courtesy of Wikepedia Commons

And from what I’ve heard, interiors follow suit. 

Later on our pilgrimage, we met a Female Canadian University Mathematics Prof. who couldn’t find a room, one night early on in her pilgrimage. Her only option was a Love Hotel. 

Her Taxi driver didn’t want to take her there. But he relented. She said her room was very comfortable. The bed was really big and most comfy. The other stuff was entertaining, but kind of irrelevant as she was traveling alone.

If we ever make it back to Japan for another pilgrimage or whatever, and are on our game, a Love Hotel stay seems like a no brainer, for old folks’ entertainment. 

Mid morning we arrived at Onsanji, Temple 18, and who should we run into but the same stout fellow we had met at Fujiidera, Temple 11 who had pointed out to us the hiker’s way up to Shosanji, Temple #12. 

A good guy with an ingenious low-tech solution to the pilgrimage backpack. Wheels for the roads. Back straps for the trails.

He didn’t speak a word of English, but he made it pretty clear, that he didn’t think much of our chances for making it to Kakurinji, Temple 20, on our bike. Like it’s way up here and the unspoken – you are old folks, and foreign old folks at that.

Curiously over the days that followed, we became pretty good friends. He was a cheerful, hardcore pilgrim on his seventh time around. He was fast, but we were faster, and we’d stop and chat every time we passed him and his cart. 

I’m not sure if its grudging respect we earned from him, but close enough. 

On our way up to Temple 20, Kakurinji, our bike computer registered a max grade of 35%, an improbable reading, but it was wicked steep and for long stretches with no let up. Most likely mid-20s, perhaps a bit steeper on the insides of a few switchbacks.

We walked the steep stuff and rode where we could, arriving at the temple mid-day.

It’s said that it doesn’t matter how you do the pilgrimage: On foot, by car, buses, motorcycles, or tandem bicycles. It’s the state of mind that counts.

Kakurinji, Temple 20, was a gem. One, where we wished we had far more time to linger. Our second mountain temple. At 1804 feet in elevation, it’s the fifth highest temple on the pilgrimage.

Kakurinji translates as “Crane Forest Temple.” The crane being a very auspicious symbol, symbolizing longevity. 

The descent down the other side of the mountain was steep. Like the steepest road, you’ve ever been on, steep. And it didn’t let up. 

I braked and the brake grips bottomed out. And we didn’t stop. Not good news. I scanned for uphill spots to crash. The thought being better sooner and slower, than later and faster.

But thankfully we gradually started to slow and eventually came to a stop. 

After more than a few deep breathes, I tightened up the brake cables, and we very, very slowly made our way down to the Naka River. 

From there it was only a bit over 4 miles to our inn at the base of the Ropeway to Tairyuji, Temple 21.

And a beautiful 4 miles it was. 4 miles of some of the most beautiful riding I have ever experienced. Little or no traffic, turquoise river water, and late afternoon light. 

We pulled into our inn, Sowaka, in Naka City, late afternoon, right on schedule.

Sowaka is located at the base of the ropeway, or cablecar if you will, to Temple 21, another mountain temple. We had decided early on, that the ropeway would be the right call for us. 

Sowaka Inn had the reputation of being a bit too relaxed for some tastes. Their motto: “Cleanliness, laughter and gratitude.” 

Miho with the girls. Borrowed photo

Whatever. We felt right at home.

One young women was kind-of at the front desk and another was puttering in the kitchen. We checked-in, parked and locked Mr. Bike in a side entrance, found our room, and unpacked.

We had a toilet, but no shower. So it was off to the communal, sex-segregated baths in our bathrobe-like Yukatas. 

I shared the Men’s bath with a half dozen Japanese men. This is a starker’s thing. Shower first and then it’s a really, really hot soak. Felt great.

At dinner over a couple of beers, mine, we talked about the next day. Up bright and early for a cablecar ride to Temple 21. Then a ride to the Pacific. 

Day 9. October 16 Wednesday; Temples 21 to 23. Tano [Naka City] to Minami Town

21 Tairyūji 太龍寺 Anan, Tokushima Cable car
22 Byōdōji Anan Tokushima Another tough mountain temple 
23 Yakuōji 薬王寺 Minami, Tokushima

I’m not sure what my problem was, but I was in a rush from the get go. I would get mine. 

I kind-of relaxed in the cable car. A beautiful day with beautiful views of a gorgeous landscape. No sweat, just a gentle swaying. Only a couple of Japanese tourists in the car and us.

We could pick out where Temple 20 should be on the far ridge. Steep stuff. Photo below.

Temple 21 Tairyū-ji, or Dragon Temple, was pretty much perfect. Kobo Daishi himself wrote about practicing here. Wonderful architecture. Well-maintained, no one around. 1000 year old cedars. Mists were lifting.

The epitome of Japanese mountain temple. Would have been a wonderful place to linger, but someone was in a rush. We paid our respects at the Main Hall and the Daishi Hall, with incense, candles, deposited name slips and token donations and headed back down. 

I kept thinking, if we could only catch the next cablecar, we could save 20 minutes. 

We arrived just as a car was about to pull out. We ran for it slipping in before the doors closed. I sat back congratulating myself, as we rode back down the mountain. We passed the super-sized Kobo Daishi and the super-sized wolf pack sculptures – scaled for cablecar views, when it hit me.

We hadn’t visited the Temple Office for our stamps in our pilgrimage books. 

We were in agreement. Stamps ruled. So it was back up for book stamps and then back down. Probably lost at least an hour. There is a lesson here somewhere.

On the way out of the station, we stopped to contemplate this most-wanted sign.

We had read many reports on crime-free Japan. Hmmm. These guys looked pretty much the real deal gangstas. Food for thought.

We retrieved our bike and headed for Temple 22. 

Temple 22, Byodoji, was a charmer. Colorful banners and a bit of western history.

Frederick Starr, an American anthropologist, visited in 1926 and left a calligraphy of sorts. Proudly displayed. Starr is purportedly the first westerner to complete the pilgrimage. Just about a 100 years before us. He walked some. And used rickshaws and trains. In 1926 he would have been 72, Sharon’s age. 

And then it was off to Temple 23, Minami Town and the Pacific Ocean.

It wasn’t long, before we passed this cute, somewhat infamous warning sign of Mamushi snakes or Japanese Pit Vipers.  Mamushi are the most venomous snakes on Shikoku. Every year ten people or so die from Mamushi bites. 

I needed to take a leak. I stood well back on the pavement, shooting for the grass, watching for any sign of movement. All was quiet. 

Next up were bamboo forests.

And our first of many, many tunnels. More on those later.

And before we knew it, we were in Minami Town at the base of Temple 23, Yakuoji.

The light had changed in the last stretch to a warm soft impressionistic ocean light.

We hiked up and paid our respects.

We gazed out over the town to the Pacific. 

Back at our bike, Sharon struck up a conversation with a French Pilgrim. Conversation in French of course.

He would soon heading home. Limited time, but he said he would be back another year and would pick up his pilgrimage here, where he had left off.

We rode through town towards the ocean looking for our inn, Guest House Oyado Hiwasa. I suspected we were in for a treat. And we were.

We had a nineteenth century traditional Japanese fisherman’s house all to ourselves. 

Kind-of too good to be true. Remarkable place. 

We were in the heart of the fisherman’s district.

That’s Sharon in the turquoise shirt at our place. That path out front is considered a road. Scaled for carts.

Jean-Phillipe had bicycled over with us to to show us the ropes. Jean-Phillipe owns and runs the Guest House and this house known as the Annex, along with his Japanese wife. 

Interesting guy. A French stone sculptor who wandered into Japan decades ago, went native and settled down in Minami Town. Respected by the locals. Shows internationally. Has a couple of cosmopolitan, arty, young-adult kids.

That’s Sharon and Jean-Phillipe in the kitchen

He showed us how to set up the mosquito netting in bedroom.

We talked about the ingenious post and beam, house construction. Good for earthquakes, good for heavy tile roofs and good for open plans. Beams with bends are a good thing if the camber is used to advantage.

The carpenters of 100+ years ago were proud of their work. They had carved their sign below a key post and beam joint. 

“When selecting the lumber, it is not uniformity but rather individuality of trees that is important.”

Room dividers floated between structural posts.

After Jean Phillipe took off, we took showers, put on our Yukatas, and settled in for the eve.

Day 10. October 17 Thursday; Day off. Minami Town.

I woke up thinking about disc brake pads. I had a bad feeling and went out back to confirm. 

Sure enough our pads were evaporating at an alarming rate. Would they last? 

Unlikely.

I had brought one set as a back-up, but that only solved half of the problem.

And those were in our emergency box back at our first inn. They could be shipped ahead to meet us. That would be step one. That said, we’d still need another set.

The good news was that our brakes are Shimano, Japanese. The bad news was that we had hundreds of miles to go before we would be in a city likely to have what we needed. 

We could order online : Amazon Japan? Or have them shipped from the USA expedited international? But we were a moving target. Logistics were an issue.

Ultimately we decided to simply to forge ahead. We had no problem stopping. For now.

In passing, Jean Phillipe said we shouldn’t try to ride up to Temple 27. Too steep. He tried it in his camper and the front wheels came off the ground. Hardly reassuring.

Next up Kochi and a long ride along the Pacific. I’ll add a link here when that post is done.