We are going to night-climb Fuji-san the last weekend in May (off-season). We are preparing climbing-crampons as we are expecting snow / ice condions.
I read from several sources that transportation is limited during this time of the year (Tokyo to Kawaguchiko). We are planning to take a taxi / private car instead.
What are your experience with off-season (May/ June) night climbs? How many climbers are on their way and is the route (ice / snow) marked?
Landing in Narita around 2pm, caught bus to Shinjuku, then 2 trains to Kawaguchiko by 8pm. We started at station 5 around 10pm after getting dropped off by a very hospitible local climber. Many cars and beaming headlamps -always a good sign. Averaged stations 6, 7, 8 each in about an hours time at an average pace. No rain, mist or winds to speak of and a comfortable yet brisk temperature to sweat in. Climbing partner fell backwards once and was feeling effects of altitude when we came across a 3000meter bunk hut. After hot Japanese tea and a toast off, I climbed into thinner air while he decided to rent a room at 6,500 yen. Lots of stars to gaze at above bellowing clouds. Lots of climbers bottle-necking as dusk approached. 1 1/2 hrs for stations 9 and 10 each, then reached a windy crater rim (30kts). 1hr walk circumnavigating top to see sunrise at 05:20am from highest point: an abondoned weather station opposite station 10. 2hrs back down to station 8 to wake sleeping comrade, then another 2hrs to trailhead parking lot. Caught bus at 11:30 to Kawaguchiko for our suitcases.
Beautiful crisp pre-dawn start on solid packed snow to summit. We had the summit to ourselves and did the circuit of the crater. We got 'lost' on the way down and had to rely on GPS to find our way back to starting point. We luckily managed to jump on a tourist bus on the way down which is rare in the off season.
bgratias - Aug 15, 2008 1:14 am Date Climbed: Sep 15, 2007
Harder than I thought
After two weeks at sea, we climbed Fuji overnight without food or water. We made it, but will be sure to prepare better next time.
Quadaxial - Aug 7, 2008 6:00 pm Date Climbed: Jul 8, 2008
Fujinomiya Route - South Side
Summited on July 8 via the south route, Fujinomiya. It was still early in the official climbing season and the south route was sparse with hikers which made for an enjoyable experience. The time estimates in the brochures are not markers for the avid athlete - it can be done in 5 hours or less - there was even a team of runners doing laps around the crater at the top! Beautiful Classic Climb!
Fuji-san in winter was a bitter cold experience! I arrived late in the afternoon at Kawaguchi-ko fifth station and reached the crater at 1 or 2 AM. There was a lot of snow on the western slope whereas the eastern slope was almost void of snow I used crampons from an altitude of around 2800 m.Winds were strong and I have never felt so cold before. Conditions here were harsher than on either Elbrus or Damavand. The hardest part for me was the altitude - going from sea level to almost 4000 m it made itself felt! Nevertheless I have no regrets and I'd gladly go there again even in winter albeit better prepared!
friday - Nov 15, 2007 5:07 pm Date Climbed: Aug 16, 2007
First Mountain Climb Ever
After 37 years of life, this was my first mountain. I chose this mountain actually as a way to kill time instead of going to my in-laws house in Okinawa, where my wife is from. At the time, I approached this climb as another exercise session, in addition to my daily running and biking sessions. But, it turned out to be so much more than that, physically and spiritually. It also taught me a big lesson about higher altitudes and clothing.
After a 12 hour flight from Chicago, and two bus rides later, I arrived at the normal tourist starting spot, the 5th station of Kawaguchiko. I arrived about 7:45PM and started climbing in the dark at around 8:15PM or so. After reaching each station and taking a few breaks, I summited around 12:30. After not having much sleep, I took a nap on a door of a summit shop that was still closed.
This is where Fuji-San taught me a lesson. Since Tokyo was sweltering in 95'F heat, I thought just a single layer of pants (my marmot precip) and a light jacket would be enough for the summit. Wrong. I woke up after two hours of sleep shivering from the 35'F temperatures that were only made worse by a howling wind. The only thing I could do to keep warm was to descend a few hundred feet and find shelter behind a large overhang.
After two hours behind this shelter, and seeing the sun start to come up, I summited again to watch the sun pop up from behind the horizon. At this point, I felt a huge overwhelming feeling of warmth. Overlooking the cities below, feeling the fresh mountain air, and taking it all in, I realized this was something I've always wanted to do my whole life, but somehow became lost along the way. Now, the addiction to mountain climbing has started.
In two years, I plan to come back and start from Fujiyoshida, from the temple far below.
HeyItsBen - Nov 12, 2007 3:08 pm Date Climbed: Nov 9, 2007
Route climbed: Kawaguchi-go
Did the climb in bad weather, but had to do it while I was there. 100 ft visibility at the top, high wind, and bitter cold made for quite an experience. Never even really saw the mountain...
Took a day off from a scientific meeting to climb Fuji-San. Hard to find my boot size in Tokyo, much giggling from sales women. Arriving at the trail head joined forces with three English-speaking Japanese (two high-school girls and a businessman). Had a most enjoyable climb in beautiful weather, nice sunrise and view of the Pacific. Many people on the route, though.
Not sure about the date, it might have been December 1994. Hiking to the summit was no problem, but on the way down I took a wrong turn and got lost. It was getting dark, and I didn't have warm clothes, bivy bag, or headlamp. Luckily, I found a mountain hut where I could stay for about $50. The next day, I had to hike part-way back up the mountain to get to the main trail.
Took a taxi in 0 visibilty fog up to the 5th station at midnight. From there we climbed up through heavy fog and constant rain. At about 5:30am we got to about 1k ft away from the summit. After 30 minutes and 90+ mph winds we descended back down to the 5th station. On the taxi ride back, our driver said that there had been a typhoon. What a wild time. Kamisama no kaze wa tsuyosugita.
atavist - Nov 13, 2006 7:35 am Date Climbed: Dec 25, 2006
How to have an epic on the most climbed mountain in the world
This mountain is not as pretty when you're standing on it as when you are 50 miles away. For me, its grandeur was eroding just like its rubble hewn scree fields. By late December, there still wasn't much snow. And at this time of year there is no public transport up to the usual tourist trailhead. I had to hike all the way from Kawaguchiko train station. I wasn't in the mood for paying $50+ for a taxi to shortcut my FujiZen experience. It was so cold; I should have brought my Feathered Friends. Anyway, I ended up getting stranded on the summit overnight (80mph winds and -20C). Unfortunately my camp gear was several thousand feet below. Needless to say, I got frostbite in my toes and after limping down the mountain (all the way back to Kawaguchiko because don't even think about hitchhiking in Japan, even if you have swollen blistered feet) I couldn't walk for 5 days.
derekp62 - Nov 7, 2006 5:57 pm Date Climbed: Sep 26, 2006
Leveraging a biz trip!
I spent the week in Japan on business and after a nice long day at work on a Friday I caught a bus to Kawaguchi-ko and on to Station five. We picked of a few supplies at the Unjyo-kaku store and headed up the mountain by about 9:30pm. We climbed up out of a near white out fog into a crisp clear night sky for a fantastic evening of climbing. Arrived at the summit just after sunrise. Traffic near the stop slows progress to a crawl. Staying awake was the hardest part of the climb! Should have stopped and taken a break. Instead we pushed through to the top and then home by 3pm the next day.
tjbst47 - Nov 1, 2006 6:23 pm Date Climbed: Oct 29, 2006
autumn ascent
Needed crampons above 3200 m, 7th station hut was open because they were doing construction, took the route from Kawaguchi-ko
Thomas Gurviez - Oct 31, 2006 9:43 am Date Climbed: Oct 31, 2006
from Gogume in 4h30mn round trip
1 day round trip from Tokyo, bus at 7h10 from Shinjuku, arrival at Gogume (fifth stqtion) at 10h30mn. In spite of my efforts, the last bus at 2:30 pm was too early for me (4h30mn round trip ascent, 2h30 mn for the going-up), but hitch-hiking allowed me to avoid to walk down to Kawaguchi-ko bus station.
Sunny but pretty cold because of the strong winds at the top. As a matter of fact, snow was icy beginning at 3200 m and I had to put my crampons.
No more than 2 or 3 climbers met
Route Climbed: Kawaguchiko (from Lake Kawaguchiko) Date Climbed: July 2nd 2005
Had only one day to spend on hiking Fuji, and reached the summit within 12 hours of landing in Tokyo. I took regular trains and started hiking from Lake Kawaguchiko, which is at ~800m. (The fifth station, from where 97% start is at 2300m - halfway up the 3800m mountain.) The lower part is quite nice through slightly mysty forrest, had noodles in a small joint at the 1st station. Hiking/running from the lake took about 6 hours (the last 1h20 with cramps in both quads), summiting at sunset. Sleeping outside was very cold, but the sun-rise well worth waiting for. Going down, at 5th station, a taxi arrived with two hikers, wanted some silly 10kyen for taking me back to the train station, but then realised he had to drive down anyway, and took me down for 540yen.
Nyle Walton - Aug 20, 2005 11:29 am Date Climbed: Jul 10, 1961
Route Climbed: From Gotemba Railway Station.
Philip Michael DeSemlyen and I detrained in Gotemba on our way from Kyoto to Tokyo, the last leg of our journey across Asia from Istanbul. I recall that we took a bus from the railway station to a point well up on the mountain and proceeded to climb all night to reach the crater at dawn where we observed the sunrise along with a horde of white-clad Japanese. Through the morning we circumvented the crater, pausing only to investigate a number of souvenir stands and tea houses. We then descended in long sandy strides back down to the road and Gotemba and caught a train to Tokyo where I remained for two years, teaching English to make a comfortable living while eating sushi, drinking beer and playing pachinko. All these activities were inexpensive back then for the almighty gaijin in the two decades before the 1970s when the dollar dropped and life for the gaijin in Japan became prohibitively expensive.
Route Climbed: Kawaguchiko - Gogome Date Climbed: 14 July 2005
Excellent climb. Started out from 5th Station at 11:30am, in mild conditions. However, temperature dropped about 30 degrees F between 8th Station and summit - went from synthetic Tshirt to sweatshirt and jacket in the last hour and was still cold at the top! Unfortunately, summit was very cloudy (2:30pm) - couldn't even see into the crater... but, had good views during the ascent and descent. Path down allows for very rapid descent and easy on the knees - but requires you stop and empty your shoes 3-4 times. Roundtrip took just under 5 hours - in time to wash up and catch the 5pm bus out.
Was expecting hundreds of people, but I'd estimate a max of 50 climbers on the mountain that afternoon - most on the lower half.
markusluft - May 19, 2009 6:19 am
Night-climb in May09Hello all,
We are going to night-climb Fuji-san the last weekend in May (off-season). We are preparing climbing-crampons as we are expecting snow / ice condions.
I read from several sources that transportation is limited during this time of the year (Tokyo to Kawaguchiko). We are planning to take a taxi / private car instead.
What are your experience with off-season (May/ June) night climbs? How many climbers are on their way and is the route (ice / snow) marked?
Thanks a lot in advance for any feedback!
Cheers,
Markus
ericd - Sep 28, 2008 9:37 pm Date Climbed: Sep 21, 2008
Direct from NaritaLanding in Narita around 2pm, caught bus to Shinjuku, then 2 trains to Kawaguchiko by 8pm. We started at station 5 around 10pm after getting dropped off by a very hospitible local climber. Many cars and beaming headlamps -always a good sign. Averaged stations 6, 7, 8 each in about an hours time at an average pace. No rain, mist or winds to speak of and a comfortable yet brisk temperature to sweat in. Climbing partner fell backwards once and was feeling effects of altitude when we came across a 3000meter bunk hut. After hot Japanese tea and a toast off, I climbed into thinner air while he decided to rent a room at 6,500 yen. Lots of stars to gaze at above bellowing clouds. Lots of climbers bottle-necking as dusk approached. 1 1/2 hrs for stations 9 and 10 each, then reached a windy crater rim (30kts). 1hr walk circumnavigating top to see sunrise at 05:20am from highest point: an abondoned weather station opposite station 10. 2hrs back down to station 8 to wake sleeping comrade, then another 2hrs to trailhead parking lot. Caught bus at 11:30 to Kawaguchiko for our suitcases.
radson - Aug 20, 2008 5:18 am
Spring ClimbingBeautiful crisp pre-dawn start on solid packed snow to summit. We had the summit to ourselves and did the circuit of the crater. We got 'lost' on the way down and had to rely on GPS to find our way back to starting point. We luckily managed to jump on a tourist bus on the way down which is rare in the off season.
bgratias - Aug 15, 2008 1:14 am Date Climbed: Sep 15, 2007
Harder than I thoughtAfter two weeks at sea, we climbed Fuji overnight without food or water. We made it, but will be sure to prepare better next time.
Quadaxial - Aug 7, 2008 6:00 pm Date Climbed: Jul 8, 2008
Fujinomiya Route - South SideSummited on July 8 via the south route, Fujinomiya. It was still early in the official climbing season and the south route was sparse with hikers which made for an enjoyable experience. The time estimates in the brochures are not markers for the avid athlete - it can be done in 5 hours or less - there was even a team of runners doing laps around the crater at the top! Beautiful Classic Climb!
MegasAlexandros - Mar 28, 2008 6:46 pm
Winter climbFuji-san in winter was a bitter cold experience! I arrived late in the afternoon at Kawaguchi-ko fifth station and reached the crater at 1 or 2 AM. There was a lot of snow on the western slope whereas the eastern slope was almost void of snow I used crampons from an altitude of around 2800 m.Winds were strong and I have never felt so cold before. Conditions here were harsher than on either Elbrus or Damavand. The hardest part for me was the altitude - going from sea level to almost 4000 m it made itself felt! Nevertheless I have no regrets and I'd gladly go there again even in winter albeit better prepared!
friday - Nov 15, 2007 5:07 pm Date Climbed: Aug 16, 2007
First Mountain Climb EverAfter 37 years of life, this was my first mountain. I chose this mountain actually as a way to kill time instead of going to my in-laws house in Okinawa, where my wife is from. At the time, I approached this climb as another exercise session, in addition to my daily running and biking sessions. But, it turned out to be so much more than that, physically and spiritually. It also taught me a big lesson about higher altitudes and clothing.
After a 12 hour flight from Chicago, and two bus rides later, I arrived at the normal tourist starting spot, the 5th station of Kawaguchiko. I arrived about 7:45PM and started climbing in the dark at around 8:15PM or so. After reaching each station and taking a few breaks, I summited around 12:30. After not having much sleep, I took a nap on a door of a summit shop that was still closed.
This is where Fuji-San taught me a lesson. Since Tokyo was sweltering in 95'F heat, I thought just a single layer of pants (my marmot precip) and a light jacket would be enough for the summit. Wrong. I woke up after two hours of sleep shivering from the 35'F temperatures that were only made worse by a howling wind. The only thing I could do to keep warm was to descend a few hundred feet and find shelter behind a large overhang.
After two hours behind this shelter, and seeing the sun start to come up, I summited again to watch the sun pop up from behind the horizon. At this point, I felt a huge overwhelming feeling of warmth. Overlooking the cities below, feeling the fresh mountain air, and taking it all in, I realized this was something I've always wanted to do my whole life, but somehow became lost along the way. Now, the addiction to mountain climbing has started.
In two years, I plan to come back and start from Fujiyoshida, from the temple far below.
HeyItsBen - Nov 12, 2007 3:08 pm Date Climbed: Nov 9, 2007
Route climbed: Kawaguchi-goDid the climb in bad weather, but had to do it while I was there. 100 ft visibility at the top, high wind, and bitter cold made for quite an experience. Never even really saw the mountain...
Ejnar Fjerdingstad - Sep 20, 2007 9:29 am Date Climbed: Sep 19, 1972
Route Climbed: KawaguchikoTook a day off from a scientific meeting to climb Fuji-San. Hard to find my boot size in Tokyo, much giggling from sales women. Arriving at the trail head joined forces with three English-speaking Japanese (two high-school girls and a businessman). Had a most enjoyable climb in beautiful weather, nice sunrise and view of the Pacific. Many people on the route, though.
Mescalito345 - Mar 12, 2007 12:40 am
Standard routeNot sure about the date, it might have been December 1994. Hiking to the summit was no problem, but on the way down I took a wrong turn and got lost. It was getting dark, and I didn't have warm clothes, bivy bag, or headlamp. Luckily, I found a mountain hut where I could stay for about $50. The next day, I had to hike part-way back up the mountain to get to the main trail.
Piers - Feb 3, 2007 6:18 am
Route Climbed: GotenbaTook a taxi in 0 visibilty fog up to the 5th station at midnight. From there we climbed up through heavy fog and constant rain. At about 5:30am we got to about 1k ft away from the summit. After 30 minutes and 90+ mph winds we descended back down to the 5th station. On the taxi ride back, our driver said that there had been a typhoon. What a wild time. Kamisama no kaze wa tsuyosugita.
atavist - Nov 13, 2006 7:35 am Date Climbed: Dec 25, 2006
How to have an epic on the most climbed mountain in the worldThis mountain is not as pretty when you're standing on it as when you are 50 miles away. For me, its grandeur was eroding just like its rubble hewn scree fields. By late December, there still wasn't much snow. And at this time of year there is no public transport up to the usual tourist trailhead. I had to hike all the way from Kawaguchiko train station. I wasn't in the mood for paying $50+ for a taxi to shortcut my FujiZen experience. It was so cold; I should have brought my Feathered Friends. Anyway, I ended up getting stranded on the summit overnight (80mph winds and -20C). Unfortunately my camp gear was several thousand feet below. Needless to say, I got frostbite in my toes and after limping down the mountain (all the way back to Kawaguchiko because don't even think about hitchhiking in Japan, even if you have swollen blistered feet) I couldn't walk for 5 days.
derekp62 - Nov 7, 2006 5:57 pm Date Climbed: Sep 26, 2006
Leveraging a biz trip!I spent the week in Japan on business and after a nice long day at work on a Friday I caught a bus to Kawaguchi-ko and on to Station five. We picked of a few supplies at the Unjyo-kaku store and headed up the mountain by about 9:30pm. We climbed up out of a near white out fog into a crisp clear night sky for a fantastic evening of climbing. Arrived at the summit just after sunrise. Traffic near the stop slows progress to a crawl. Staying awake was the hardest part of the climb! Should have stopped and taken a break. Instead we pushed through to the top and then home by 3pm the next day.
tjbst47 - Nov 1, 2006 6:23 pm Date Climbed: Oct 29, 2006
autumn ascentNeeded crampons above 3200 m, 7th station hut was open because they were doing construction, took the route from Kawaguchi-ko
Thomas Gurviez - Oct 31, 2006 9:43 am Date Climbed: Oct 31, 2006
from Gogume in 4h30mn round trip1 day round trip from Tokyo, bus at 7h10 from Shinjuku, arrival at Gogume (fifth stqtion) at 10h30mn. In spite of my efforts, the last bus at 2:30 pm was too early for me (4h30mn round trip ascent, 2h30 mn for the going-up), but hitch-hiking allowed me to avoid to walk down to Kawaguchi-ko bus station.
Sunny but pretty cold because of the strong winds at the top. As a matter of fact, snow was icy beginning at 3200 m and I had to put my crampons.
No more than 2 or 3 climbers met
waltraud - Feb 14, 2006 8:58 pm
Date Climbed: September 1993What a great experience. Made it to the summit in time for sunrise
das1310 - Jan 11, 2006 11:56 am
Route Climbed: Don't remember Date Climbed: September 1992Did a 6 month tour in Japan, and did the climb on a saturday morning. Great views when finally above the clouds.
hmronnow - Oct 31, 2005 4:44 am
Route Climbed: Kawaguchiko (from Lake Kawaguchiko) Date Climbed: July 2nd 2005Had only one day to spend on hiking Fuji, and reached the summit within 12 hours of landing in Tokyo. I took regular trains and started hiking from Lake Kawaguchiko, which is at ~800m. (The fifth station, from where 97% start is at 2300m - halfway up the 3800m mountain.) The lower part is quite nice through slightly mysty forrest, had noodles in a small joint at the 1st station. Hiking/running from the lake took about 6 hours (the last 1h20 with cramps in both quads), summiting at sunset. Sleeping outside was very cold, but the sun-rise well worth waiting for. Going down, at 5th station, a taxi arrived with two hikers, wanted some silly 10kyen for taking me back to the train station, but then realised he had to drive down anyway, and took me down for 540yen.
Nyle Walton - Aug 20, 2005 11:29 am Date Climbed: Jul 10, 1961
Route Climbed: From Gotemba Railway Station.Philip Michael DeSemlyen and I detrained in Gotemba on our way from Kyoto to Tokyo, the last leg of our journey across Asia from Istanbul. I recall that we took a bus from the railway station to a point well up on the mountain and proceeded to climb all night to reach the crater at dawn where we observed the sunrise along with a horde of white-clad Japanese. Through the morning we circumvented the crater, pausing only to investigate a number of souvenir stands and tea houses. We then descended in long sandy strides back down to the road and Gotemba and caught a train to Tokyo where I remained for two years, teaching English to make a comfortable living while eating sushi, drinking beer and playing pachinko. All these activities were inexpensive back then for the almighty gaijin in the two decades before the 1970s when the dollar dropped and life for the gaijin in Japan became prohibitively expensive.
Bobkylaka - Jul 20, 2005 1:56 pm
Route Climbed: Kawaguchiko - Gogome Date Climbed: 14 July 2005Excellent climb. Started out from 5th Station at 11:30am, in mild conditions. However, temperature dropped about 30 degrees F between 8th Station and summit - went from synthetic Tshirt to sweatshirt and jacket in the last hour and was still cold at the top! Unfortunately, summit was very cloudy (2:30pm) - couldn't even see into the crater... but, had good views during the ascent and descent. Path down allows for very rapid descent and easy on the knees - but requires you stop and empty your shoes 3-4 times. Roundtrip took just under 5 hours - in time to wash up and catch the 5pm bus out.
Was expecting hundreds of people, but I'd estimate a max of 50 climbers on the mountain that afternoon - most on the lower half.