Honshu

Submitted by jono on 26 Apr 2025.

I have just completed the Shimane Peninsula section. This isn't a standard sticky out bit, but rather a sausage of rugged terrain that is connected to Honshu proper by a low plain. The sausage is 36 nm long, in some places indented, and elsewhere with straighter coastline where a side wind can have a decent run. With no konbinis until back on the plain, I stocked up on Cup-Noodles and went off round the corner:

Submitted by jono on 14 Apr 2025.

At zoomed-out scale (from space! Wakasa Bay is an indent on the Sea of Japan coast. Having not previously zoomed-in, I'd assumed it would be a continuous bay and easy to sail. In fact, it is an indented coastline with many peninsulas and deep inlets. That's much more challenging. It was a rewarding section and one I will look back on fondly.

Submitted by jono on 06 Apr 2025.

There is a joke that Norwegians share about their summer: they say that it falls on a Tuesday. The day doesn't really matter of course. Here in Japan (west coast Honshu), winter has been reluctant to release its grip, and within an eye-blink it will be summer. That doesn't leave long for cherry blossom. Hopefully, when spring does arrive it will stick around a while - a full weekend would be nice.

Submitted by jono on 31 Mar 2025.

March 27th - to Shinbo

Windless AM. Around midday I give up waiting and make some miles with the paddle. It soon gets rather choppy, so I am thankful for the faint trickle of breeze that also arrives. The chop continues to build, and rebound with interest from reflective shores. The most perfect mirrors are port walls. Around me, white horses tumble in defiance of Lord Beaufort's mandate. Despite the absence of wind, clearly it is blowing hard nearby.

Submitted by jono on 24 Mar 2025.

Moving again after two days waiting for very strong south-westerly headwinds to ease.

I sailed out of Itiogawa port and the wind promptly died to nothing. Rather than wait for wind in the confused chop, I switched to paddle mode to claw my way beyond the Himekawa River estuary: the boundary between turquoise river water and the deep blue seawater a sweeping curve. Later, a tailwind arrived and stayed with me until a sunset landing at Ecchu-Miyazaki port. That is Niigata-ken (prefecture) cleared, and the first landing in Toyama-ken. 

Submitted by jono on 15 Mar 2025.

We are are useful chunk (70 nm, 130 km) further south than a a week ago! The Sea of Japan was calm for a few days, which allowed for stress free passage past some industrial zones and the city port of Niigata.

Submitted by jono on 09 Mar 2025.

Just a heads up that I am back moving after the winter pause. Yumiko has the car with the tent and she will be with me for the next 3 or 4 weeks. Then, in April, she starts a job, and I will be on my own again sleeping under the sail in hopefully warmer conditions.

It was an excellent day for the restart: very flat sea and a breeze that was helpful. The wind died away at a convenient place to check out a stream over the beach that was sending plumes of steam into the air.

Then the wind came back to allow a few more (nautical) miles bringing the day's total to 13.

Submitted by jono on 08 Feb 2025.

The latitude of my last landing is similar to Lisbon, in Portugal. That’s about a third of the way down the coast of Honshu. I’m trying to go south, but currently going nowhere.

Since the beginning of the winter, winds have been blowing from the NW on to the Japan Sea coast. 9 out of 10 days are windy, with rough seas and a dangerous lee shore. The cloud base rarely lifts, and most days bring rain or snow.

Submitted by jono on 04 Feb 2025.

The exploratory mission in January allowed for 3 days of sailing. Days 1 had very light and unreliable wind. Day 2 a meagre headwind. Day 3 there was more breeze and a few good miles early, but then a thunderstorm with heavy headwinds and a building sea. My hands were too wet and cold to operate the phone (in it's wet case), which meant I had to pull-in when I reached a decent size port in order to make some navigational checks... and there I stayed because to continue was most uninviting.

Submitted by jono on 13 Nov 2024.

Team Effort

Recently, this solo round Japan journey has become a team effort. That started in Setana (in Hokkaido) where Shino-san and friends looked after me up until the crossing of the Tsugaru Strait. Then, since making landfall in Honshu, Yumiko has been following with a car and a tent and a big bowl for cooking hot food.