Showing posts with label shimanami kaido. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shimanami kaido. Show all posts

Thursday, October 15, 2020

The Views From The Kurushima Kaikyo Bridge

 

The Kurushima Kaikyo Suspension Bridge(s) are the last of the bridges on the Shimanami Kaido, the road that connects Honshu with Shikoku across a series of island-hopping bridges. A post about this amazing structure I posted earlier.


The views across the island -studded Inland Sea are great from any highish point and the bridges tend to get quite high, so.........


The Inland Sea was once the major transportation route of Japan, and it is still a very busy waterway so you can look down on many boats and ships.


As you approach Shikoku, Imabari is clearly seen to the SE.


Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Kurushima Kaikyo Suspension Bridges


Claimed to be the longest suspension bridge structure in the world, the Kurushima Kaikyo Bridge is actually 3 connected suspension bridges. Its total length is a tad over 4 kilometers, a little longer than the Akashi Kaikyo Bridge further along the Inland Sea which also connects to Shikoku and is still, I believe, the longest suspension bridge in the world.


I walked across it on the third day of my walk along the Shimanami Kaido, the route that connects Honshu to Shikoku via a series of bridges across the islands.


If you are on foot like  I was, or cycling or using a moped then the crossing is much more than 4k as a series of gradually rising loops take you up and down to the height of the bridge.


The bridge connects Imabari on Shikoku with Oshima. I had crossed Oshima fairly quickly after spending the night on Michika Island in view of the Hakata-Oshima Bridge. Later I will post some shots of the stupendous views from the Kurushima Kaikyo Bridges....


Thursday, April 9, 2020

Sunset from Michika Island


Michikajima, Michika Island, is a tiny, uninhabited island in the Seto Inland Sea. It is located between Hakata Island and Oshima Island and is part of Ehime.


It is on the Shimanami Kaido that connects Shikoku with Honshu. It connects to Hakata Island by the Hakata Bridge, and to Oshima Island by the Hakata-Oshima Bridge which can be seen in some of these photos. There is a small campsite on the island but is only accessible for cyclists, pedestrians, or moped/scooter riders.


I spent the night there at the end of my second day walking along the Shimanami Kaido, and I had the island completely to myself.


I know many of you are in lockdown right now, and I hope you are all staying safe and well. There will come a time when we can all go out and visit such places again.....


Saturday, January 11, 2020

Across the Tatara Bridge


By lunchtime of my second day walking along the Shimanami Kaido that connects Honshu with Shikoku via six islands it was time to cross over from Ikuchijima to Omishima using the Tatara Bridge.


Considered by most to be the most elegant of all the bridges on the route, it was, when built, the longest cable-stayed bridge in the world, but has since been superceded by a couple of bridges in China.


The two towers are 220 meters tall, and the central span between them is 890 meters.


For cyclists and pedestrians, there are fairly steep approaches to get up to the bridge.


Monday, June 17, 2019

Ikuchijima Island-Wide Art Museum


On the second day of my walk from Honshu to Shikoku along the Shimanami Kaido I left Kosanji Temple and started walking down the west coast of the island. On the beach looking westward was this statue, a Jizo I think.


A little further, set on a rock in the water was an unusual modern sculpture, "Wings of the Waves" by Susumu Shingu, one of 17 modern sculptures located around the island in what they call the Island-Wide Art Museum


Sunset Beach runs down the coast almost to the Tatara Bridge which crosses over to Omishima.


At the southern end of the beach another couple of sculptures. In the foreground is "Calm Time-Red form / Inclination by Keiji Uematsu, and in the background "Clairvoyance" by Shin Matsunaga.


Art can take many forms, but this old bus is not part of the Island-Wide Art Museum.

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Monday, September 3, 2018

Hill of Eternal Hope Revisited


Miraishin no Oka, the Hill of Eternal Hope is a sculptural work located on a hill above Kosanji, the somewhat bizarre temple located on Ikuchijima along the Shimanami kaido that connects Hishu with Shikoku.


I have posted about it before, the link is here Heights of Eternal Hope for the Future


All the statues and in fact the surface of the hill top, is constructed out of Carrera marble from Italy where the Japanese sculptor, Kazuo Kuetani lives and works.


I revisited it while on my second day walking along the Shimanami Kaido, a route most often cycled by visitors.


Sunday, December 17, 2017

Kosanji Revisited

Kosanji


On the second day of my walk along the Shimanami Kaido I stopped in at Kosanji Temple to take some more photos. This first one is a reproduction of the Yomeimon gate at Toshugu Shrine in Nikko.


Like all the buildings at Kosanji that are based on famous historical structures, it is somewhat more colorful and embellished with more details than the original.


The remains of the temple founders mother lie beneath the five storied pagoda which is based on the pagoda at Muro-ji in Nara.


The fifteen meter tall statues of Kannon is based on a statue less than 2 meters tall in Horyu-ji, Nara.

Purchase a selection of ema from GoodsFromJapan

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Ikuchi Bridge


The sun was getting low as I approached Ikuchi Bridge on the first day of my walk from Honshu to Shikoku along the Shimanami Kaido.


Connecting Innoshima with Ikuchijima, it is a cable-stayed bridge built in 1991.


The total length is 790 meters with the main span being 490 meters. The two supports are delta shaped.


Once across to Ikuchijima I had to find somewhere to lay my sleeping bag for the night.


Sunday, November 13, 2016

Murakami Pirate Castle


It was late afternoon as I crossed over the bridge onto Innoshima Island on the first day of my walk along the Shimanami Kaido. I stepped up my pace as there was somewhere I wanted to visit before it closed for the day.


The Murakami were a clan of samurai who for a long time, until Hideyoshi moved them, controlled the waters of the Inland Sea from a series of bases on the islands.


Called pirates, or a navy, depending on who wrote the history, Innoshima was one of their main bases and there were numerous fortifications on the island, though the current structures are far more grand and substantial than anything that existed back then.


There is a small museum and it is possible for visitors to put on some samurai armour for photo ops.


Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Innoshima Bridge


If you are cycling or walking the Shimanami Kaido, the road that connects Onomichi in Hiroshima with Imabari on Shikoku, then the first bridge you cross is the Innoshima Bridge connecting Mukaijima Island with Innoshima island.


When it was built in 1983 it was the longest suspension bridge in Asia. The total length is 1,339 meters, and the main span is 770 meters.


All the bridges of the Shimanami Kaido can be used by pedestrians and cyclists, and on the Innoshima Bridge they are carried below the expressway carrying cars.


Though the views are a little obscured by the chain link fence, at around 40 meters above the water the views are still great.