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Japan's southernmost island is different - not as different as Hokkaido
to the north, but a definite change from Honshu or even Shikoku. For one
thing, the ups-and-downs are definitely moreso; even the most experienced
riders counsel caution when it comes to some of the roads in the interior.
For another thing, Kyushu offers an incredible variety of scenery: wonderful
wide-open-spaces like the one shown above, the world's largest caldera at
Aso, the lovely and exotic Chinese-influenced port city of Nagasaki; the
almost-tropical beaches of Miyazaki and the Nichinan Kaigan (which we'll
explore in an upcoming route), wild horses on the Toi Peninsula (ditto);
other-worldly fauna and flora at Ebino Kogen (plateau); and the smoking
volcano at Sakurajima in the south.
This route travels north to south along virtually the entire length of the
island, starting from the hot springs town of Beppu (a major ferry terminus).
From there, we head up into the interior along the picturesque Yamanami
Highway to the active volcano of Mt. Aso, then to Takachiho, site of Japan's
creation myth, and from there back along the coast southward to Miyazaki,
the beginning of Kyushu's famed white sand beaches, and finally inland again
to Ebino and Kirishima, site of some of the most unusual natural scenery
in Japan and a major Shinto shrine, respectively... and finally ending up
at Kagoshima, Japan's southernmost major city dominated by the active volcano
of Sakurajima across the harbor. It's quite a journey; prepare to both exhaust
and enjoy yourself. |