Sunday, 17 May 2026

Nakatsugawa

Momiji (Japanese Maple), our "house" for tonight

It was time to make tracks toward the starting point of our walk — the small post town of Nakatsugawa, gateway to one of Japan's most celebrated historic trails.

The Nakasendo — literally "the road through the mountains" — was one of five major highways connecting Edo (modern-day Tokyo) to Kyoto during the Edo period. Stretching some 530kms through the Japanese Alps, it was the inland alternative to the more famous Tokaido coastal route, favoured by feudal lords, merchants, and pilgrims who preferred mountains to sea. Along the way, 69 post towns grew up to service travellers, providing lodging, food, and rest. Today, the stretch between Magome and Tsumago is the most beautifully preserved of these, and Nakatsugawa, sitting just below Magome, has become the natural jumping-off point for walkers wanting to step back into Edo-era Japan. Which is exactly what we were about to do. But first...Don Quijote.

For this mission, the team willingly woke early and marched to the nearest store with the determination of seasoned bargain hunters. The Tokyo sun, however, had already chosen violence. Combined with intermittent sprinting to catch green pedestrian lights in an effort to maximise precious shopping time, Jays nearly perspired himself into expiration.

And then came the sensory overload.

There is truly nothing quite like wandering through the gloriously chaotic aisles of Don Quijote while Disney songs such as Let It Go blast enthusiastically in the background. Every aisle appeared to contain a completely unrelated category of brightly coloured products stacked floor to ceiling in what could only be described as organised confusion. Cosmetics next to Kit Kats. Suitcases beside vibrators. Snacks adjacent to household appliances and questionable novelty items. 

I showed remarkable restraint and purchased only a lightweight umbrella. The others demonstrated significantly less self-control.

Early breakfast

My kind of place. Solo booths to eat in peace!

Umm...best thing ever. Why is it not at more buffet stations!?

Complete with instructions

Coffee jelly

You cannot be in an Asian country without some sort of noodle station at the buffet

All our tickets neatly arranged by our travel agent

Only in Don Quijote. Soft toys next to adult toys...

Still a past time, looking at different KitKat flavours

Our second challenge for the day was navigating Tokyo Station - a vast, teeming organism that has reduced many a confident traveller to a bewildered standstill. Not us. Our thoroughly engineered buffer system proved its worth and we navigated the JR concourse, threaded through to the Shinkansen hub, and boarded with time to spare — ekiben, snacks and drinks in hand like seasoned professionals.

For those interested in the logistics:

We departed Tokyo Station on the 11:48 Nozomi 69 arriving Nagoya Station at 13:25. Unfortunately we did not have time to indulge in the regional specialty of friend chicken wings. Shame. 

At Nagoya Station, we transferred to the Shinano 15 bound for Nagano alighting at Nakatsugawa Station. Because this was Japan. We arrived on schedule at exactly 14:48.

One useful detail for travellers: the Tokyo to Nagoya Shinkansen included an oversized baggage area, which made life substantially easier with hiking luggage in tow. Be sure to purchase these seats if travelling with larger suitcases. At entry and exit gates, tickets for regional/local and shinkansen trains are inserted into the machine TOGETHER in a stack. No need to insert sequentially. The machines will keep the relevant tickets as required. 

JR Yamanote line. Tick.

Get to correct Shinkansen platform and find seats at the right carriage. Tick

Hello Shinkansen

Just like kids

My lunch

Once we arrived in Nakatsugawa, we caught a short five-minute taxi ride to our ryokan for the night, Nagataki. We were welcomed and taken around the property for an orientation. 

Nakatsugawa. Now modern but still quiet

Just to the left outside the station is the information centre 

With a small shop inside with some interesting products like sake ice-cream

As well as useful information such as bus timetables to Magome and Tsumago

Taxi stand right outside the station. Fare calculations are clearly marked.

The property consisted of several beautifully restored traditional buildings scattered throughout manicured gardens, all framed by mountains in the background. Each couple had their own little house. For the purposes of this trip, Fiona and I were now officially considered a couple.

Our tiny house was over 200 years old and felt like stepping directly into another era. Wooden beams, sliding paper doors, creaking floors and complete tranquility — exactly the sort of place that makes you immediately slow down and breathe differently.

At the entrance to the Ryokan


Our home tonight

Traditional entrance

Living room

A tea room

Corridor to the bathroom and toilet

A private bath 

Our yukatas and towels

Geta for outdoor use

She made tea for us

The dining room

Naturally, this was followed by obligatory onsen time.

Dinner was a multicourse feast accompanied by sake we had purchased along the way, followed later by a whisky and mochi afterparty at the Yoongs. To say we were happy would be an understatement. And the thing is, we hadn't even started hiking yet. This, I think, is what people mean when they say the journey itself is the adventure.

Time for onsen!






Cheers to good friends! We had a large dining room to ourselves

Matching tops in different colours heehee

This is when you know the alcohol has started to work its magic

No further comment

Our futons ready

There was certainly plenty of joy!

Saturday, 16 May 2026

Festival of Fifty – Chapter 4: Back to Asia

Time for the next chapter of the Festival of  Fifty, our slightly unhinged mission to celebrate turning 50 with adventures that feel equal parts meaningful, ridiculous and memorable.

This chapter takes us back to Japan with Malcolm swapped out for a group of girlfriends, plus the occasional husband tagging along for the ride...

The plan? Ten nights of fun with hiking, onsens, mountain towns, good food and, naturally, a detour to Tokyo Disney because apparently we believe in balance.

Our main goal for the trip was hiking a section of the historic Nakasendo Trail, walking from Nakatsugawa through beautifully preserved post towns to Narai-juku. After that, we’d continue on to Matsumoto and Takayama before looping back to Tokyo for a few days of Disney fun.

The trip had been booked almost a year earlier, so by the time departure day finally arrived, the excitement levels were high. We had organised the trip through a local travel agency which meant we could largely switch our brains off and let somebody else worry about itinerary, logistics, and transport tickets.

Despite the usual organised chaos at Sydney Airport, the lines moved surprisingly well and we still had enough time to relax in the Amex Lounge and catch up before boarding.

Transport 2 is away! Serena & Jay flew with Japan Airlines

The flight itself was pleasantly uneventful, exactly what you want from a long-haul flight. ANA’s legroom felt remarkably generous, particularly for economy, and before long we were descending into Haneda Airport. As much as 10 hours in the air flying economy felt long...it was infinitely better and a relief to have only a single flight to reach the end destination!

For those interested in the economy food offerings

Lunch was meat patty pictured above, or fried salmon with rice

Desert

Snack pack aka our dinner prior to landing

Arrival procedures were slightly confusing with the introduction of Visit Japan Web, Japan's attempt to part with its treasured love affair with paper. Passengers being funnelled in multiple directions at once depending on whether you had pre-registered or stuck with old school paper, but there were plenty of staff everywhere patiently redirecting travellers. Aside from one impressively sour-faced immigration officer who looked personally offended by our question of a passport stamp for the all important duty free shopping, the process was actually fast and relatively painless.

A comfortable private transfer whisked us into the city, and soon we arrived at the hotel with the longest name I have ever encountered - Mitsui Garden Hotel Shiodome Italia-gai.

Private transfer

Not bad size wise for a Japanese hotel room

Same for bathroom

Hot bath time

Clean, boiled and ready for tomorrow's adventure!

After checking in, we collected the package our travel agency had left for us — complete with transport passes and Disney tickets — grabbed the complimentary toothbrushes, dumped our bags and headed straight for the public bath.

Honestly, there are few better feelings after a long flight than sinking into a steaming hot bath. The warmth melted away the stiffness from hours in the air and felt like the perfect beginning to the trip — and excellent preparation for sleep.