Enoshima and checking off a bucket list item (pt. 1)

Well, if nothing else, on this trip I finally got to check off an item on my bucket list that has been bugging me on every trip I’ve made here. Until I went to Enoshima earlier, I had not actually gotten a really good picture of Mount Fuji, I had always had fog, or clouds, or haze, or lack of sunlight to prevent me from seeing the mountain clearly.

So, feeling somewhat hopeful, but not expecting a lot, I set off in the morning to go to the town of Ofuna, in order to catch the “top-end” of the Shonan Monorail, a suspended monorail train line that was built in 1970, running about 4 miles from Ofuna Station to Enoshima Station. It’s pretty neat, for nearly all of the line the train cars hang from overhead rails, all but one of the stations is also high in the air. It can be a bit unnerving to watch the train travel, especially from inside watching as a station in the air comes into view, with people on the platform, or when leaving the station, watching the platform fall away beneath you!

The Monorail ends at the seaside town of Enoshima, which is on the Shonan Coast, along the Pacific Ocean. It’s been a getaway spot for tourists in Japan for centuries, and shares a lot in common with other beach towns around the world. The town of Enoshima is the hub of an older train line, the Enoshima Densha, which everyone calls the “Enoden”. The train line runs from Kamakura in the east to Fujisawa in the west, and it’s been running since the early 1900’s. The train cars are still in use, many of them, and they are definitely unique.

Without a doubt, seeing amazing things is the real reason to go to a tourist town, and coming out of the Monorail station at Enoshima I was happily surprised that I got to finally see Mount Fuji! I have been waiting almost 18 years to see it, and at last, there it was! There was a photo observation deck at the top of the station and I managed to get plenty of good photos! If I don’t manage to see much more of Japan (more on that in another post) at least I could check that off my bucket list!

The Enoshima Enoden station is just down the hill from the Monorail station, so on my way to the island I walked past it, hoping to see if the little sparrows were still there from when I last saw them, and they were! Two of the guard rails have 4 little steel sparrows on them, and the locals dress them in hand-knitted warm clothes!

Speaking of birds, the birds in the Shonan Beach area including Enoshima are fierce! There are wild hawks, kites and other predators that have decided it’s easier to attack the big humans and take their food, than it is to hunt! All over the island and beach area are signs saying “be careful” and “don’t carry food in your hand and eat outdoors”, they really will swoop down and grab food out of your hand! I’ve seen hawks in flocks circling overhead at the restaurant section near the bridge to the mainland, just waiting for their chance! I think the hawks also catch and eat their competitors, or at least chase them away, I didn’t see many pigeons or seagulls around Enoshima.

I was lucky enough to go during a work week, and didn’t have to fight the crowds. Also, the island of Enoshima is loaded with shrines to various gods and dragons are a big part of the history. As expected there were many places where cherry blossoms and other flowers were blooming.

At the top of the island there were the ruins of a huge garden planted and owned by an Englishman named Samuel Cocking, who built it during the Meiji era. The garden itself is still there, carefully maintained, but there are only foundations left of the original buildings.

It’s kind of neat that the city of Fujisawa, which basically runs the town on Enoshima, made a point to become “sister cities” with other towns around the world, including Miami Beach, Florida and Windsor Ontario Canada.

The biggest attraction other than the shrines is the “Sea Candle”, a large observation tower at the peak of the island. Unfortunately for you all, I wasn’t brave enough to go up in it to take photos, I still have a problem with heights, but it’s presence is unavoidable, and apparently at night on special occasions they light up the tower.

The main attraction for the Shonan area surrounding the island is the Shonan Beach, which stretches on both sides of the bridge leading to Enoshima. The water often becomes excited enough that the waves draw surfers, and many people like to enjoy wind surfing as well. The beaches are beautiful and clean, and very popular during the main season.

Well, that’s all I’m going to show for now, I’ll post a part 2 sometime in the next few days! Here are a few more flowers from this first part!

Nerdtour 2012: Riding on the Enoden pt. 3: Hase station and a train ride

After spending about an hour at the Great Buddha of Kamakura, the day was fast coming to a close and it was time to get back on the Enoden, in order to get to Enoshima before dark. AFter getting back to Hase station, there was a little time to kill before the next train, so I took a few pictures of the station itself, and a bit of the surroundings. The Enoden line goes almost as far back as there were trains in Japan, it was first laid down about 100 years ago, and many of the stations (and the neighborhoods around them) retain many traces of the older line.

In some ways, with the old wooden beams and the narrow gage tracks, some stations on the Enoden are reminiscent of some old West train stations, of course without the coal and water feeds that Western trains needed. Some of the train cars are modeled on the earlier cars of the line, as well, although with modern instrumentation and controls.

When the next train came, it was time for a quick ride. This is a short clip for the first leg from Hase, going to Gokurakuji station, one stop towards Enoshima, to give you a feel for what the ride was like. We didn’t actually get all the way to Enoshima, one of the stops before then looked interesting, a town called Shichirigahama, which turned out to be a very nice town indeed.

Oh, and notice the care that the conductor uses, there are specific gestures to each instrument, which work as mnemonics that the conductor uses to make sure that each item in his checklist is complete. The combination of hand and eye motion and examination of the control settings at the same time gives the conductor stronger reinforcement than simply moving his eyes to check the controls. My Japanese teacher used a similar approach to teach us how to write kanji characters, one of the steps was writing the character in the air while speaking the stroke numbers aloud. “Muscle memory” helps the “main memory”.

As always, there are more photos on my portfolio site.

Nerdtour 2012: riding the Enoden

So, I’m updating (only a year later!) with some more photos from my Nerdtour of Japan! This will broken up into a couple of sets of photos that are going to be on my portfolio site, but I’ll update here when I update there!

So, on this day I rode the Enoden train, a historic train line that runs from Kamakura to Fujisawa, with the main stop in the middle, at Enoshima Island. Enoshima has been a tourist spot since the days of the Shogun, and the Enoden gets its name from “Enoshima Dentetsu“, Enoshima Electric Railway. Kamakura is famous for its large statue of Buddha, which I will post in another set of photos. The train runs along the beach on the Pacific Ocean south of Tokyo, with stops at several beach towns along the way. I stopped at one of these, Shichirigahama, which turned out to have a nice view of Enoshima Island, as well as Mount Fuji (but only in silhouette, as usual…). It very much reminded me of the beach towns of southern California, especially with the surfers, and apparently the Enoshima area is known internationally for its surf. After spending way too much time in Shichirigahama, I continued on to Fujisawa in the evening, but due to failing batteries I didn’t get many photos of the city.

This set of photos is from the first leg of the day trip, from Etchujima station near Monzennakacho, through Tokyo Station and Kamakura Station, and sights along the Enoden to Hase.

At any rate, Enjoy!

Nerdtour 2012 quickie: Enoshima Girls

Be grateful you can’t hear me singing this! And I only did one verse so you can be even more thankful!

Enoshima Girls
(sung to the tune of “California Girls” by the Beach Boys)

Well Tokyo girls are hip, I really dig those styles they wear,
And Osaka girls with the way they talk, they knock me out when I’m back there.
The Tohoku farmer’s daughters really make you feel all right,
And Hokkaido girls with they way they kiss they keep their boyfriends warm at night.

I wish they all could be Enoshima
I wish they all could be Enoshima
I wish they all could be Enoshima girls!

Sun, sand, surf and cute girls, the Beach Boys would have loved Enoshima! =^_^=

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Nerdtour 2012: Surf, sunset, and Mount Fuji

This will be short and sweet, Wednesday I rode the Enoshima Train, or Enoshima Densha (Enoden) from Kamakura to Fujisawa, stopping along the way to see the Big Buddha (more on that later), and serendipitously caught the sun setting on a beautiful seaside town along the way. Plus, Mount Fuji! Or at least, the silhouette of it…
Continue reading “Nerdtour 2012: Surf, sunset, and Mount Fuji”