Mt. Takao has been registered as a Quasi-national park. Recently Mt. Takao has become very popular among foreign visitors, because it was rated with three stars in the Michelin Guidebook.
Mt. Takao is located in the western suburbs of Tokyo, a 50-minute train ride from the center of Tokyo. It is a week-end destination for Tokyo citizens to enjoy hiking,
cable car and lift rides, and to visit a big temple called Takao-san Yakuoin. What is better still, Mt. Takao is 599 meters above sea level, and the original nature, such as many kind of small animals like raccoons, squirrels, moles, bats, and variety of wild birds, is very well preserved. Walking in the primeval forests refreshes the citizens who are tired with busy daily life in the city. Especially in autumn, the change of the colors of foliage pleases our eyes. Personally speaking, my husband and I took our children hiking on this mountain several times when they were small.
The climate is quite different from the center of Tokyo, and the temperature there is about three degrees lower both in summer and in winter.
I attended a couple from America this winter. Though they are retirees, they are very fit and they dared to walk in the snow. They took the cable car up to the observatory which is on the middle point of the mountain.
Cable car |
They had to walk carefully on the icy snow on the steps to the observatory. I paid attention to whether I could push a wheelchair into the cable car or not, just in case.
Metal board for a wheelchair to get into the cable car |
This cable car runs on the steepest slope in Japan, so the body of the car itself has several steps on the floor. But I know I can stop the wheelchair on the flat part of the floor. The platform has many steps but beside these steps there is a slope for the wheelchair. When we went up to the observatory, we could command a wide view below our eyes, finding the Sky Tree (almost twice the height of Tokyo Tower) which will be open to the public this coming May. Unfortunately there was no slope to go up to the observatory, It started snowing again, so we quit walking up to the big temple, about 15-minute walk from the cable car station. There is a paved road to go up to the temple, and many people in wheelchairs go up along this road in spring and autumn. They can enjoy strolling in the nature.
After we got off the cable car, we enjoyed Japanese Tempura noodles in a cozy Japanese restaurant. Hot noodles after walking in the cold snow! All of us felt quite refreshed. There was a Trick Art Museum in front of the station, and the couple enjoyed it for more than one hour just like a boy and a girl. I'm glad to know they enjoyed their visit to Takao-san even in winter. At the same time I have become confident of a wheelchair trip to Mt. Takao in spring, summer and autumn, but not in winter.