Showing posts with label Yokohama Line. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yokohama Line. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Where the wild things are: Miho Citizen Forest 三保市民の森


Miho Citizen Forest 三保市民の森 is located to the west of Niiharu Citizen Forest 新治市民の森The map is here (in Japanese). Roughly speaking the two forests are separated by 6 campuses of educational institutions and JSAT, a satellite operator. So, the area itself is more of one continuous forest rather than 2 forests divided by housing complex or metropolitan businesses.


If you come to Miho Forest by public transportation, take Kanachu-Buses from Tsurugamine Station 鶴ヶ峰 of Sotetsu Line, or from Nakayama Station 中山 of JR Yokohama Line. There are 2 bus routes to choose. One is Route Naka-53, between Nakayama Station and Tsurugamine Station via Imajuku 今宿. (Mind you, there is another bus service between Nakayama and Turugamine operated by Sotetsu-bus withouht going to Imajuku. This route does not come to Miho Forest Park.) Another is Route Yoko-52, between Nakayama Station and Yokohama Station via Kawaijuku 川井宿 and Tsurugamine. (Come to think of it, if you come from Yokohama Station anyway, this Yoko-52 would be the cheapest option as we don’t have to pay for the fare for the trains ...) When you take those buses to Miho Park from Nakayama Station, find Bus Stop Number 1 in the South Square of the station. In Tsurugamine, find Tsuragmine bus terminal from the North Exit of the station. If you come from Tsurugamine Station, here is the time table. From Nakayama Station, the timetable is this one.

Get off the bus at the bus stop for Miho Citizen Forest 三保市民の森 (Miho Shimin-no-Mori) with a bus-stop shelter. I love its simple and rustic design.

Miho Shimin-no-Mori Stop

Next to the bus stop is a small car park, open only for weekends and holidays, for you coming to the park by car.  To find an entrance of the Forest from here is a bit tricky. From the bus stop, go south a bit, just 10 m or so, then turn right for the first small road.


At the end of the way,



there are 2 tiny roads, One-michi 尾根道 (Ridge Way) and Tani Michi 谷道 (Valley Way), both leading you into the Miho Forest.


We can also come to the Forest from Tokaichiba 十日市場 JR station. Go to Bus Stop #1 in the South Square of Tokaichiba Station. The service runs between Aobadai-chuoh Station 青葉台中央 of Den’entoshi Line and Wakabadai-chuoh 若葉台中央, with Yokohama City Bus Service 23 or Tokyu Bus Route Blue 23Here are the timetables for the Buses to Wakabadai-chuoh from Tokaichiba Station (as of April 2015). The bus stop for the Forest is Kirigaoka Kohkoh (High School) 霧が丘高校. Find a traffic light named “Kirigaoka Kohkoh.” At the crossing, facing Wakabadai Junior High 若葉台中学 take the road on the left. Keep going to meet a T-crossing. Choose the way on the right which eventually becomes Ridge Way of Miho Citizen Forest.

You can see Wakabadai Junior High from O-14 like this.
The 40.5 ha Park was opened in 1972, spreading over a hillside as one of the biggest remaining forests in the City of Yokohama. The tallest trees of the Park are human planted Cryptomeria japonica, Chamaecyparis obtuse, Chamaecyparis pisifera, and natural Quercus myrsinifolia, Magnolias, and others. Under the canopy are rich colonies of various ferns and Sasa palmatas, etc. In Japan, at this moment, there are about 600 kinds of known ferns. We can find 100 of them here in Miho Forest. This is the Forest of ferns.


Mind you, the network of treks within the park is complicated. There is no circular route of the park, Ridge Way (with numbering O-1 to 15) on the east, and Valley Way (T-1 to T-9) in the west both of which connect to the standard paved roads for the surrounding residential areas.  Ridge Way has 15 exit points colored Pink, some of which give us a clear view of Tanzawa 丹沢 and Mt. Fuji in a fine day.

Er, well, Red, yeah
The points for the Valley Way are 9 colored in blue.


Both Ridge and Valley Ways are popular among local joggers, especially for training to trek-run. These 2 Ways are connected by “Promenades” crisscrossing in the Forest. The point numbering is in orange from P-1 to P25, sometimes with a map of the Forest and benches.


If we choose the trek to the right from the Miho Citizen Forest bus stop, we go into the Valley Way that runs (almost) along the graveled road for cars used by locals.


In the middle of the route there is a source of Umeda River 梅田川, a tributary of Onda River 恩田川 which in turn is a tributary of Tsurumi River 鶴見川. The spring now has a name, Kotori-no-Oasis 小鳥のオアシス (“Oasis for small birds”).


You will find a Way climbing upwards which brings us to the northern tip of the Park.


When you go the way to the left from the Miho Citizen Forest bus stop entrance, it brings you to Ridge Way and the treks within the Park.


Just next to the sign to Ridge Way, there is an ancient road sign indicating the Ridge Way of Miho Forest was once a main road for pilgrims to Aburi Shrine 阿夫利神社 in Oyama Mountain 大山 in Tanzawa. 

Soon on the right, there is Miho-daira 三保平, an open space equipped with picnic benches and toilet.



Toilet
… and drinking water
This is the only toilet in the Forest. From here, you can either proceed to the Ridge Way, or turn right to deep inside. If you choose the direction to Ridge Way and check Yellow Point 5, you may find a small farm land cultivating vegetables. The system of Citizen Forest of Yokohama is a kind of public-private enterprise between the municipality and the landlord. The majority of such small farms within the Citizen Forests are by the landlord to preserve their way of farming. Further to the direction of Wakabadai Jr. High, on the left, there is a structure looked like a covered canal. It is a part of 37 km aqueduct from Lake Sagami 相模湖 to Nishiya Water Purification Plant 西谷浄水場 which distributes drinking water to the downtown of the City.


Inside the forest, there are several treks connecting the Ridge and Valley Ways. They are not straight, but winding, crisscrossing and often with steep ups and downs. + Sometimes, especially after rain, several points can suffer land-slides that make the routes impassable. The risk with nests of vespinae and gloydius blomhoffii applies here. Having said that, it is just a small park, surrounded by residential areas of Yokohama. The total length of the trekking network is only 9 k. If you get lost inside, you can either climb up to the Ridge Way leading to Wakabadai Housing Complex 若葉台団地, or down to the Valley Way which brings you to Miho Forest Park bus stop we found before. Grab your map and compass, and examine where you are when you find a check point along the way. No need to panic. 


Some of you may get excited with my description of the forest for its “wilderness.” You are not alone. It seems to me the Forest had problems with Survival Gamers so that you will find many notices saying “Survival Game is prohibited in the Forest.”


I do agree with the Forest administrator for this ban. This is a part of the final front to preserve original nature in the metropolitan Tokyo area. Stomping the ground with survival game surely damages the fauna and flora of the Forest. Miho Forest surely has a charm of many kinds of ferns colonizing the space here and there.

If you manage Japanese, you’ll notice each check point has species name of birds, which are frequent flyers around the point.


Choosing the right time of the day, we can enjoy bird watching there.

Please take your trashes with you when you say good-bye to the forest. There is no trash-bin, of course.

If you find a problem in the Park, please make a contact with

Office for the Park Greeneries in the North北部公園緑地事務所
Yokohama Municipal Government Creative Environment Policy Bureau横浜市環境創造局
Phone: 045-311-2016 (I guess in Japanese only)
FAX: 045-316-8420 (I hope there is somebody who can read English …)



Thursday, April 9, 2015

Introduction to Niiharu Citizen Forest 新治市民の森

NiiharuCitizen Forest 新治市民の森
Niiharu Citizen Forest 新治市民の森can be reached by about 15 minutes’ walk from Tokaichiba十日市場 Station of JR Yokohama Line. Tokaichiba Station is next from Nagatsuta 長津田Station where JR and Tokyu Den-en-toshi Line 東急田園都市線connect.

Den-en-toshi Line has been one of the main drivers for Kanagawa Prefecture to be bed towns of Tokyo. Tokyu Corporation has been the leading advocate in Japan for the idea of Ebenezer Howard, the giant of modern city planning. Simply put, Tokyu’s idea was (1) to build a commuter service which connects country-sides and the center of Tokyo, and (2) around the new train station in the countryside to construct new towns with modern and fashionable housing complex for commuters, then (3) to repeat this until the train line reaches to a too faraway place for ordinary people to contemplate to commute every morning. True, the idea has transformed many communities as drivers for economic development where otherwise they could remain at a sleepy farming village. The latest success story for Den-en-toshi Line may be the industrial complex around Futako-Tamagawa Station 二子玉川(“NikoTama”) where lots of companies from Silicon Valley chose to locate their Japanese HDQ. Before, the area was just a town with farms and houses mingled along Tama River. Now the station boasts housing skyscrapers for the techies to report daily to their office.

When Den-en-toshi Line reached to Nagatsuta, Tokaichiba area was destined to be developed for bed towns of Tokyo. Niiharu Citizen Forest occupies the area of 67.2 ha. When it became Citizen Forest in March 2000, the landlords of the area formed a group and made an agreement with the city to preserve their traditional landscape against the ever-approaching housings for Tokyonites (; they have a Japanese moniker, “Yokohama Tomin横浜都民,” meaning, “they sleep in Yokohama, but in the end they are Tokyonite”).

Tokaichiba is a new JR station. It opened for business in April 1979. Now its two Squares (North and South) lead us to familiar chain stores such as Macdonald’s, supermarkets, and the like. We exit the Station to the South Square, and proceed strait-ahead along a pedestrian promenade between a drugstore and a fitness center. If you need food, drinks, and any other things to enjoy your walk in Niiharu Forest, you can finish your shopping somewhere here.

Then, we find a narrow flyover ahead. Toyota dealership is below the overpass, along the main pathway which meets with Route 246 near Nagatsuta Station. Over the flyover, there is a gigantic new housing complex called Tokaichiba Hill Town with a post office and an elementary school. Keep going and beyond the traffic light named Tokaichiba Shogakko (elementary school), we meet a T crossing at Asahigaoka Kindergarten あさひが丘幼稚園. Turn left; on the left, the housing complex, and on the light, ordinary detached houses and small shops. When we find Building Number 4-4 of Tokaichiba Hill Town on the left, there is a small pathway on the right between discreet houses, with also a small billboard saying “Niiharu Citizen Forest, This Way” in (of course) Japanese. Just few steps from there, in front of you, Niiharu Citizen Forest, the biggest of Citizen Forest in Yokohama, is waiting for you. 

Map of Niiharu Citizen Forest is here (Japanese). Niiharu has 3 main buildings for visitors. One is Administrative Office 管理事務所 where we can have information about Niiharu Citizen Forest including maps, and the Citizen Forest system in general.




Inside, it has a small library, some rental toys made of materials from the forest, and a tiny souvenir shop with potpourri and others made of Niiharu Forest.

  
 
For winter when you’d like to stay to browse the books …
We can also find two maps just outside of the Office showing the Niiharu Forest, so visiting this tiny house could be useful to acquaint yourself with the Forest.

 

The office coordinates the activities of citizen volunteers for Niiharu Forest, and distributes the flyers. The planned events at Niiharu for April-May 2015 are

April 1              2 hour walk for Niiharu Satoyama (200 yen, RSVP)
April 4              A concert for Japanese harp (free)
April 12            Kids’ Adventure Program in Satoyama (1st event of 3 sessions, 1000 yen for  3 sessions to kids, 2000 yen for an adult; RSVP)
April 13-15       Bottling of hand-made soy sauce (with serving a rice cake dipped in the      fresh shoyu for 100 yen)
April 15            Craft salon for local ladies (free)
April 18            New volunteer orientation for preserving Satoyama (free)
                        Story-telling party for kids (free)
April 25            Herb gardening class (free). Theme: Tropaeolum majus
                        Spring Concert by Wind Orchestra of Tokaichiba Junior High School
                        Nagayamon 長屋門Farmer’s Market serving bamboo shoots miso soup for shoppers
May 2              A concert for Japanese harp (free)
May 5              BBQ party (need reservation; 2000 yen per group, RSVP)
May 6              2 hour walk for flowers and butterflies of Niiharu (200 yen, RSVP)
May 7              Bamboo weaving class (the 1st class of 10 sessions; 19,000 yen for the entire course, RSVP)
May 10            Soba noodle making lesson (2,000 yen, RSVP)
                        Kids’ Adventure Program in Satoyama (2nd event of 3 sessions)
May 12/19/26  Chamomile Tea making (200 yen)
May 12/19       Natural Dye lesson for silk with Chamomile (2,000 yen, RSVP)
May 16            Story-telling party for kids (free)
May 17            Cooking class for making Kashiwa-mochi かしわ餅(; seasonal sweet rice cake with bean cream; 2,000 yen, RSVP)
                        Kids’ Research Adventure for the nature of Umeda River 梅田川(free, RSVP; I will write about Umeda River in a different post.)
May 20            Craft salon for local ladies (free)
May 23            Herb gardening class (free). Theme: Chamomile
June 3             Let’s play in Yato; discover your inner Haiku master!
June 6             Kids’ Adventure Program in Satoyama (3rd event of 3 sessions)
June 7             Let’s grow your own satsuma-imo; planting the cuttings (1st event of 4 sessions; 3,000 yen for each group, inclusive for the right to bring home the harvest and the cost of cooking lessons in the final session, RSVP)

Phew!



In addition to these, Niiharu Forest has regular events such as
ü  Volunteering activities every Thursday and  2nd and 4th Sunday for maintaining the Forest (with bonus; when you join the activities 4 times, you’ll awarded 500 yen ticket usable at Nagayamon Farmer’s Market)
ü  Nagayamon Farmer’s Market 長屋門朝市for every Saturday morning
ü  Open Herb Garden for every Tuesday morning


A staff: their uniform is an arrangement of traditional working clothing of monks. Cute.
If you are interested in any of these events (and others), you can make a contact with the office at
Phone: 045-931-4947
Fax: 045-937-0898

I guess, although they may be shy in speaking English, they will try reading your email or fax even if it's in English. ;-)