Plastics floating outside Izumi-no-mori Forest |
So, the nearest public transport facility going to Izumi-no-mori Forest is the same for Naval Air Facility Atsugi, which is Sagami-Otsuka Station 相模大塚 of Sotetsu Line. Tsuruma Station 鶴間 and Yamato Stations 大和 of Odakyu / Sotetsu Lines are also in walking distance to the Forest. In addition, Izumi-no-mori Forest spreads to both sides of Route 246 (; my post on March 17, 2017). The southern edge of the Forest is Tomei Express Way. As the place has ample car parking spaces, you can drive to the Forest and enjoy a relaxed stroll there. On foot, the access from Sagami-Otsuka Station is nearest. Let’s take this route. Simplest would be leaving the station from the north exit, and keep to the north in suburbia of ordinary houses. The distance between the Sagami-Otsuka Station and the Forest is not much, about 500m. The Forest is large so that you eventually bump into the edge of it even if the point you reach does not have a road into the forest. When you reach the forest rim, just walk along the road between the forest and the houses. You’ll meet the First or Second Parking for the Forest. Welcome to Izumi-no-mori Forest!
The north exit of Sagami-Otsuka Station |
Outside
the station, there is this map for Izumi-no-mori Forest. We can use this map to the forest. |
Eventually, we reach the rim of the forest like this. |
The Second Parking |
The larger First Parking |
Though its name does not contain “park,” Izumi-no-mori Forest has the design similar to city parks such as Shiki-no-mori Park 四季の森公園 (; my post on June 26, 2020), Takane-Park 高根公園 (my post on June 15, 2018), and Yokohama Children’s Amusement - Botanical Park 横浜子供遊園地・植物園 (; my post on November 4, 2016). Many routes in Izumi-no-mori Forest are wide enough and relatively flat so that wheelchair users could enjoy nature as well. The entire land for the forest is lent indefinitely by landlords to Yamato City 大和市. So, visitors are expected to “behave” in a private property. Beyond the parking space, there are two old traditional houses that serve as historical museums of Yamato City. Both houses were transferred from the other part of the City in order to preserve them as heritage sites. One is the house of Ogawa Family that was built during the first half of the 18th century. Another is the house of Kitajima Family built in the early 19th century. By visiting these two houses, we can know the 100 years has made difference in the design of the house. The newer Kitajima house has a more robust structure, and equipped with spaces for sericulture. Sericulture and silk were the main industries for the early industrial revolution in Japan. The contrast between these two houses could say the process of economic development of Japan during the industrialization. Beyond the museum area, there is a BBQ space which has the larger First Parking. Especially after COVID, the place became very popular. Many people enjoy casual outdoor parties there these days. RSVP (; for details, here).
The house of Kitajima Family |
The BBQ place |
Northwest of the Forest, beyond Route 246 is the area for the water source of Hikichi River. We can visit there from the BBQ place. Go down the road from the BBQ place and in front of us is a valley that runs beneath the flyover of Rote 246. The pedestrian routes go along the valley, and we can find two ponds almost immediately beyond the overpass. The ponds are actually springs. The area around the ponds and the small stream from it are off limit, sealed off by wire fences. Kanagawa Water Supply Authority oversees management and preservation of the place, since until 1992 the place supplied tap water to about 1900 households surrounding the north part of the Forest. Now the water from the Forest does not enter the water supply system as Sagami and Sakawa Rivers do the enough job for the area. Compared to the Southwest part of the Forest, this side is “deep” forest. Though, many broadleaved trees were affected by Oak Tree Wilt and some were on the verge of falling. The management of the Forest sealed off many strolling paths in order to prevent fatal accidents (; my post on August 23, 2019). Please follow the warning signs when you walk there. Those trees are large, and your cranium can easily be flattened when they come down over your head!
Under 246 is like a playground for kids. |
The road
is in general wide and well-maintained inside the forest. |
There
is birdwatching station for observing birds coming to the water source pond. |
The water sources are sealed off. |
And a
grey heron relaxed near the pond … do we call it as “he’s in a cage”? |
Southeast side of the 246 overpass starts with an area that has the administration cottage (“Shirakashi-no-ie”), a small shop, a police station, and a restored water mill. From the admin office, you can have a hardcopy of the map for the forest. The place also serves as a mini nature museum giving us information about the biosphere of the forest and the surrounding area. It also has the latest news from volunteer organizations that help the management of Izumi-no-mori Forest. If you’re living near there and interested in fieldworks for the forest and the stream, you can find info how to join them, etc. Oh, one important thing. Izumi-no-mori Forest equips toilets here and there, but the area surrounding the admin office has the largest numbers of it. Don’t miss your chance.
A shop and a police station |
An admin-cum-museum cottage |
Inside of the cottage is like this. |
Water mill |
In front of the admin area are landscaped streams that lead water from the source to Hikichi River. They have nice semi-paved promenades along the streams where lots of families have a leisurely walk for sunny weekends. The very end of this landscaped stream is a pond named “Bamboo-leaf oak Pond.” The place serves as a regulating reservoir to prevent flood from Hikichi River. It is allowed to fish there provided you don’t do lure fishing. During winter we can find lots of migratory winter birds floating on the pond. The place is famous for amateur photographers of wild birds. During winter they jostle each other for the best position for their perfect shot of mallards et al. The pond ends with a overflow dyke that is also the end of Izumi-no-mori Forest. Beyond the dyke is Hikichi River.
Many people enjoyed the waterside. |
And a row of photographers focusing on … |
Eurasian Pigeon. |
Great Cornmorants were also there. |
The dyke which is the end of Izumi-no-mori Forest. |
The southwest embankment of the dyke, there is a small forest of bamboo-leaf oaks (Quercus myrsinifolia). The place is considered to be a few remaining climax forest for Sagamino Plateau 相模野台地. Sagamino Plateau is a geological area sandwiched between Sagami River and Sakai River 境川 (; my post on January 28, 2022), ended around the border between Yamato and Fujisawa Cities. The plateau did not have good water sources for human consumption. During pre-industrialization people did farming on the Plateau, not rice cultivation, which was at that time an implicit sign of “poverty.” In the climate for Sagamino Plateau, the climax forest should be dominated by evergreen bamboo-leaf oak but people cut them off for their more convenient trees. They afforested their hills with sawtooth oaks, jolcham oaks, and coniferous trees. These oaks became good charcoal, the main fuel for people before imported oil dominated the economy. Their leaves supplied good compost for tobacco cultivation, the main cash crops during the period. Coniferous trees were sold for housing materials. Not many naturally climax forest remain now on Sagamino Plateau. The forest in Izumi-no-mori is a rare remnant of natural forest before people used intensively their land for their livelihood. (I won’t say it’s a virgin forest. Who knows if it has never experienced human intervention!) Kanagawa Prefecture designate the place as Prefecture’s Natural Treasure that should be protected “as is.”
… looks ordinary, but … |
Leave the dyke and walk the promenade along Hikichi River, we proceed under the flyover of Tomei Expressway, and enter “Fureai-no-mori ふれあいの森” which is a landscaped city park along Hikichi River. The end of Fureai-no-mori is almost the beginning of the main pedestrian way to Yamato Station. The other fine weekend when I took this route, the Forest, especially around the admin office to the Park and Yamato Station, welcomed many families and groups of friends. I even had a feel of “congestion.” The greenery and riverside are loved by locals quite a lot ... The reason why such seemingly ordinary forest of bamboo-leaf oaks is designated Natural Treasure is the area’s historical difficulty for the access of water sources. The scarcity of water, together with its location relatively near to Tokyo and Yokohama, made secretly unique the area of Sagamino Plateau and Hikichi River. Why does Hikichi River run through housing suburbs, and Naval Air Facility Atsugi? Why does the place not have many deep forests, compared even to Yokohama? And why does Hikichi River let microplastics float that much? Peaceful rows of family houses carry old, and contemporary, burdens, but in any case, we all love quiet strolls in the forest and along the river ... Oh, in some corners of Japan, people have started to discuss lawmaking to prohibit usage of astroturf, in order to stop microplastic contamination getting worse. The new chapter for Izumi-no-mori Forest and Hikichi River may start not before long.
To Fureai-no-mori |
Under the Tomei Expressway is like this. |
Brown-eared Bulbul were neatly drinking from Hikichi River. |
Fureai-no-mori |
There are signs showing us the direction to Yamato Station. |
If you find environmental issues in Kanagawa Prefecture, please make a contact with Kanagawa Natural Environment Conservation Center 神奈川県自然環境保全センター
657 Nanasawa, Atsugi City, 243-0121
〒243-0121 厚木市七沢657
Phone: 046-248-0323
You can send an enquiry to them by clicking the bottom line of their homepage at http://www.pref.kanagawa.jp/div/1644/
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