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#okutama lake
fameone · 10 months
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奥多摩湖
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okutama-tpreport · 10 months
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6月20日奥多摩レイクSUP13:00~
Thank you for coming today guys !
Now you're not the only one to fall... :DD
Let's paddle again oneday !
The key word is>>> http://30d.jp/grandex/7465
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mikasuzuki · 8 months
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photoconcerto · 1 year
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奥多摩 大菩薩ラインから甲州市へ 2022晩秋 To the Katunuma area popular for JAPAN WINE through the Yanagisawa Pass by the mountain driving from the Tokyo metropolitan area late autumn 2022
お気に入りの、奥多摩の青梅街道・大菩薩ラインから、甲州市塩山・勝沼方面へ抜ける高原・山岳ドライブコースです。
東京都青梅市街地から青梅街道あるいは吉野街道を通って奥多摩湖へ、奥多摩湖で一休みします。この日の朝、登山者は若干名です。11月中旬、紅葉は概ね終わっているような感じでしたが、真っ赤なモミジの紅葉が盛りでたいへん綺麗でした。再び青梅街道を走り、雲取山登山口の鴨沢・祭の集落を通過しますが、山梨県に入ると大菩薩ラインと名前が変わります。丹波山村の道の駅「たばやま」は、往路は通過です。山深い中を走ると、奥秩父・笠取山登山口の一ノ瀬高原に向かう分岐(おいらん淵)に出ます。台風による土砂災害で2年以上通行止めになっていた一之瀬林道はこの春に復旧工事が終わっていたようです。臨時駐車場の案内板も。今度、作場平まで行ってみようと思います。
落合の集落を抜けて、急登を登り切ると柳沢峠です。ここには公営駐車場と峠の茶屋があります。今日は、快晴と雲の流れがうまく調和して本当に美しい富士山です。
柳沢峠から塩山まではジェットコースターを下るような急勾配の坂道が続きます。途中で雄大な富士山も望めます。エンジンブレーキをいっぱいに効かせながらの走行です。今日は途中、昔の大菩薩嶺登山口の裂石から林道に入り、上日川峠に向かいます。狭い林道を対向車に注意しながら落ち葉の中をゆっくりと登ります。かなり走って大菩薩嶺登山口の上日川峠に到着、駐車場にクルマを入れます。昨年も同じ時期に登山目的で来ましたが、やはり紅葉は今年も終わっていました(苦笑)。ロッヂ長兵衛でちょっと早い昼食です。きつねうどんを頼みました。シンプルなきつねうどんですが、これやや関西風ですが本当に美味しい!昨年下山後に食べた山葡萄アイスクリームも美味しかったし、ロッジのご主人は料理が上手なのかもしれませんね。大菩薩峠から登山者が三々五々下山して来ます。ここから甲斐大泉駅への下りは路線バスが通るので車幅も十分、楽勝のドライブコースです。
甲斐大泉駅から勝沼市街地まではすぐです。山梨ヌーボー解禁日は11月3日ですが、新型コロナの関係でまだ以前のような大規模なイベントは行っていないような印象でした。今回はいつものワイナリーには立ち寄らずに、”勝沼ワイナリーマーケット” 新田商店に寄って買い物をします。結局、この日は一升瓶の葡萄ジュース(葡萄汁、蒼龍葡萄酒株式会社)だけ買いました。
帰路は再び大菩薩ライン・青梅街道を戻ります。柳沢峠を一気に登り、道の駅「たばやま」で休息です。気温も下がり、ひんやりとした空気です。こちらのソフトクリームは値段が高いですが、分量が多いです。今日は、売店にジビエ(鹿肉)が豊富にあり、少々迷いましたが鹿肉ソーセージを買ってみました。まだ食べていません。晩秋の夕暮れの奥多摩湖を通過、バイパス的な吉野街道を下り、青梅市街地に着く頃には街の明かりが輝いていました。
Daibosatu Line  Japan  November 2022,  CONTAX645 Phase One P30+ Distagon T* 35 mm F3.5 Sonnar T*  140 mm F2.8 We can look at the enlarged images clicking the original ones.
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nanami-kunto · 5 months
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My contribution for Day One of KiraKari Week - Stargazing/Camping
due south - 1k - Rated G
Tonight is supposed to be special; they’d taken the used car he’d managed to buy with his winnings and driven up to Lake Okutama to see the stars. Around them the trees are budding an early green, half-naked branches dancing under the light of the moon.
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drstonetrivia · 10 months
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Chapter 1 Trivia
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Every human on Earth turned to stone...
The deterioration levels vary here: cars and buildings look clean, but there are plants sprouting everywhere including on peoples heads. Fabrics can take anywhere from a month (linen) to several decades (synthetics) to degrade.
I love the plants in the phone ports on the left!
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We get the name of their school, Hiromatsu! The characters used can mean big (広) & tree (末). This means Taiju Oki from Hiromatsu high school can be translated as Big-tree Big-tree from Big-tree high school. I wish he got to graduate...
We also find out both his parents are dead— who's been taking care of him this whole time?
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Looking at the sound effects, Taiju's yelling was loud enough for everyone's eardrums to pop. For this to happen, you need ~165dB. This approximates to a shotgun blast at close range, or a jet engine within ~100ft. The loudest human yell is 129dB, so Taiju's setting new records
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If you were wondering about the original sound effect, it's ビリ (biri), usually used for sudden loud shocks or vibrations, or shuddering after a strong force. In case you had any doubts about Taiju's true power...
Looking at the other students, Senku seems to be the only one wearing a tie, and a patterned one at that. I wonder who could have inspired such a frivolous fashion choice...
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This process is pyrolysis, specifically thermal depolarization which is basically turning waste plastics (bottle caps) back into crude oil. Senku's setup looks semi-random.
He's also lighting the gasoline Taiju poured into the sink on fire and throwing it at the other students...
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Even though he needs plastic caps for his experiment, he chooses an energy drink in an aluminum can. I wonder if that helped him stay alert over those 3,700 years, or sped up his depetrification at all...
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The high school is implied to be in/near Tokyo. At this angle, the 109 department store (Shibuya) is to the northwest, so the people on the ground are staring southeast. Therefore the beam originated to the southeast of Japan.
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Inagaki has mentioned a few times now that he originally drafted this as Hillary, before the 2016 election took place. Interestingly, the dialogue didn't change between the two versions.
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The petrification seems to be total sensory deprivation: you can't see or move, and you can tell that you're immobile. On top of that, you can feel your consciousness slipping. The fact anyone has enough willpower to push through it and not give up over millennia is incredible.
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The birds didn't all get petrified at once unlike the humans. There seems to have been at least an 8 hour delay (enough time for Senku and Taiju to sleep, assuming they hadn't talked yet that morning).
There's also no visible beam of light, which is curious.
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We can assume it wasn't simply a precariously placed bird that conveniently fell as Taiju passed since it was frozen mid-flight, and thus would have shattered on impact had it not landed on a bush/other cushioning surface (that would likely have held it steady).
A few landmarks are shown: lake Okutama dam bursts, flooding Tokyo and destroying several buildings.
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Then there's the Rainbow Bridge and the Tokyo Skytree, also both in Tokyo.
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Taiju's depetrification started on his head; was it the presence of nitric acid there? Or did it start there for another reason?
Taiju's scars also follow the initial cracks of depetrification; does that mean it's the most shallow/damaged there? Oddly, his eyeball is unscarred.
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Statues embedded in cliff faces could imply at least a little tectonic upheaval, redirected rivers, or could be a result of the populated skyscrapers.
3,700 years isn't long enough for major continental shift (1 inch per year, roughly), but basic topography has changed a bit.
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I wonder what this pose could possibly mean... Nothing to do with being petrified while sitting in the corner of a fighting ring during an MMA battle, I'm sure...
In any case, he's very serene and unlike most other statues, doesn't look scared at all.
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Yuzuriha survived because she was protected by two big trees.
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Camphor trees can live a very long time, as demonstrated by this (supposedly) 2,000 year old camphor tree at the Kinomiya Shrine in Atami, near Tokyo.
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Yuzuriha's headband has also survived petrification. Since there seems to be no plastic on the ground anywhere, it looks like it got petrified along with her (the cracks match up!) Why? Is it made of human bone or something?
The margin of error Senku is working with here is incredible, but at least he won't get bored!
800,000 seconds is about 9 days and 6 hours. I wonder if that cycle has any significance...
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Senku seems pretty handy; he's got a kiln, pottery, woven fabric, several spears, rope, and clothing. Impressive work for someone who lived in the modern era!
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Homo habilis (2.1 million years ago) was the first species to use stone tools, while homo erectus mastered fire by 1.5 million years ago. Anatomically modern homo sapiens didn't come about until ~300,000 years ago. Senku seems to have already jump-started quite far on his own!
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The hallmark of modern civilization: rockets. I'm sure this is only an example and not one of their goals since they're only highschoolers haha...
Speaking of goals, the story is unlikely to end before they restore civilization and solve the petrification mystery. I can't wait.
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To any anime-watchers reading, I very much recommend starting the series from here rather than from where the anime left off. It's an exhilarating journey.
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cliffdog01 · 9 months
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Japan’s Bumpy Road Back to Tourism (2023) | ONLY in JAPAN * GO
Space Boat is definitely high on my plans. Ever since I took a River ferry in Brisbane, I have been convinced that river systems like this are the most efficient and cheapest way to see a new city. I’m not gonna lie; I would prefer the older style that you, Peter and Shoji went on, but as far as I can tell, they’ve stopped using them after the Pandemic.
Man, speaking as a train lover, the trains you get in Tokyo are out of this world. I don’t like Rental Cars in foreign countries; they are stressful. I did it in Melbourne; it was not a pleasant experience, so long as I have a choice, I won’t do it again. Those trains get you to places like Choshi Tokyo Prefecture’s East Cape and most places you’d ordinarily take a Car. Choshi has an astounding Single older style track out to Tokawa Station with a walk to the most easterly point of the Prefecture. I love reaching the end of the line. Another place with an epic Tokyo Rural area is Okutama, with beautiful  Lakes and some fantastic trails out in Tokyo prefectures forests.
I hope I don’t annoy Japanese people when I go too much, but I love using my large Suitcase as a Poor man’s Palacan case. It has my computer in the middle and mostly Air and Clothes to keep it safe. Works, too. I’ve taken many flights, both Domestic (Napier and Taupo all across New Zealand) and International (San Diego, Gold Coast, and Vanuatu), and Unlike my Mum (who has a small bag that John would say is good), I never had anything Break.
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lifes26-blog · 2 years
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Seiko SBSA117 Field Watch ay Lake Okutama Cycling Hill Climb
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pizzaheresblog · 2 years
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Japanese Craft Beer
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Aussies love beer and love to travel. When they do travel they usually want to have unique authentic local experiences. What better drink to have in Japan than a Japanese craft beer then? Made with local ingredients by locals, it’s the ultimate local experience.
About ten years ago I started seeing craft beers here and there in Japan. Some were in the combine or convenience stores, and others were in bottle shops, and over the last five years, I’ve noticed an increasing number of craft beer bars have been popping up. Two years ago, on holidays in Gomyo, Kagawa Prefecture (way out in the sticks), I even saw a craft beer brewery there, which shows how far the scene has come in Japan in the last few years.
Is Craft Beer Popular in Japan?
In some cool neighborhoods like Shimokitazawa, there are several craft beer bars, as well as several bottle shops that sell a wide variety of craft beers. The most impressive craft beer selection is at Kitazawa Konishi along with an awesome Stars Wars treasure trove. Other trendy areas, like Koenji, Nakano, and Shibuya also have more than one craft beer place each. Now there are also some in business centres like Marunouchi, Ginza, Shinagawa and Gotanda. They are becoming so mainstream that I’ve ever seen one in Shinjuku!
Although craft beer’s popularity in Japan keeps growing and growing, in many izakayas, or Japanese-style pubs, there is not really a lot of them for sale. The same goes for sushi and ramen bars. So, if you are going out for sushi or some other real Japanese-style cuisine, you may be limited to sake, shochu, and beer from the big producers. Most craft beer bars tend to serve only western style food. The logic seems to be that burgers, hummus, and pita toast go better with the deeply interesting craft beers. Yakitori, ramen, and edamame on the other hand have matched beautifully with sake, shochu, and mainstream beers for centuries. They don’t want to mess with that.
Festivals for Craft Beer Fans
Aside from the increasing number of craft beer bars, there are also a lot of craft beer festivals in and around Nagano. A quick google search reveals BeerFes, The Great Japan Beer Festival, Oedo Beer Festival, and The American Craft Beer Experience plus lots of smaller festivals. Most of them are annual, some of them even happen two or three times a year and they all offer a wide range of craft beer plus tasty beer snacks. They will give you lots of different craft beers for your beer bucks.
In the regional cities such as Osaka, Sapporo, Fukuoka, Kobe, and Nagano, there is also a craft beer festival or two per year.
What Are Some Good Japanese Craft Beers?
Vertere TIPA is made out west of Tokyo in Okutama. You can visit the brewery, buy some beer and go for a hike. The hiking is good and the beer is great. They make a 10% double IPA which is also sold in the combine in the area but be careful that 10% really sneaks up on you.
Sankt Gallen – Brewed in Kanagawa, south of Tokyo, they claim to have made the first craft beer in Japan. They have lots of beer made with fruit, chocolate, and even a stout made with coffee beans excreted by an elephant.
Yona Yona Ale – the name means “drinking night by night”. Its home is in Karuizawa, a fashionable resort town in Nagano Prefecture in the snowy North. It tastes hoppy and fruity. Should be drunk at 13 degrees Celsius to bring out the flavors. They have their own craft beer bar called Yona Yona Beer Works. Their beers are American-style pale ales.
Swan Lake Beer – it’s brewed in Niigata to be crisp and a little bitter. It’s another craft beer brewery in the snowy North! They have a bottom fermentation beer, Koshihikari, made with rice of the same name.
Hitachino Nest Japanese Classic Ale – It has a light refreshing hoppy taste. The brewery is in  Kounosu in Ibaraki, northeast of Tokyo. The town’s name literally means “wild goose nest”. The family has been brewing sake for eight generations and their skills show in their very drinkable craft beers.
Shiga Kogen Beer – made in Yamanouchi in Nagano with pure mountain water. Some of their beers contain sake rice and all of them are unfiltered. They have an American Pale Ale, a coffee stout, and a barrel-aged sour ale. There is also UFO, an Unidentified Fermented Object, and an imperial milk stout.
Minoh – an Osaka microbrewery. They make Minoh Godfather 8 Yamaroku Ale which has Yamaroku soy sauce in it. It’s a 6% pale ale and not as weird as it sounds. They also made a salty ale with local salt but it was discontinued because it was as weird as it sounds.
Chabeer – from Kyoto makes a luscious cherry stout called Smoochies. They also make Wasabi Salt Gose, a 4.5% goes, which is a little spicy as you’d expect but surprisingly mild and malty.
So you can come to Japan for the temples, shrines, and fabulous food, you can even come for the skiing, but also dive into the vibrant craft beer scene to really get to know the locals. Local and sometimes quirky ingredients, ancient skills and modern brewing technology is a recipe for a great experience.
Contact Us:
8004-1 Nishiminowa, Ina City, Nagano Prefecture 399-4501
Website: https://www.inadazebrewing.com
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pix4japan · 3 years
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Short clip from YouTube video of photo shoot at Japanese mountain lake with cherry blossoms and my dog. (Full video here: https://youtu.be/DXM5_8wIid0)
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mikasuzuki · 9 months
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daffydave · 4 years
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Are the patterns visible to you?
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Okutama Lake (Okutamako Bus Stop (20 minutes from Okutama (Oume), 5 minutes, 2014)
Okutama Lake lis used as a water reservoir for the Tokyo region. Lying in the mountains, its pristine water feeds the lower reaches of the Tama River. While water sports and swimming isn’t permitted on the river itself, the Tama River provides many such opportunities. There are many hiking courses nearby, with the Okutama (old) Therapy Road being one which brings you back to Okutama Station (about a 3-4 hour walk). (Book - September 17)
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kinuphoto · 6 years
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hashy · 3 years
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おくたまは魔境
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taifunu · 5 years
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rainy dam lake
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rainy dam lake by naoto shinozaki Via Flickr: 小河内ダム
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muratagawa · 5 years
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Lake Tama, Okutama, Tokyo, June 2019
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