Let me start with the most important point: Mr. and Mrs. Sawase at Kita Samuraihama Campground are the nicest, most wonderful people and here are the reasons why:
1. Mr. Sawase lent me a rope recommending that maybe I should tie up the loose corner of my rainfly cover thing for the tent. “If you don’t, water will come in if it rains.” Did it rain? Yes. It rained hard for several hours that night, and as I sat huddled in tent I was extremely grateful that corner wasn’t loose.
2. Mrs. Sawase fed me and the other campers the following: large hot rice ball at night with instant miso soup, grapes and tea, plus egg with rice ball in the morning. I would’ve gotten by with more instant ramen from their shop, but it was so much better to have hot rice and eggs.
3. What else? Let’s not forget the part where they lent me the office flashlight because I’d grabbed my bicycle light as a poorly thought out last-minute lightweight alternative to a flashlight and its battery chose the worst possible night to die. Without the office flashlight, I would have been blundering off to the bathroom in darkness while the eager swarms of mosquitoes bit me in countless places, and unable to see where puddles were forming in tent during downpour.
4. Etc. Believe me, there’s more.
I left around 9:30 and my hike lasted until near 6 pm with breaks. The course was maybe half along forest paths that popped out into various fishing harbors. The Michinoku Coastal Trail guidebook text by Kuji City (the Sawases gave me their extra copy when I expressed interest. The best people.) explained that each fishing harbor had sustained heavy damage from the tsunami. Kuji City has also put up signs showing how far up the tsunami went. It’s shocking each time to come up to one and think, “really? Wow, all the way up here…”
I took one of my longer rests at Itsukushima-jinja Shrine. The map is right, it really does have splendid carvings! Another break was at Moguranpia Aquarium. It’s situated between a cliff and the ocean, so it was very heavily damaged by the tsunami. Miraculously a handful of the animals survived, including Kamekichi, a green sea turtle. I visited him hanging out with his friend (?) who seemed to be cleaning him. The staff at the aquarium were kind enough to take my heavy, likely smelly backpack off my hands so I (also likely smelly) could wander around looking at the fish. They also sold instant noodles so I could have a snack before getting back on the road!
Today’s wildlife included: a large frog hopping around in the post-rain forest, and a little south of Moguranpia, the dumbest shorebird looking large peep I have ever met. It didn’t want to move away from the patch of grass along the sidewalk it was grazing along, but it also found my presence deeply disturbing, so it decided the best way to solve this problem was to speedwalk away from me in the same direction I was heading, pausing ever other second to look over its shoulder at me in great distress. It could have just walked behind me or having wings, it could have, say, flown behind me, but no. I finally had to walk into the road before it occurred to the silly little guy that it could just head north away from me.
Tonight’s stay is in Kuji Grand Hotel (a bed! Electric lights!) Had my bath, off to food and drinks on the Sawase’s recommendation: Kensoh, a highball bar and casual dining joint recently opened by a transplant from Kyoto who recently ended his service as a community revitalization employee for the city. Looking forward to a ginger highball and some tacos.
This is my last day for this trip. Heading home tomorrow via bus/train to reunite with husband and cat. Kuji, I’ll be back for you soon.










































