Sunday, June 7, 2026

Healthy for Everybody: Endosasakuboyato Park in the Forest for Healthy Living, Fujisawa City 藤沢市遠藤笹窪谷公園

 


When we enter the Forest for Healthy Living from entrance 6, the first impressions are the sudden changes of everything. So far from the Bus Stop we walked along a wide prefectural road whose opposite side is the college campus and business offices. We strolled in the row of new residential houses and small patches of veggie fields in between. But, suddenly, when we enter the Forest, it is a closed world of densely populated trees. The entrance area is occupied mainly by planted tall cedars. They are probably more than 40 years old. Forest floor was cool and dark where Lethe butterflies suddenly flied over before us. The atmosphere is calm. It’s a different world from cars buzzing away on a wide road.

Trekking road in the forest of cedars

Calm

Some gap areas appear occasionally.

Galium niewerthii Franch. & Sav.
It’s nationally defined endangered species,
Category II (VU).
It is found in Tokyo, Chiba and Kanagawa.
Actually we can find some colony of it
in Niiharu Citizen Forest
where it is one of the best hot spots of Tama Hills.
This one in the City of Fujisawa is VERY VERY rare.

Acropteris iphiata

Proceeding the trekking road to the northeast direction, we will meet a drying wetland where it was once rice paddies. Its geographical feature is Yato valley, a common rice cultivation area in the small hills of Kanto Region. I had an impression the surrounding hills here are far milder than Yato in Yokohama, like in Niiharu. Maybe, it’s a difference between Sagamihara Terrace and Tama Hills. Now the former rice paddies are covered by common reed. There is one foot path connecting both sides for Yato. Please cross the valley here and reach the other side. Follow the trekking road starting from the crossed foot path. Soon we will meet a relatively wide unpaved road running along the field of reeds. Take the direction of southeast. Before long we will be in more landscaped expanse of drying wetland. This is Endosasakuboyato Park 遠藤笹窪谷公園.

Common Reeds are entering our sight.



The foot path

To the upstream

To the downstream

Streams are snaking between the reeds.

The other side

The area is mixture of afforested cedars and
probably naturally coming broad-leaved trees.

We reach here from the back of this photo.
The trekking road comes out to this graveyard point
(on our left in this photo, but when we come here it is on our right).
 This means the forest was
once a part of the agricultural village.

The entrance to the Park is on our right.

Endosasakuboyato Park is 2.5ha of flat land in the Forest for Healthy Living. The place was once rice paddies. Now small streams and ponds run between the former paddies with Japanese Iris and sweet flags. The pathways are well-maintained and wide, which are completely capable of wheelchairs and stretchers entering. (How to come here for wheelchair users has a trick. Please read on.) The entire park area makes us feel safe, i.e. very suitable for the Forest of Healthy Living. The water system provides home for aquatic creatures, frogs et al. The forest we’ve been provides layers of protection for the living things in the Park. Volunteers for the Forest, with the help of professional landscapers, help maintain the water stream in the Park. They also research the ecosystem of the area and report their results to the public. People of Fujisawa are proud of having here as the most biodiverse area in Fujisawa City.

Wheelchair capable road

Volunteers resurrected rice cultivation here.

Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm …


Benches are here and there.
The admin office is over there.


The end of today’s itinerary is an admin office for the Park. They have a mini-museum of the Forest, toilets, a seminar room, and an observation deck. People station there can give you the latest information about the Forest of Healthy Living. The other side of the admin office has a fashionable fence and beyond there is a stylish building. It is a campus for the Faculty of Nursingand Medical Care of Keio University. When we leave the admin office and take a well-maintained paved road, we find parking space for the Park, then a large car maneuvering space for the University. Go forward further. We will meet at the front entrance for Keiiku Hospital and the traffic light at the corner of commuter bus terminal of Keio University Stop. When wheelchair users plan to visit the Forest of Healthy Living, please take this route turning at the corner of the Hospital and find a parking space on your right. Yup. This is Forest of Healthy Living gatewayed by a large hospital and education institute for health services. Very apt. 😊 Before leaving the Forest, there is one more place to visit here. Unfortunately, it would be difficult for wheelchairs to visit. Otherwise, it was a curious and beautiful spot. Let’s go there next week.

The latest findings in the Forest

There are picnic benches.

A scene from the observation deck.

The main gate for Endosasakuboyato Park

The Faculty Building along the road

The Parking for the Park, and

the other side is the Faculty Building.

The hospital is on our right.

We’ve returned to the bus stop.


Endosasakuboyato Park 遠藤笹窪谷公園

4840 Endo, Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, 252-0816
Japan

Phone: 0466-47-7760
https://endosasakuboyatokouen.jp/
Instagram: @endosasakuboyatokouen

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Next to the Faculty for Medical Cares: Forest for Healthy Living, Fujisawa City 藤沢市健康の森

 


One of Yokohama’s neighbors is the city of Fujisawa. The place is famous for beach tourism, whose representative is Enoshima Island (; my post for June 30, 2017). Geologically speaking the City has 4 different kinds of features. One is Enoshima Island. Then there is beach front area where sandbanks and inlets were filled up by the sediments from the sea and several small rivers. These two areas, roughly south of National Route 1, are the most populated and urbanized sections of the city. The north of Route 1 is for the third and the fourth areas where there remains decent acreage of forests and farms. As such, there are large college campuses as well. One is College of Bioresource Sciences for Nihon University in the third geological area. The area is a mixture of hills and small valleys where farmers have engaged in their agricultural business for centuries. It’s apt that Nihon University has a large campus with experimental farms there. The fourth area is the northernmost area of the city where the Sagamihara Terrace is ending. It has the highest altitude of the city, for ASL 30-40 m. And in general, the terrain is flat. So, there is a large factory and warehouses for Isuzu and an extensive Shonan-Fujisawa Campus for Keio University. The area is a mixture of such large establishments, farmland, housings and forests. It has 33ha for the water source forest for Koide River, a tributary of Sagami River. It’s located right next to the Keio Campus. Today let’s start visiting this forest whose name is Forest for Healthy Living 健康の森. The idea of this forest is not apart from the existence of Keio University.


The designation of the Forest was originally included in the City Planning Mater Plan of Fujisawa City, formulated in 1999. (It was updated in March 2026.) There, the city would have forests of culture and health for the benefit of people of Fujisawa. Already, Keio University has a campus in the north of the city surrounded by a forest. So, “culture” part was well-established in 1999. Then there were the farmlands and forests next to the Campus, or to be exact the Faculty of Nursing and Medical Care. Before Great Kanto Earthquake, this area had a large village engaged in wet-rice cultivation using the spring water for Koide River. Unfortunately, the land good for paddy cultivation was vulnerable to Magnitude 7.9. After the disaster, many people abandoned the area and greenery remained. (Keio’s Campus is on the hill, going up from the former rice paddy area.) Ironically it has worked well for nature conservation. When Fujisawa City thought the Master Plan, it was natural for the forests remained side-by-side with the faculty of medical care to be designated “Forest for Health” … er, it might be too easy idea at that time. But, now, the forest is suitable to be called “forest for Health” not only for humans, but for the ecology of all the living creatures.


To dive in the forest, first the access. The nearest public transportation facility for the forest is the commuter bus terminal for Keio Shonan Campus, named Keio University Bus Stop. There are two services to reach there. One is from Shonandai Station for Odakyu/Sotetsu/Yokohama City Subway. Another is from JR Tsujido Station. This note site, written by Student Government Association of Keio Fujisawa Campus, has a detail to use these services. Or, if you drive, there are parking spaces of 14 cars for the Forest, almost in front of Keio’s Nursing Faculty campus. It seems to me the parking is busy always. If you play safe, I recommend public transport. You get off the bus at Keio University Stop, then you may notice there is a large hospital building in front of the terminal. It is Keiiku Hospital affiliated with Keio University, famous for rehabilitation treatments. (My mom stayed there for two months after she broke her left femur due to osteoporosis.) Please cross the road and stand in front of the Hospital. Facing the hospital turn left and walk along the wide road which is Prefectural Road #410. 100m or so from the hospital, there is a road on our right. Turn right here and go along this road running in parallel to Road 410. At the 4th corner from the previous turning, 500m or so ahead, turn right. Both sides of the road are of grassland and a garden of shrubs. Ahead of us there is a forest. This is our destination today.

Keiiku Hospital’s over there.

A scene after turning right from the hospital

Our destination is over there in this photo.

200m or so from our final turning to the right, there is a small sign saying this is one of the 4 entrances to the Forest for Healthy Living. Next week, I tell you about my adventure in this Forest. It’s a relaxing walk on more or less flat trekking roads. Please stay tuned.

The signpost.
We are at the corner named Number 6.
In this exhibit, there is another forest named Forest for Boys,
west of the Forest for Healthy Living.
I haven’t checked it,
but it says there are large metasequoias,
non-native for Japan, in the center of the field.
Perhaps, it is a well-maintained garden.


Endosasakuboyato Park 遠藤笹窪谷公園

4840 Endo, Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, 252-0816
Japan

Phone: 0466-47-7760
https://endosasakuboyatokouen.jp/ 
Instagram: @endosasakuboyatokouen

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Twitter: Making a bird call from wood scrap

 


Yeah, these days when we want to trick wild birds to chirp near us, we can open an app to play bird song and turn up the volume of our cell phone. A real bird would start singing a song to quell the intruder (from the net space) into its territory. That’s that. Though, there is more organic approach to the matter. We can make a bird call from wood scrap. The other day, GROUP the Creation and Voice of the Woods had a workshop to craft the tool from scrap from their forestry activities. The design of bird call this time was done by Mr. Harada Akatsuki. It was fun!

Blueprint

The artists for the GROUP prepared the mini logs from various thinned branches of wood. The size of a wood is small enough to be held by a human palm. We try several mini logs to find one with which we feel right in our hands. To make a sound from a scrap, Mr. Harada combined two mini-logs. The smaller part is defined as a tail of a bird.

We chose one of these.

My choice

The bigger “body” wood has 3 holes that were prepared by the artists beforehand. Into the center, we screw in a screw. This is the beak of a bird. The other two holes are eyes. We paint this surface of wood with color pencils and crayons. It is the face of a bird.

Screw in.

Who are you?

I am …

a varied tit!
Ishiyama-san for the GROUP told me
nothing in nature is in a simple color.
For the face of varied tit,
the brown part is a mixture of blue,
light brown and dark brown.


Next, screw in a tale of the bird. As we make the tool sing by turning this tail, we should stop screwing the screw just at the right point. For my call, I stopped the screw here as in the below photo.


After fixing the smaller scrap to the main part of the call, we file this “tale” to create 3-4 grooves around the rim in order to make holds for playing the tool.

Filing

To finish the work, we spray pastel fixative to stop the painted colors from being wiped away.


Done! My bird caller.




To make a bird song, we turn the “tale.” There is just a right point for each bird caller to sing a song. I tried several turns to find the point. Finding the sweet spot itself was enjoyable conversation with a scrap. Interestingly, the voice differs according to

1. The diameter and the length of a scrap,

2. The variety of wood. Some say cherry trees make the best voice. Others claim sounds of oaks are better. 

3. Probably, the size of a screw also matters.


In forests, sometimes real birds are tricked, and the other occasions the birds must have thought this human fool tried to con them in a supposed to be quiet forest. A caution. Too many bird callers, whether it is from your cell phone or wood scrap, could harm wild birds’ breeding behavior, and give too much stress from a mistaken turf war. Please be modest and OK with just a little bit of fun with birds. 😉


If you have any questions about Yokohama’s Green Tax and Green Up Plan, please make a contact with

Strategic Planning Division, Green Environment Bureau, City of Yokohama
横浜市みどり環境局戦略企画課

Phone: 045-671-2712
FAX: 045-550-4093