Iriomote, Japan

The Small Tropical Japanese Amazon of Iriomote


Fluvial coming and going
Vessel sails up Urauchi River, in the heart of the dense jungle of Iriomote.
Back to the mouth of Urauchi
Japanese hiker progresses along an irregular trail on the bank of the Urauchi River.
Tropical flow
Small waterfall on the way to the main stream of northern Iriomote, the Urauchi River.
Yamaneko
Traffic sign alerts drivers to slow down to avoid hitting the increasingly rare Iriomote endemic bobcats.
Unnavigable Bed
Rocky section of the Urauchi River, soon to be substantially more covered with water due to intensified monsoon rains.
Umbrellas on board
Seats of a vessel on the Urauchi River, equipped with umbrellas for passengers to protect themselves from tropical rain.
military shelter
A cave used for hiding and protection by Japanese soldiers during World War II.
gastronomic organization
A typical Iriomote meal carefully arranged in a traditional bento box.
'Kampire-no-taki'
Kampire waterfall, known as the place where the gods sit.
across the tunnel
Japanese sign prohibits entry into an old tunnel excavated by the Japanese imperial army, near the village of Funauki.
A History of Coal
Panel displays images, maps and old documents that explain the importance of the coal mines of Iriomote.
Ida beach
Ida: a sub-tropical beach of Iriomote, usually with a much more appealing sea outside the monsoon period in this part of Asia.
solitary water fall
Falling water flows in the wilderness of Iriomote.
Impenetrable rainforests and mangroves fill Iriomote under a pressure cooker climate. Here, foreign visitors are as rare as the yamaneko, an elusive endemic lynx.

"Good Morning, Marucu and Sara!” It's 8 in the morning.

We remain painfully sleepy when we receive the good morning from the ever-smiling Kaori Kinjo, who uses the usual Japanese gesture of multiplying the “us” in words to better articulate them.

we leave the guest houses rakutenya of Ishigaki and we left, in his company, towards the port of Rito-Sanbashi. Once arrived, we waited for the announcement of the ferry boarding to Uehara – a port village in Iriomote – in a room that doesn't look like a small airport.

As impatient as they were curious, we went out again and again and examined the shops and offices of that infrastructure and the operational bases of one or another local tourist agency. But we don't see a single foreigner.

Not even Japanese vacationers. Instead, port workers and passengers living in Ishigaki and the rest of the Yayeama archipelago look us up and down, as if they have no reason to walk there and don't understand our very different features.

Embarkation to Another Yayeama Island of Iriomote

Nevertheless, Kaori assures us in the most convincing tone possible: “Last week was our Golden Week. Many Japanese from the main islands were on vacation. We had dozens of busloads around Iriomote. Now they've all gone home. However, the monsoons came.”

It's time to board the ferry, a slender and sophisticated looking vessel, both hydro and aerodynamic. Barely set sail, that kind of floating torpedo achieves impressive speed, with its bow high above a very choppy East China Sea. "But look, these are old models." tells us Kaori. “In Honshu, they use really futuristic boats!”.

Half an hour later, we docked at Iriomote. From the port of Uehara, we head straight to the mouth of the Urauchi River, one of several meandering, muddy and remote streams that wind through the island and give it a look of a mini-Amazon of the Asias.

'Kampire-no-taki'

Kampire waterfall, known as the place where the gods sit.

Iriomote is tropical like no other southern Japanese domain. By that time, the Southeast Asian monsoons are already in place. If the heat proved oppressive, so was the humidity, maintained by a persistent covering of clouds, sometimes white and sometimes leaden.

And New Embarkation Rio Urauchi Above

As a colorful and silent barge takes us upstream through the thick jungle, we confirm how permanent humidity and torrential rains fed the Urauchi. And how the river flows from the highlands at great speed and then reaches the plain and gives itself first to the vast mangroves.

Fluvial coming and going

Vessel sails up Urauchi River, in the heart of the dense jungle of Iriomote.

A little later, to a Pacific Ocean that, there and in those days, could not do better justice to the baptism of Fernão Magalhães.

Having reached the point where the navigable bed ends, we disembark. We feel numbed by the heat, the silence and the somewhat sterile beauty of the place. From there, we continue on foot, subsumed in the waterlogged forest of the island and in search of Mariyudo-no-taki, one of its imposing waterfalls.

Falling water flows in the wilderness of Iriomote.

In the several lush and soaked kilometers of the trail, we come across one or another resident of Iriomote who exercises on the same route, keeping an eye on the latent threat of the vipers habu, whose bite requires a short injection of the correct antidote.

The Tropical Fund, Japan's Last Frontier

Although it is only 20km west of Ishigaki and a few further east of Taiwan, the most populous island in the Yayeama archipelago, Iriomote has long been considered Japan's last frontier.

With almost 300 km², it proves to be the largest island in this sub-archipelago of Okinawa. It has only 2000 inhabitants and a single road that connects the tiny villages on the north and east coasts.

until the end of the 2nd World War, the dense jungles and swamps of Iriomote remained infested with malaria. Iriomote hardly welcomed inhabitants.

Back to the mouth of Urauchi

Japanese hiker progresses along an irregular trail on the bank of the Urauchi River.

The End of Malaria and the Preservation of the Yamaneko Lynxes

This was one of the problems that the troops of United States they finally managed to resolve it when they introduced a Wheeler Plan on the island.

This plan called for attacking anopheles mosquitoes using DTT instead of annihilating the malaria parasite already in the bodies of patients, as had been done since 1920 by the Taiwan regional government, then a Japanese territorial possession.

As an indirect consequence, the number of inhabitants of Iriomote increased. For this reason, the local fauna and, in particular, the furtive Yamanekos – the native lynx – are now forced to avoid humans. Both those who have moved to its territory and those who arrive, from time to time, from other parts of Japan, excited by the adventure of exploring the wildest of the Japanese islands. 

Only around a hundred specimens of the feline are left. The only place where they can be seen for sure is on the yellow traffic lights that, to protect the species, the authorities spread across the island.

YamanekoWe took advantage of the feline's scarcity to play with the guides that were always contained and disciplined. Every time we see a domestic or stray cat, we take the opportunity to shout “yamaneko”. As you might expect, only the first two of these false alerts get real attention.

We finished the course. We admire Maryudo's waterfall, that of Kampire. And, in the distance, the Mayagusuku waterfall. Afterwards, we return to the starting point of the trail and, in the same boat, again to the mouth of the Urauchi.

Dinner with a Portuguese Soundtrack

From there, they take us to the restaurant-terrace of an almost empty hotel where we are supposed to recover our energy by tasting typical Iriomote food.

The meal is served to us without blemish, geometrically organized in the compartments of a traditional and elegant bento box that occupies most of the table.

gastronomic organization

A typical Iriomote meal carefully arranged in a traditional bento box.

We didn't realize whether the musical choice was intentional or coincidental. What is certain is that, throughout the meal, the restaurant only played themes sung – at least in part – in Portuguese from Brazil. It was the case of the surprising memory of “underwater love” by the English Smoke City.

Until the end of the day, we just got over the tiredness generated by the steep morning walk and the atrocious humidity that only seemed to increase.

Shirahama, Uchibanare-Jima and Funauki: Island Nooks Full of History

Shortly after new dawn, we traveled first to Shirahama, then to Uchibanare-Jima, where we visited one of Iriomote's historic coal mines.

military shelter

A cave used for hiding and protection by Japanese soldiers during World War II.

From 1891 to 1960, 1400 miners managed to extract from the island's subsoil, during the annual period of greatest production, around 130 thousand tons of this fossil fuel.

Like Iriomote, in general, Uchibanare was the target of the American bombings that tried to end this extraction and anticipated the arduous conquest of Okinawa and the nuclear bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

A History of Coal

Panel displays images, maps and old documents that explain the importance of the coal mines of Iriomote.

In Funauki – a small port village – we inspect a pearl factory but also preserved military shelters and tunnels.

The guide who had taken Kaori's place was a native of the village. He had emigrated to study Russian in Moscow a year before the disintegration of the Soviet Union. He traveled as far as he could through the new nations that emerged from it. “When I heard you speak, I thought I was Russian but since I didn't identify any words afterwards, I saw that I was wrong”.

His wife had chosen to take shelter at the far end of the dying Cold War. She had studied in Michigan and spoke much better English than her husband. The couple produced the Iriomote newspaper. Only many spaces published village news

We soon realized why. There were no more than 41 inhabitants of Funauki. Little or nothing happened there.

At the time, there were only three students at the local school which employed only nine teachers, the president, the vice president, a nurse and two cooks. This, at the whim of the regional government, which insisted on compensating for the isolation of the village.

Ida beach

Ida: a sub-tropical beach of Iriomote, usually with a much more appealing sea outside the monsoon period in this part of Asia.

“We don't complain” assures us the couple, used to their secluded and peaceful life. “For the kids it's the worst. For three, it is even impossible for them to do group activities or games. It's rare for other friends to appear here."

Kyoto, Japan

The Kyoto Temple Reborn from the Ashes

The Golden Pavilion has been spared destruction several times throughout history, including that of US-dropped bombs, but it did not withstand the mental disturbance of Hayashi Yoken. When we admired him, he looked like never before.
Okinawa, Japan

Ryukyu Dances: Centuries old. In No Hurry.

The Ryukyu kingdom prospered until the XNUMXth century as a trading post for the China and Japan. From the cultural aesthetics developed by its courtly aristocracy, several styles of slow dance were counted.
Boat Trips

For Those Becoming Internet Sick

Hop on and let yourself go on unmissable boat trips like the Philippine archipelago of Bacuit and the frozen sea of ​​the Finnish Gulf of Bothnia.

Taroko George

Deep in Taiwan

In 1956, skeptical Taiwanese doubted that the initial 20km of Central Cross-Island Hwy was possible. The marble canyon that challenged it is today the most remarkable natural setting in Formosa.

Okinawa, Japan

The Little Empire of the Sun

Risen from the devastation caused by World War II, Okinawa has regained the heritage of its secular Ryukyu civilization. Today, this archipelago south of Kyushu is home to a Japan on the shore, anchored by a turquoise Pacific ocean and bathed in a peculiar Japanese tropicalism.
Cairns to Cape Tribulation, Australia

Tropical Queensland: An Australia Too Wild

Cyclones and floods are just the meteorological expression of Queensland's tropical harshness. When it's not the weather, it's the deadly fauna of the region that keeps its inhabitants on their toes.
Cairns-Kuranda, Australia

Train to the Middle of the Jungle

Built out of Cairns to save miners isolated in the rainforest from starvation by flooding, the Kuranda Railway eventually became the livelihood of hundreds of alternative Aussies.
Miyajima, Japan

Shintoism and Buddhism with the Tide

Visitors to the Tori of Itsukushima admire one of the three most revered scenery in Japan. On the island of Miyajima, Japanese religiosity blends with Nature and is renewed with the flow of the Seto Inland Sea.
Nikko, Japan

The Tokugawa Shogun Final Procession

In 1600, Ieyasu Tokugawa inaugurated a shogunate that united Japan for 250 years. In her honor, Nikko re-enacts the general's medieval relocation to Toshogu's grandiose mausoleum every year.
Nara, Japan

The Colossal Cradle of the Japanese Buddhism

Nara has long since ceased to be the capital and its Todai-ji temple has been demoted. But the Great Hall remains the largest ancient wooden building in the world. And it houses the greatest bronze Vairocana Buddha.
Takayama, Japan

From the Ancient Japan to the Medieval Hida

In three of its streets, Takayama retains traditional wooden architecture and concentrates old shops and sake producers. Around it, it approaches 100.000 inhabitants and surrenders to modernity.
Kyoto, Japan

An Almost Lost Millennial Japan

Kyoto was on the US atomic bomb target list and it was more than a whim of fate that preserved it. Saved by an American Secretary of War in love with its historical and cultural richness and oriental sumptuousness, the city was replaced at the last minute by Nagasaki in the atrocious sacrifice of the second nuclear cataclysm.
Ogimashi, Japan

A Village Faithful to the A

Ogimashi reveals a fascinating heritage of Japanese adaptability. Located in one of the most snowy places on Earth, this village has perfected houses with real anti-collapse structures.
Magome-Tsumago, Japan

Magome to Tsumago: The Overcrowded Path to the Medieval Japan

In 1603, the Tokugawa shogun dictated the renovation of an ancient road system. Today, the most famous stretch of the road that linked Edo to Kyoto is covered by a mob eager to escape.
Japan

The Beverage Machines Empire

There are more than 5 million ultra-tech light boxes spread across the country and many more exuberant cans and bottles of appealing drinks. The Japanese have long since stopped resisting them.
Tokyo, Japan

Pachinko: The Video - Addiction That Depresses Japan

It started as a toy, but the Japanese appetite for profit quickly turned pachinko into a national obsession. Today, there are 30 million Japanese surrendered to these alienating gaming machines.
Hiroshima, Japan

Hiroshima: a City Yielded to Peace

On August 6, 1945, Hiroshima succumbed to the explosion of the first atomic bomb used in war. 70 years later, the city fights for the memory of the tragedy and for nuclear weapons to be eradicated by 2020.
Tokyo, Japan

Disposable Purrs

Tokyo is the largest of the metropolises but, in its tiny apartments, there is no place for pets. Japanese entrepreneurs detected the gap and launched "catteries" in which the feline affections are paid by the hour.
Tokyo, Japan

The Fish Market That Lost its Freshness

In a year, each Japanese eats more than their weight in fish and shellfish. Since 1935, a considerable part was processed and sold in the largest fish market in the world. Tsukiji was terminated in October 2018, and replaced by Toyosu's.
Tokyo, Japan

The Emperor Without Empire

After the capitulation in World War II, Japan underwent a constitution that ended one of the longest empires in history. The Japanese emperor is, today, the only monarch to reign without empire.
Jabula Beach, Kwazulu Natal, South Africa
Safari
Saint Lucia, South Africa

An Africa as Wild as Zulu

On the eminence of the coast of Mozambique, the province of KwaZulu-Natal is home to an unexpected South Africa. Deserted beaches full of dunes, vast estuarine swamps and hills covered with fog fill this wild land also bathed by the Indian Ocean. It is shared by the subjects of the always proud Zulu nation and one of the most prolific and diverse fauna on the African continent.
Thorong Pedi to High Camp, Annapurna Circuit, Nepal, Lone Walker
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna Circuit: 12th - Thorong Phedi a High camp

The Prelude to the Supreme Crossing

This section of the Annapurna Circuit is only 1km away, but in less than two hours it takes you from 4450m to 4850m and to the entrance to the great canyon. Sleeping in High Camp is a test of resistance to Mountain Evil that not everyone passes.
Architecture & Design
Castles and Fortresses

A Defending World: Castles and Fortresses that Resist

Under threat from enemies from the end of time, the leaders of villages and nations built castles and fortresses. All over the place, military monuments like these continue to resist.
Totems, Botko Village, Malekula, Vanuatu
Adventure
Malekula, Vanuatu

Meat and Bone Cannibalism

Until the early XNUMXth century, man-eaters still feasted on the Vanuatu archipelago. In the village of Botko we find out why European settlers were so afraid of the island of Malekula.
Camel Racing, Desert Festival, Sam Sam Dunes, Rajasthan, India
Ceremonies and Festivities
Jaisalmer, India

There's a Feast in the Thar Desert

As soon as the short winter breaks, Jaisalmer indulges in parades, camel races, and turban and mustache competitions. Its walls, alleys and surrounding dunes take on more color than ever. During the three days of the event, natives and outsiders watch, dazzled, as the vast and inhospitable Thar finally shines through.
ice tunnel, black gold route, Valdez, Alaska, USA
Cities
Valdez, Alaska

On the Black Gold Route

In 1989, the Exxon Valdez oil tanker caused a massive environmental disaster. The vessel stopped plying the seas, but the victim city that gave it its name continues on the path of crude oil from the Arctic Ocean.
Meal
Margilan, Uzbekistan

An Uzbekistan's Breadwinner

In one of the many bakeries in Margilan, worn out by the intense heat of the tandyr oven, the baker Maruf'Jon works half-baked like the distinctive traditional breads sold throughout Uzbekistan
Nahuatl celebration
Culture

Mexico City, Mexico

mexican soul

With more than 20 million inhabitants in a vast metropolitan area, this megalopolis marks, from its heart of zócalo, the spiritual pulse of a nation that has always been vulnerable and dramatic.

4th of July Fireworks-Seward, Alaska, United States
Sport
Seward, Alaska

The Longest 4th of July

The independence of the United States is celebrated, in Seward, Alaska, in a modest way. Even so, the 4th of July and its celebration seem to have no end.
Jeep crosses Damaraland, Namibia
Traveling
Damaraland, Namíbia

Namibia On the Rocks

Hundreds of kilometers north of Swakopmund, many more of Swakopmund's iconic dunes Sossuvlei, Damaraland is home to deserts interspersed with hills of reddish rock, the highest mountain and ancient rock art of the young nation. the settlers South Africans they named this region after the Damara, one of the Namibian ethnic groups. Only these and other inhabitants prove that it remains on Earth.
Intha rowers on a channel of Lake Inlé
Ethnic
Inle Lake, Myanmar

The Dazzling Lakustrine Burma

With an area of ​​116km2, Inle Lake is the second largest lake in Myanmar. It's much more than that. The ethnic diversity of its population, the profusion of Buddhist temples and the exoticism of local life make it an unmissable stronghold of Southeast Asia.
portfolio, Got2Globe, Travel photography, images, best photographs, travel photos, world, Earth
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio
Portfolio Got2globe

The Best in the World – Got2Globe Portfolio

View from John Ford Point, Monument Valley, Nacao Navajo, United States
History
Monument Valley, USA

Indians or Cowboys?

Iconic Western filmmakers like John Ford immortalized what is the largest Indian territory in the United States. Today, in the Navajo Nation, the Navajo also live in the shoes of their old enemies.
Mahé Ilhas das Seychelles, friends of the beach
Islands
Mahé, Seychelles

The Big Island of the Small Seychelles

Mahé is the largest of the islands of the smallest country in Africa. It's home to the nation's capital and most of the Seychellois. But not only. In its relative smallness, it hides a stunning tropical world, made of mountainous jungle that merges with the Indian Ocean in coves of all sea tones.
Northern Lights, Laponia, Rovaniemi, Finland, Fire Fox
Winter White
Lapland, Finland

In Search of the Fire Fox

Unique to the heights of the Earth are the northern or southern auroras, light phenomena generated by solar explosions. You Sami natives from Lapland they believed it to be a fiery fox that spread sparkles in the sky. Whatever they are, not even the nearly 30 degrees below zero that were felt in the far north of Finland could deter us from admiring them.
Lake Manyara, National Park, Ernest Hemingway, Giraffes
Literature
Lake Manyara NP, Tanzania

Hemingway's Favorite Africa

Situated on the western edge of the Rift Valley, Lake Manyara National Park is one of the smallest but charming and richest in Europe. wild life of Tanzania. In 1933, between hunting and literary discussions, Ernest Hemingway dedicated a month of his troubled life to him. He narrated those adventurous safari days in “The Green Hills of Africa".
Torres del Paine, Dramatic Patagonia, Chile
Nature
PN Torres del Paine, Chile

The Most Dramatic Patagonia

Nowhere is the southernmost reaches of South America so breathtaking as the Paine Mountains. There, a natural fort of granite colossi surrounded by lakes and glaciers protrudes from the pampa and submits to the whims of meteorology and light.
Sheki, Autumn in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan, Autumn Homes
Autumn
Sheki, Azerbaijan

autumn in the caucasus

Lost among the snowy mountains that separate Europe from Asia, Sheki is one of Azerbaijan's most iconic towns. Its largely silky history includes periods of great harshness. When we visited it, autumn pastels added color to a peculiar post-Soviet and Muslim life.
Kukenam reward
Natural Parks
Mount Roraima, Venezuela

Time Travel to the Lost World of Mount Roraima

At the top of Mount Roraima, there are extraterrestrial scenarios that have resisted millions of years of erosion. Conan Doyle created, in "The Lost World", a fiction inspired by the place but never got to step on it.
Ruins, Port Arthur, Tasmania, Australia
UNESCO World Heritage
Discovering Tassie, Part 2 - Hobart to Port Arthur, Australia

An Island Doomed to Crime

The prison complex at Port Arthur has always frightened the British outcasts. 90 years after its closure, a heinous crime committed there forced Tasmania to return to its darkest times.
Ooty, Tamil Nadu, Bollywood Scenery, Heartthrob's Eye
Characters
Ooty, India

In Bollywood's Nearly Ideal Setting

The conflict with Pakistan and the threat of terrorism made filming in Kashmir and Uttar Pradesh a drama. In Ooty, we see how this former British colonial station took the lead.
Tarrafal, Santiago, Cape Verde, Tarrafal Bay
Beaches
Tarrafal, Santiago, Cape Verde

The Tarrafal of Freedom and Slow Life

The village of Tarrafal delimits a privileged corner of the island of Santiago, with its few white sand beaches. Those who are enchanted there find it even more difficult to understand the colonial atrocity of the neighboring prison camp.
Engravings, Karnak Temple, Luxor, Egypt
Religion
luxor, Egypt

From Luxor to Thebes: Journey to Ancient Egypt

Thebes was raised as the new supreme capital of the Egyptian Empire, the seat of Amon, the God of Gods. Modern Luxor inherited the Temple of Karnak and its sumptuousness. Between one and the other flow the sacred Nile and millennia of dazzling history.
On Rails
On Rails

Train Travel: The World Best on Rails

No way to travel is as repetitive and enriching as going on rails. Climb aboard these disparate carriages and trains and enjoy the best scenery in the world on Rails.
Women with long hair from Huang Luo, Guangxi, China
Society
Longsheng, China

Huang Luo: the Chinese Village of the Longest Hairs

In a multi-ethnic region covered with terraced rice paddies, the women of Huang Luo have surrendered to the same hairy obsession. They let the longest hair in the world grow, years on end, to an average length of 170 to 200 cm. Oddly enough, to keep them beautiful and shiny, they only use water and rice.
Saksun, Faroe Islands, Streymoy, warning
Daily life
Saksun, streymoyFaroe Islands

The Faroese Village That Doesn't Want to be Disneyland

Saksun is one of several stunning small villages in the Faroe Islands that more and more outsiders visit. It is distinguished by the aversion to tourists of its main rural owner, author of repeated antipathies and attacks against the invaders of his land.
Cape cross seal colony, cape cross seals, Namibia
Wildlife
Cape Cross, Namíbia

The Most Turbulent of the African Colonies

Diogo Cão landed in this cape of Africa in 1486, installed a pattern and turned around. The immediate coastline to the north and south was German, South African, and finally Namibian. Indifferent to successive transfers of nationality, one of the largest seal colonies in the world has maintained its hold there and animates it with deafening marine barks and endless tantrums.
Passengers, scenic flights-Southern Alps, New Zealand
Scenic Flights
Aoraki / Mount Cook, New Zealand

The Aeronautical Conquest of the Southern Alps

In 1955, pilot Harry Wigley created a system for taking off and landing on asphalt or snow. Since then, his company has unveiled, from the air, some of the greatest scenery in Oceania.