To get to Aso we climbed over 2,000m in elevation in two days, over the slopes of Mount Kuyu and over the Aso caldera rim. The weather was turning increasingly rainy and grey.
Our first sightseeing stop was at the Aso Volcano Museum, which is as close to the mountain one can currently get.
Kumamoto has a beautiful 17th century castle that was seriously damaged during the 2016 earthquakes. Repair works are being undertaken but are estimated to take twenty years. Hard to imagine the planning, expertise, machinery, effort and financing this requires!
And of course another beautiful Japanese garden: Suizenji Koen in Kumamoto.
Takachiho gorge was formed by pyroclastic flows.
On the way back to Aso we visited the Takamori Yusui Tunnel Park. The National Railway planned to build a tunnel through the caldera. Two kilometres in, they hit an underground river and water came gushing out. They abandoned the project and converted the tunnel into a garden and art space.
Tree pruning taken to extremes......
...... and a well-looked-after private garden.
Sometimes they even have one with salmon roe!
More rain! The wet season has definitely started, as per predictions, right at the beginning of June! It’s time to get out of Kyushu!
Not a good day for a flat tyre! But at least we found a spot out of the rain and it’s only the second flat of the entire trip.
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