Day 8: Magome to Ena
QOTD: Don’t they have small towels in the bath?
Hiking Haiku
Kiso River delights.
Distant voices, playful
laughter
Keep us company.
Weather: mid to high 60s, slight
breeze at times
Pics: Breakfast, after a day off DB and Fusao
continue their tech talks again (how about Fusao using two six-shooters at same
time!), sights on the road, mid-morning mochi snack, urban trail signs,
pre-schoolers in their red hats learning how to cross the road, Nakasendo sign
post, lunch from the supermarket in the mall (and a pic of something like a squid
that THB cannot recognize), utility boxes, pomegranate tree, chestnuts,
afternoon chocolate snack, our western hotel, washer/dryer, communal bath at
hotel, our dinner restaurant and hosts
Up early as usual, breakfast
the usual variety of smoked fish, rice, pickled veggies and a sesame sauce that
goes great on the rice. THB ignores the miso, cold egg and daikon. The taxi
arrives at 9 to take our bags off to Ena, and we start walking. Today is very
much a suburban walk, with a short train in the middle to get us through the heart
of the city in between Magome and Ena. In all we do around 7 miles of what
might have been 10 otherwise, saving ourselves for the 14 miles tomorrow.
The hiking is almost all on
roads and sidewalks, very little on trails or cobblestones. Again today we see
no other hikers, so other than Tsumago to Magome THB and DB have been it for
the non-professionals. The weather is also the best so far, very comfortable
and as always on the hike (always, even in the towns and cities), the
air is crystal clear.
Lunch is purchased at a supermarket
in the mall: THB has soba and chicken thighs (very good) and ice green tea, DB
goes for a sushi variety pack, and we share a fuyu persimmon (not as hard as
can get at home), $17. We eat in a
little park across the street from the mall, then mosey down to the train
station for our short bypass of downtown.
An easy walk after departing
the train to Route Inn Hotel (chain in Japan where they feel the need to
emphasize you can sleep there overnight…), for an early check-in of 2:30. That
gives THB time to do a load of wash and dry and for THB to take a soak in the
communal bath (DB opts for the privacy of the tub in the room though there is no
one downstairs. The sitting down, soaping up and washing your hair with a
flexible hose is starting to grown on THB. The soaking in very hot water (today
is hotter than the onsen, not quite as hot as inns in Narai and Magome). Hmmmm…now,
why did THB think those midget towels would be in the bath area? They’re not,
they are in the room. THB goes without, drying off by standing under a fan,
using a bit of tissue, and not too worried because he was just putting on
running shorts and a t-shirt while the washer was running.
Before dinner, DB asks THB:
did we get any messages? THB checks the phone and there is a message. Now, can
THB figure out how to play back the message? No. DB figures it out, and it is
from Steve, our guide from 2010 who will be hosting us for an evening in Kyoto.
She calls Steve, gets his message box. While the phone is still DB’s hand, it
starts blinking like a slot machine. Hmmmmm…it’s Steve calling back. Somehow,
along with an inability to get messages, THB has turned the phone to “silent”
pinball mode. That’s after THB has managed to put the camera in video mode so
often he has used a bandaid to lock it in picture mode.
Dinner is at a small place
near the hotel Fusao knows (he’s a regular!), and it is just the three of us
tonight. A great meal: sashimi of scallops, squid, and tuna cheek; chicken with
potato soup; edamame; something like a clear noodle with pickled veggie that is
amazing; pork cutlet with miso sauce; sea bream/tai/red snapper in a teriyaki
sauce; gyoza (light and flavorful, not greasy, a THB fave); inari (tofu skins filled with rice); plum
sorbet (with pit) and nashi for dessert; large brewski for Fusao, medium
brewski for THB, excellent sake for DB, our total is for drinks only, $15
(dinner is included in tour price).
It is warmer on the walk
back to the Inn Minshuku Guest House Hotel than on the way to dinner, probably
close to 70 with no wind. Hopefully it will cool off for tomorrow’s big day.
Book Review: The Day of Battle, the War
in Sicily and Italy, 1943-44, Rick Atkinson. Part two of the liberation
trilogy, somehow THB managed to read Part 3 first, followed by Parts 1 and 2.
Lots of pages, a consistent style, a focus on the US and British combined
forces led by Eisenhower (though he had little to do with the Italian campaign)
and the author’s theory (not uniquely his) that the US industrial engine and
forces ended up spelling the end of the Germans and the British Empire despite
the inability to create well thought out plans and execute what they did plan. Recommended
(each part and the whole trilogy)
It looks as though you are not getting enough to eat for all the hiking you are doing. All sorts of "little foods". I hope you are really getting enough! You are being good sports from my perspective. Enough of the rice balls! Keep truckin"
ReplyDeleteLove, Davida
We are getting a lot to eat, being somewhat selective at the inns, dishes vary from place to place and yet somehow it all seems like the same meal. needless to say, back to those crunchy Grape Nuts in the morning when I get back, anything but soft soft soft every morning
ReplyDelete