このブログを検索:山名などキーワードを入れてください

2022-03-31

2022年3月30日 晴れ間の南港山 Rambling Mt. Nangang-shan of Taipei

南港公園から見る南港山 Nangang-shan viewed from Nangang park

自宅近くからでも望める南港山は、台北盆地の縁を構成する山である。一番近い登山口は、筆者自宅から約5㎞、歩いていける。台湾登山初期に多く訪れた場所である。その後、しばらく訪れることがなかったが、大雨の間欠に訪れた。人里すぐ近くなので、山道は四方八方に続いている。石畳の立派な官製山道もあれば、土の細い道もある。今回はどこを歩くか、大体の地域は決めていたが、その後は実際の状況に応じて適宜変更し、4,5時間の枠内で歩き終えて下山する、という歩き方である。南港山は今までの経験で地理的な条件や道についてわかっていたので、こうした歩きかたでも問題ないことが前提である。

季節が変わりはじめ、台湾北部でもよい天気が現れているが、一方寒の戻りとでもいう東北季節風が吹くと、湿った空気と衝突し、雨を降らせる。ここ二、三日大雨がふった。そして、すぐ訪れる清明節(墓参節)連休の際にも雨が予報されている。そこで、その合間に近場の山歩き、といことだ。結果として、天気は最後にちょっと雨がぱらついたが、良い天気のもと、昼少しすぎには下山した。

第2岩壁路 #2 rocky route (2015年)

数年前によく訪れた、南港山稜線北側の岩場ルートは、台北市政府によって封鎖され、ロープやアルミ梯子などすべて取り外されていた。そのため、ここは通ることができなかった。台北市のこのような対応は、不適切と思う。ことの起こりは、このルートで死亡事故があったことである。現場にいたわけではないので、事故発生については語れないが、その背後にある誰がリスクをとるのか、という認識において台北市民は、本人ではなく市政府にある、という考えが多いことがその背景だろう。登山は、簡単なハイキングでも、血管系持病などがある人は登山中に問題があることもある。道を歩いていても、車にひかれるリスクはある。様々な行動には、命や財産などに対するリスクが伴う。筆者はリスクはその行動によって利益などを得る本人が、最終的に負うべきだと考える。リクリエーションで岩場を登るのは、それを完成することで本人の達成感などを得るためだ。技術が未熟、悪天候など、本人がリスクを勘案し行動することが前提だ。強制されたのでなく、自主的に岩場に挑みその結果遭難した場合は、本人のリスク判断の結果であって、その道を閉鎖しなかった市政府の責任ではない。死亡された不幸は、同じ登山家として同情にに値するが、その責任は市政府ではなく本人にあると考える。

-----------------------------------------

Mt. Nangang-shan (南港山) is a very familiar mountain to citizens of Taipei, including myself. The peaks and their valleys located east of the Taipei basin are collectively called Nangang-shan. Of course there is a single peak called Nangang-shan.  At some of spots not far from my home without tall buildings like open streets, Nangang-shan shows its terrain not afar. This is also  one of the places where I first stared regular hikes more than ten years ago. Since then I have been to it many times trying its various routes ant trails. In a few years I seemingly exhausted all major routes of it and hardly visited it again.

Start from Nangang park

It is often said that mountains are always there. It is true. After a couple of rainy days I decided to go there and ramble for a few hours on a fine day. I just decided a place to start a hike and a general direction, but not a particular route to follow. So this was a hike that I would decide at a junction which way to go on the spot. I placed my hiking schedule on the Taipei Hiker Club page of Facebook. It toured out that twelve friends showed up at MRT Kunyang station (昆陽站) of our starting point.

All members at Jiuwufeng peak
Climbing #2 rock route (Feb. 2015)
The cross section of Nangang-shan is asymmetrical. The mountain range runs in the direction of northeast to southwest. The north side shows very steep slopes, particularly near the ridge line, while the south side goes moderately down to its foot. There are five routes on the north side just under the ridge trail that include very steep, nearly vertical, rocky sections. They were popular among adventurous hikers. A few years ago, a hiker slipped down and died while climbing one of the routes. The Taipei municipal government which is responsible for maintaining the trails of Nangang-shan sealed off all those routes. There was another fatal accident a year ago. The government this time cut all ropes and removed other safety measures of the routes besides placing sign posts at the trail heads.


This is a controversy among hikers. Sone claim that in order to prevent such a tragic accident to happen again this is reasonable and support the government's measure, Some say that this deprives hikers of freedom of hiking and disagree this kind of banning. I myself see this is a matter of risk taking. The government should not intervene this matter and let hikers decide whether or not to climb these routes. The authority was under pressure of voices that they were not careful enough to prevent accidents and they naturally came to this conclusion.

#3 route (Feb. 2015)

I am of an opinion that the government should not be blamed for this kind of risky business. Any action involves risks. When you drive a car, for instance, you face a risk of accidents, like being collided with other cars or hitting pedestrians. The one to take responsibility is the one who gets benefits or rewards of that risky action. Drivers get benefit of convenience by driving a car. If an accident happens due to their careless drive then they are the one to blame. Hikers climbing these routes get rewards like a sense of accomplishment when they complete their climb. They should be the one to take an ultimate result of the risk. They are supposed to make a risk assessment by taking into consideration their physical fitness, climbing skills and other factors before climbing. I sympathize that those unfortunate hikers ended their lives in a such way. Nonetheless the responsibility of their death lies on themselves, not the city government,  if they made the decision on their free will.

----------------------------------------

Renovated houses of Songshan snatorium

When I step out of the machine gate of MRT Kunyang station at ten to 8:00, a few friends are already there. A few more friends come up and 13 of us set out a little after 8:00. Our first destination is Nangang park  (南港公園). It lies at the northern foot of Mt. Nangang-shan. Crossing the busy Zhongxiao east road (忠孝東路), we walk through a residential block. Recently renovated Japanese style houses show up as we proceed. They are houses of Songshan sanatorium (松山療養所) established in the 1910s. One of the houses, now called Jingxin yuan (靜心苑) , was a dormitory of the sanatorium superintendent and now serves as a restaurant. This location was very remote at that time. Now tall residential buildings surround the houses.

At the main gate of Nangang park
Wide meadow and Nangang-shan 
Fude street
We follow Dongxin-jie street (東新街) to come to the Nangang park main entrance with a tall Chinese style gate. This is my first visit to the park. It is pretty spacious and impressive. A wide  gateway leads to a large open meadow, beyond which Nangang-shan stands behind rows of residential buildings. A large pond lies besides the meadow and a walkway goes along it, which we follow to the other entrance of the park. Getting out of the park, we follow Fude-jie street (福德街). At the corner of Fude primary school (福德國小). we take a left turn to head for the Hushan nature trail (虎山自然步道). A little ascent brings us to the trail head at 8:42.

Sishou civic forest sign
Selling vegetable by the trail
Summit of Zhongpo-shan
By a large red sign saying Sishou-shan civic forest (四獸山市民森林) two stone paved trails begin, the right one going along the stream and the left one going up along a ridge. I walked both of them a long time ago. Except a new sign they look the same as before. We take the left trail and go up. It passes by a shop which sells vegetable that must have been picked up by local farmers this morning. A several-minute climb brings us to a junction. We take left and keep going up. The trail turns left and gets out of the woods. It soon splits into two and we take a left trail up to the summit of Mt. Zhongpo-shan (中坡山, elevation 110m).

Wide platform
Notice of fire fly activities attached the direction sign
We go back along the same path and go up a little further. It leads us up to a large platform. It looks like an abandoned house and its adjacent courtyard. On a mountain very near to residential areas like this often finds such man-made objects and remains. We get down to the original stone paved Hu-shan trail though a yard of Taiji-juan (太極拳) lessons, which lies beneath the platform. We follow the trail up for a few minutes to a rest shelter at 9:14 and have a break. A nearby signboard shows a notice of fire fly observation activities coming soon.

Stone tiger by the trail

Passing a bridge

A trail traversing the mountain side diverges to the right and we follow it. It passes a bridge just below Zhenshangong (鎮山宮) temple. It comes to an observation deck. Trees are tall and the view is limited from there, yet you see Yanming-shan (陽明山) mountain range and many buildings in front. We return to the Hu-shan trail and keep going further up. At a junction we take right and go along a traversing trail for a while to see a steep stone step trail branching up on the left side. We take this trail up to a garden with a few small houses called Huangchan-yuan (黃蟬園) at 9:41. We step inside the garden and have a break.

A view towards Yangming-shan
Climbing a steep section to Huangchan-yan
Gate of Huangchan-yuan

According to a notice attached to the gate pillar, this little garden perched on the steep hillside was built by a professor named Mr. Yi. He brought unused furniture or other stuff up to here and created this garden for all hikers to have rest. Mr. Yi passed away in 2018 but this endeavor has since been succeeded by his fellow volunteers. The land belongs to another person Mr. Gao, but he is generous to let this piece of land be occupied by the garden. 

Inside one of the houses
Junction on the ridge trail
Vista from the ridge trail
Rock route #1 already sealed
The yet steep trail goes up to a junction on the ridge, which we reach at 10:00. We take right. The official paved stone trail is going on the ridge. We come to a junction of rock climbing route #1 at 10:09. I go down a little only to find a rope at the rock section has been completely removed. It may be possible to come up but it could be dangerous to go down without help of ropes. So giving up this route down to a traversing trail just under the ridge, we continue our way up on the official trail. A resting spot just under Jiuwufeng peak (九五峰) shows up at 10:19. The rock climbing route #2 comes up here, but it met the same fate as the #1.

Resting just below Jiuwufeng peak, #2 rock route opens here

After a short rest we continue our way up for a few minutes to reach the summit of Jiuwufeng (elev. 375m). From the big rock with a large engraved peak name, you can have a wide vista of the whole Taipei metropolitan area. Beyond the conspicuous 101 building lies Mt. Guanyin-shan, which is very curiously covered with clouds. It seems that clouds over the ocean is advancing towards the Taipei basin.

Panorama from Jiuwufeng peak, note Guanyin-shan in far distance

The head of #5 rock route
On our way down we pass by the peak of Nangang-shan (elev. 374m) and three more heads of rock climbing routes, all of which met the same fate as #1 and #2 except #5 with a less degree of damage. So we cannot go down to the traversing trail. We keep our way down and stop over at Mt. Muzhi-shan (拇指山, elev. 313m).  Despite under clouding sky, the 360 degree of panorama is still visible. The distant view is rather fuzzy now, like Guanyin-shan is covered with advancing clouds and no longer discernible. Getting down to a junction below at 11:25, we have a lunch break. Several squirrels are busy running around us and many hikers are coming and going by.

Eastward panorama from Muzhi-shan summit
Cloud advancing from the ocean to Taipei basin
Squirrels are very active
Going along the traversing trail
We spend a half hour for lunch and set out for our final leg at 12:00. A dirt trail opens its head on the right side of the trail and we take this trail. Compared with the official paved trail, this one is much primitive though pretty clear. Rain of last couple of days soaked the soil, which now flows out of it and runs down along the trail. It traverses the west side of Nangang-shan south peak with a little ups and downs. We finally reach a flat area with a rest shelter at 12:09. If the rock climbing routes were OK, we could have come here to have lunch, which is much secluded.

Reaching a resting shelter
Baoshanxi trail
We feel drops of rain by now and hurry our further way down. This section of trail is pretty good like concrete pavement and hand rails all the way though much less travelled. We hit the official trail again in 10 minutes and take a right dirt trail down to Lingyin-si temple (靈隱寺). Baoshan-xi trail (豹山溪步道) starts just below the gate of the temple. It goes along the Baoshan-xi creek, which gets very narrow and deep like a gorge at one point. The walls of mountain open up again at 12:39 where a rest shelter stands. We have a final rest under the roof with beer!

Coming out of the gorge
Yongchunpi Wetland park
Retusus (流蘇) in full bloom
We get down to Yongchunpi wetland park (永春埤生態濕池公園) and come out onto Fude road at 13:09. A #88 bus just comes by and I catch it with a hurried goodbye to friends, which gets me home in about a half hour. Nangangshan is indeed very close!!

We ended up hiking for 5 hours with a lot of rest. The distance was 7.6km with a total ascent of 397 meters and descent 439 meters. The route physical index was a mere 16, an easy hike after all.


2022-03-26

2022年3月21日 台北雙溪山 - 梅花山 - 金明山 - 北港山 Hiking of nearby Taipei peaks via newly opened trails

北港山から下ってきた山々を望む From Mt. Beigang-shan peak looking at those peaks we just came over

台北の街の北東部、故宮博物館のさらに奥の山から隣の新北市汐止區へと連なる山々は、今まで何度が訪れている。今回の山行の前半は、初めて訪れるピークもあるが、後半分水嶺を越えた後の峰々は、ほぼ同じルートを登りにとったことがある。再度訪れた主な目的は、最近整理された道を歩き、これらの山を登ることにある。同じ山でも、ルートが違う、或いは登りか下りにとるかで、また別の側面が見える。それが面白い。

台湾近郊の山は、日本でいう里山的な存在でもある。その山は近くの住人の生活の糧である。今は山を下りて都会に移住した集落もあるが、いまだに暮らす人々もいる。こうした人たちの畑でありまた森である。今回のルート中、歩き始めてすぐに800段といわれる石段を登ったが、これはその昔、日ごろの山での作業に通うため、地元住民が資金を投じて造ったものだという。その後ほとんど歩かれず、草に埋もれていたが藍天隊によって整理された。また、山を越えて汐止側に入った後は、最近聯合艦隊ボランティアグループによって整理された道や、新たに開かれた山道を歩いた。

地元民による石段道 Stone step path built by local people

ルートとしては、至善路の聖人瀑布バス亭から歩きはじめ、上記の階段道をへて雙溪山,梅花山西峰,梅花山,車坪寮崙,火燒坪山,柯子林山,金明山そして北港山を越えて、拱北殿へと下った。標高としては最高でも600m台だが、上り下りがあるのでそれほど楽でもない。台北から近い場所だが、誰でも知っているようなルートではない。今回は英語で記述します。

------------------------------------

Mountains and hills adjacent to the metropolitan Taipei are the place where local people have been making living in the past and even present days. As the city limit expanded to mountains, the boundary between the urban and the rural got blurry. Housing complexes have been elected on the side or even the top of mountains. Mountains have been engulfed by the wave of urbanization. Yet even today in this trend, you can find spots seemingly far from urbanization. If you step into the inner locations of Neishuangxi (內雙溪)  of Taipei, you find ancient stone steps and bridges or even houses made of stones. This place belongs to the same Shilin district (士林區), which includes such bustling locations like Shilin night market and dense residential housing, presenting a stark contrast.

From north west to south east

The location of this trip is just a such spot. As soon as we started our hike, we came across a long stone steps that was built by local people to access their firm fields. This nice path was recently brought into attention by Lantiandui (藍天隊) volunteer hikers when they made clearing job on it. If you go further up the valley of Neishuangxi you will find more of their terrace fields on the slope of mountains. You can make a nice escape from the city only after a half hour ride of a bus.

All members at Huoshaoping-shan summit

I have visited Neishuangxi many times yet it still keeps my interest alive. The path of ancient stone steps drew my attention this time. So I planed this trip. There are a few more attractions on the side of Neishuangxi before going over the ridge of mountain to Xizhi side (汐止). like Mt. Shuangxi-shan (雙溪山) and Mt. Meishua-shan west peak (梅花山西峰), which we visited on our way up. Hitting the ridge we went down the other side along the trails that we made a way up two years ago. The Allied volunteer hikers (聯合艦隊) has lately been working on trails in the norther Xizhi area. They even opened a new hiking path from Mt. Jinming-shan (金明山) to connect the trail head of Mt. Beigang-shan (北港山). You had to walk a public paved road to link the two peaks in the past. The weather was wet in the morning but it turned out sunny as we progressed, which made this hike very enjoyable at the end.

------------------------------------

Setting off from Shengren waterfall bus stop

When I got up at 5:40 in the morning, I was surprised to find it was raining. The weather forecast the night before said that it would be a fine day. I checked the latest weather information. The radar chart showed the could covered the northern Taiwan. I wondered whether we should go as scheduled. After a study and contemplation, I decided to go and told my friends so.

Wanshan store
Stone bridge
Now at Jiantan station (劍潭站), we are waiting for our Xiao 18 bus (小18) which is scheduled to leave at 7:30. Despite no rain, the sky is dark and overcast. No mountains are visible from here, which stand in the north if the weather is clear. The bus comes on time. Passengers are not so many when we leave Jiantan. It picks up more passengers on the way to full. It then let passengers alight. By the time we pass Gugong National Palace Museum (故宮博物院) there are not so many passengers besides us. We reach Sengren pubu bus stop (聖人瀑布站) at 8:07.

Take the left trail
A long stepped path
The roads are wet. I even feel droplets. I wonder whether we should have cancelled this hike. With a hope of better weather, we set off 8:24. We soon pass a store called Wanshan (萬山商店) and find a long path of stone steps with a stainless steel handrail. This is one the we take to go up. The steps lead to a junction with a stone bridge just besides. We take one leading to a stone house on the left, which soon splits into two. The left one looks rather desolate but recently maintained. There is no direction signs nor markers, but this should be it. It soon proves right.

Moss and dirt covered trail
Trail head of Mt. Shuangxi-shan
According to Lantiandui Mr. Jiang, this is a path built by the local people for accessing their farms and originally had 1200 steps. Now it has been cut back to 800 to a public road above. The construction should have cost a sizable money, which indicates how important this path was. We usually hate steps, but this one is special. Fallen tree trunks on the path and thick sediment of covering soil means that it has long been abandoned. It takes us a little more than ten minutes to reach its top.

Summit of Shuangxi-shan
Head of trail we take for Mt. Meihua-shan
We take left on a public paved road and pass a trail head going down on our left and one going up to Mt. Meihua-shan west peak on our right. A trail to the summit of Mt. Shuangxi-shan opens its mouth on our left at 8:54. We go up along the trail for five minutes to reach the tree-encircled summit (elevation 439 meters). Going down the same trail back, we take another trail across the public road. A direction sign shows the date of Mar 16 2022, just a week ago. A steep trail goes in a forest of thin trees and the forest bed has little undergrowth. 

At the summit of Meihua-shan west peak
Passing a overhung big rock
At 9:25 the trail meets another one from left and goes flat to our right, which soon comes to another junction. We take a right trail up to the summit of Mt. Meihua-shan west peak (elev. 517m) and back again to the junction. The trail going up which we take is pretty steep and meets Shuangxigou (雙溪溝) old trail running alongside the mountain slope at 9:49. Our trail crosses the old trail and keeps ascending, which is a newly opened one directly leads to the summit of Mt. Meihua-shan (梅花山).  Passing a large rock we reach the summit (elev. 640 m) at 10:00  This is the highest peak of the day.

Summit of Mt. Meihua-shan
Junction with the Taipei Grand Trail
Sea of cloud fills the valley
Xingcheng coffee shop terrace garden
We soon meet the Grand Taipei Trail and go down to Xiwan road (汐萬路). The public road soon meets a road coming up from right. Sea of cloud spreads beyond the right side road, which is rather rare for such low altitude mountains. A terrace of Xingcheng coffee (星城咖啡) shop is built on a hump by the junction. We go up to it for rest. This shop is open for business only for holidays. A member tells that even on a business day, this place is open for anybody. This is a nice vantage point, but we can only see cloud today. 

Gate of the cemetery, take right road to the trail head
Trail head at the corner of grave yard
We get down to the public road and take a right road leading the Wuzhishan military cemetery. It splits into two roads and we take the right one. A section of cemetery shows up in front. Our trail down starts at the bottom edge of the grave yard. We came up to this place from Gonbeidian temple (拱北殿) two years ago. We go down all the way down to Gombeidian today instead. The trail gets steep soon and passes a little open field where sun shines on us. The weather has turned fine! We further go down in woods to find a junction to Mt. Chepingliaolun (車坪寮崙). We follow the trail to it and at 10:54 reach a open circle with a stone marker (elve. 560m) at its center.


Chepingliaolun
Returning to the junction we keep on our descent and reach Xiwan road at 11:12. Our dirt trail opens its mouth diagonally across the road. It keeps downhill for a while and goes up again to pass under a tall electric transmission tower. It soon meets a trail from right and gets to the summit of Mt. Huoshaoping-shan (火燒坪山 elev. 460) at 11:19. The volunteers cut out vegetation around the summit, which now allows a view toward Mt. Wuzhi-shan (五指山)  We have lunch break under trees besides the summit.

Get down onto Xiwan road
Summit of Huoshaoping-shan
Steep trail down from Huoashaoping-shan
The trail from the summit gets steep. A long ropes are attached for the enter length of the steep downhill. At 12:07 we hit the lowest point before climbing back to Mt. Kezilin-shan (柯子林山). The ascending trail passes a rocky gap and gets onto the ridge line. We follow the ridge trail right to reach the summit of Kezilin-shan (elev. 382m) at 12:18. The ridge trail passes under a overhung rock and leads us to the rocky summit of Mt. Jingming-shan (金明山, 392m) with no marker stone. Unlike the adjacent Kezlin-shan, which is in woods, this peak is free of surrounding trees towards east. Mt. Xin-shan (新山, elev. 499m) stands high across a valley.

Summit of Kezilin-shan
View towards Xin-shan from the summit of Jingming-shan
Newly opened ridge trail
Crossing a stream
I have been to Mt. Jingming-shan couple times in the past. We  climbed from the Xiwan road to the summit. Now we have another path avoiding to walk along the paved road to connect our next peak, Mt. Beigang-shan. Hikers usually do not like to walk along paved roads, particularly with traffic. So volunteer hikers opened a new trail recently. The new trail begins just beneath the summit and follows the ridge extending down to south. It goes steeply down with a long aiding ropes. It passes a section with little tall trees where you see Mt. Beigang-shan stands in a distance. It reaches the lowest point at 13:08. We cross a small stream and climb back to a paved road. We then walk cross the road and get onto a dirt trail again for Beigang-shan, along which we go up for a while to a spot of rest at 13:30. It is in the shade of trees and a gentle breeze occasionally flows through,

Climbing back to Mt. Beigang-shan, Jingming-shan behind

Last climb will soon be over
The last long uphill lasts about a half hour and leads us to the summit of Beigang-shan.(elev. 271m). The northern side of the summit is clear of vegetation, allowing a wide vista of Wuzhi-shan and its wide slope and sub ridges. The electric tower near Mt. Huoshaoliao-shan and the peaks of Mt. Jingming-shan, both of which we just walked over, are visible. This kind of view that shows your footprints gives you a feeling of accomplishment. We have a rather long break of twenty-five minutes with beer and leave the summit at 14:30.

Beigang-shan summit
Going down from Beigang-shan
The final leg of our hike is to walk down along the ridge stretching to Gonbeidian temple. The trail follows the ridge while diverging a trail to left at two separate junctions,. It goes rather steeply down for a while and turns gentler. Passing by a big rock we come to a junction where stone paved paths begins. The right one goes up to a small hill and the left one traverses the hillside. We take left and comes to a resting place with benches and tables, where we have a final break at 15:00. Gnbenidian is known for its colored leaves in autumn. At this time of a year, all leaves are green.

Last junction near Gongbeidian temple
Gongbeidian temple on the hilltop
Gongbeidian bus stop
Having another beer break of twenty minutes we go down to the temple buildings and further down along a paved road to a bus stop nearby. We reach there at 15:34. A #896 bus bound for Nangang station (南港站) comes in about 10 minutes, by which we reach Nangang at 16:34. Our hike covered 10.6 kilometers with a total ascent of 658 meters and descent 830 for seven hours and twenty minutes. The route physical index is 24.