Japan’s Bandai-Asahi National Park stuns in its contrasts
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Sep 8, 2021 • 5 min read
Bandai-Asahi National Park abounds in grandiose scenery © Yuki Yatsushima / Shutterstock
Bandai-Asahi National Park, stretching across Japan’s Tohoku and Hokuriku regions, is a fusion of the contrasting elements which underpin Japanese nature and culture.
A ritual of mountain worship that has been passed down for 1,400 years coincides with modern amenities like QR guides and visitor centers. The park is home to imposing mountain ranges and simmering volcanoes which rub shoulders with placid ponds, wildlife, and delicate flora. In the summer Bandai-Asahi glows in brilliant shades of emerald-green while birds chortle in the overhead boscage, yet it assumes a blank white canvas in the snowy winters becoming a silent if pristine world.
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Read on to find out more about the stunning contrasts of Bandai-Asahi National Park:
Nature on the Doorstep
Bandai-Asahi National Park straddles the border of three prefectures: Yamagata, Fukushima, and Niigata. So, while its rolling forests and lake-dotted parkland epitomize the bucolic nature of rural Japan, it’s also close to several of the major population centers in northern Honshu (Japan’s main island).
Fukushima City, capital of its namesake prefecture, is famous for its nihonshu (sake), peaches and apples, and the art of bonsai. Just over an hour by car from the city center, you’ll be at the foot of Mt. Bandai, which features many lakes and ponds formed by the 1888 eruption and collapse of the mountain.
Yonezawa in Yamagata Prefecture, a city of centuries-old onsen (hot spring) resorts, flirts with the borders of the national park. While the lively Niigata City, one of northern Japan’s largest metropolitan areas and home to the stone Bandai Bridge (designated as an Important Cultural Property in 2004), is less than two hours from the park by car. The six-arched, granite-sided bridge was constructed in 1929. Despite its name, it’s not related to Mt. Bandai, but it remains one of the most scenic spots in the city especially when illuminated come nightfall.
Mountains and Flowers
Whether it’s the spiritual peaks of Dewa Sanzan (the three mountains of Dewa), the volcanoes of the Bandai-Azuma district, or the non-volcanic Iide Mountains running along the spine of the three prefectural borders, Bandai-Asahi National Park abounds in grandiose scenery. Carving through the mountains in the Dewa Sanzan are well-defined hiking trails lined by Shinto shrines and spiritual iconography, all of which are accessible in spring and summer.
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Contrasting the dramatic mountain vistas are myriad species of flower; the kinds you might observe on poetic ukiyo-e woodblock art – a popular craft during the Edo Period (1603 – 1868).
In the north of Bandai-Asahi you’ll find
Fire and Water
Typically, fire and water don’t make the best of friends. But in the Urabandai section of Bandai-Asahi National Park they’ve combined to craft a rather striking landscape. Bandai-san’s steam and pyroclastic eruption of 1888 killed almost 500 people and rendered thousands more homeless. Simultaneously, the obliteration of the volcano’s conical wall and the rock avalanche and mudslide redirected rivers, hiding hundreds of square miles of forest under ponds. More than a century later, however, we can now appreciate this new topography via the park’s walking trails.
The Goshikinuma nature trail takes you past a series of colorful volcanic lakes each with its own distinct color, from one that’s a milky lime to another that’s a vivid shade of turquoise. The Rengenuma pond trail in Urabandai offers scintillating views of the collapsed Mt. Bandai, its sister peak Mt. Kushigamine, and the forested plateau below. Or you can tackle the about-20-mile running and cycling track which traces the perimeter of the largest lake in the Urabandai district, Lake Hibara.
Old Meets New
Bandai-Asahi National Park’s most historically significant region is Dewa Sanzan, composed of the mountains of Haguro-san (representing birth), Gas-san (representing death), and Yudono-san (representing rebirth). Even after about 1,400 years of Shugendo yamabushi (mountain monks) cleansing their souls by hiking this group of sacred peaks, pilgrims from near and far still come to pay their dues and give votive offerings to Dewa Sanzan’s numerous shrines and temples.
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Today there are fresh new ways to make a connection to these remarkable mountains, streamlined with modern conveniences. Three visitor centers in Bandai-Asahi National Park built in tasteful, yet environmentally appropriate styles are scattered around the park. Signposted QR codes in the Urabandai district give on-the-ground guidance and offer GPS services to help you navigate your forest sojourns. And there are also hotels inside Urabandai where you can sleep on nature’s doorstep, such as Kyukamura Urabandai which has become a popular workation spot.
The Changing of the Seasons
Bandai-Asahi National Park changes dramatically with the seasons. The provincial forests, verdant highlands, and moss-smothered walking trails are blanketed in snow when winter descends upon northern Japan. Much of the wild animals – including Asiatic black bears, squirrels, foxes, and migratory birds – either hibernate or make for warmer climes, leaving a motionless white landscape in their wake. The Goshikinuma nature trail provides some of the best color-clashing scenery in winter, where powdery tufts of snow surround the vivid colors of the extraterrestrial-looking ponds.
Winter also heralds the end of the national park’s summer outdoor activities – which include cycling, hiking and kayaking – paving the way for the several-month-long winter outdoor activity season. Alts Bandai, Inawashiro and Grandeco are among the most popular ski resorts in the Urabandai region, each of which caters to various inclinations and levels of ability. Snowshoe trekking and Japanese pond smelt fishing are also popular in Bandai-Asahi National Park in winter.
Carefully crafted collaboratively between Ministry of the Environment Government of Japan and Lonely Planet. Both parties provided research and curated content to produce this story. We disclose when information isn’t ours.
For more information, visit Bandai-Asahi National Park at the website of the National Parks of Japan
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This story was crafted collaboratively between Japan Ministry of the Environment and Lonely Planet. Both parties provided research and curated content to produce this story. We disclose when information isn’t ours.
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