Alpine Logs

【Deep Dive Chronicle】Naranokisawa-Kamosawa Stream Climbing: Three Nights of Unexpected Wandering in the Iide Mountains

北村 智明

The Iide Mountains — a spine of jagged peaks stretching along the border of Echigo and Dewa provinces. In mid-September, we set our sights on Naranokisawa-Kamosawa, a gorge hidden deep within their folds. What began as a three-day circuit through abandoned trails became a test of endurance, camaraderie, and the humbling authority of the mountains. This is the record of those who love the sound of rushing water, and who dare to walk where paths no longer exist.



Part One: The Quiet Dawn of the Mountain

We departed Miyagi Prefecture on the evening of September 13th — myself along with S, M, and O — heading for Oku-Tainai Hütte in Niigata Prefecture. Our destination: Naranokisawa-Kamosawa in the Iide Mountains, a full-scale gorge of granite set deep within peaks that straddle the old boundaries of Echigo and Dewa.

Most parties who climb this stream descend via the trail from Mt. Nioji-dake. We chose differently. Our circuit would follow the abandoned trail over Kuroishi-yama and Nariba Peak — a route preserved only in old records, with descent times heavily dependent on the state of decay. We estimated five hours of Yabukogi (bushwhacking) from the stream head to the trailhead. How generous that estimate would prove to be.

We spent the night in the parking lot of Oku-Tainai Hütte. Anticipation for the days ahead mixed with a faint unease. The surrounding wilderness was silent save for the chorus of insects. I looked up at the stars and quietly surrendered to sleep.

Pre-dawn forest road approach Iide Mountains stream climbing Japan September
The team sets out in the early morning dark along the forest road toward the Tainai River. Day 1, just after 6:00 AM.

The next morning, we set off just after 6:00 AM. We walked the dimly lit forest road and arrived at the Tainai River, where the water ran calm enough to ford without issue. After crossing, we began ascending the ridge of Agemaino-Katchi — an oddly evocative name for a steep, relentless climb through dense forest.

September heat still clung stubbornly to the air. Partway up the ridge, something felt wrong. Sweat poured in sheets; nausea crept up from my stomach. Heat exhaustion. I told my companions, and we stopped in the shade. Water, rest, cooling down. I felt the pull of urgency, but knew that pushing through now would compromise everything that followed. We rested long and carefully.

Steep forested ridge approach Agemaino-Katchi Iide Mountains sawanobori Japan
Climbing the steep, forested ridge of Agemaino-Katchi. September heat and high humidity made this approach section physically demanding.

Eventually my body came back to me, and we pressed on. Two hours of climbing, then a descent along the streambed, and at 8:40 AM we finally caught sight of Naranokisawa below us.

The moment we stepped off the ridge and onto the canyon floor, the beauty stopped us cold. Clear water slid over granite, the valley wrapped in deep green and still air. The sound of water filled the world. No great waterfalls requiring major bypasses — Maki (bypass) around an obstacle — just a succession of climbable small falls, long Gorge (gōrju) sections, and the pleasure of Hetsuri (traversing along the wall). An ideal stream for Sawanobori (Japanese stream climbing).

Naranokisawa stream entry granite crystal clear water sawanobori Japan Iide
The moment of entering Naranokisawa. Transparent water slides over the granite streambed, the valley enclosed in deep green — the beauty of this stream is immediate.

At 10:00 AM, we entered the stream proper. The real ascent had begun.


Part Two: Into the Depths of Iide

O took out his tenkara rod and began casting for iwana (Japanese char), while I worked the water with a lure. The fish showed little interest in my offerings, though O’s tenkara proved far more persuasive. Those iwana would later become the centerpiece of our camp meal.

Tenkara fly fishing for iwana Japanese char Naranokisawa Iide Mountains stream
Team member O casts a tenkara fly rod in search of iwana (Japanese char) while ascending the stream. A long tradition of stream climbing and stream fishing combined.

Granite is unforgiving when wet. We moved deliberately, reading each surface for hidden slime before committing weight. Two-meter, three-meter falls appeared one after another — some climbable straight up via Chokuto (direct ascent), others requiring stemming up the side walls. S and M picked their lines with care as we slowly gained elevation.

Stream climber ascending small waterfall granite wall Naranokisawa Japan sawanobori
A climber moves up a two-to-three meter granite fall on Naranokisawa. Some falls allow direct ascent (chokuto); others require stemming up the side walls.

We entered the gorge proper. The canyon walls closed in; water poured through the narrow passage with focused force. Some sections we traversed along the walls by hetsuri; others required wading hip-deep through Toro (slow-moving pools). The cold water was welcome. This variety — this constant reading and responding — is the essence of sawanobori.

Narrow granite gorge gōrju canyon Naranokisawa stream climbing Iide Japan
Deep inside the gorge (gōrju) of Naranokisawa. The canyon walls close in as water rushes through the narrow passage — traversed by hetsuri or waded hip-deep.

Just after 2:00 PM, we reached the Futamata (confluence) with Kamosawa. Beyond it, the gorge and small falls continued unbroken. The streamscape remained beautiful, holding our attention. Somewhere around 590 meters elevation we found a suitable flat area and decided to make camp.

Campfire iwana sashimi namero stream camp bivouac Naranokisawa Japan
Around the fire at 590m elevation camp, the team prepares Iwana no Namero (minced Japanese char mixed with miso and green onion) and fresh sashimi over fire-cooked vinegared rice — the quintessential sawanobori camp meal.

Around the fire, we turned the iwana O had caught into Iwana no Namero (minced Japanese char mixed with miso and green onion, shaped into a paste) and sashimi — thin-sliced raw fillets laid over vinegared rice cooked in the fire. A privilege reserved for those who stand in mountain streams. The rich, clean flavor of fresh iwana seeped into tired bodies. The four of us talked mountain talk until the flames burned low. The only torment was the mosquitoes — an unrelenting assault that kept the ears ringing long into the night.

I woke in the dark to the sound of rain. Water had pooled on the silver mat beneath the tarp. The rain only intensified. By morning, the clear stream we had ascended the day before had turned a murky, swollen brown. The uncertainty was real. But we had already passed through most of the gorge. We decided to continue, watching the flow carefully.

High water level clear stream Day 2 Naranokisawa Iide Mountains Japan after rain
Morning of Day 2. Overnight rain has raised the water level noticeably, but Naranokisawa remains clear. The team presses on, the main gorge sections already behind them.

We departed at 6:20 AM into the second day’s grey light. The water roared. Each footstep demanded full attention, full commitment. The stream climbing itself remained engaging — small falls still offered interest — but the rain worsened, and eventually it came in curtains. Thunder rolled down the valley walls.

Stream climbing high water clear stream Day 2 Naranokisawa Iide Mountains Japan sawanobori
The team ascends Naranokisawa on the morning of Day 2. Water volume is up after overnight rain, but the stream remains clear — small falls still offer engaging climbing.

Around noon, we left the stream and pushed up to the ridge. To this point, we were on schedule. Standing at the 1,320-meter ridgeline, we felt a brief, quiet sense of accomplishment. We could not know that this was only the beginning of our ordeal.

The yabukogi that followed refused to move. The ridge was broad and featureless — no way to identify where the abandoned trail had once been. Even where we could find it, dense brush and bamboo grass rose to face height, demanding many times the effort for each meter gained. Branches struck our faces; footing was treacherous. We pushed through in silence. Forward progress became a matter of faith rather than sensation.

Emergency bivouac four climbers two-person tent Iide Mountains Japan night
Inside the emergency bivouac tent at 1,040 meters elevation, Day 2 night. Four climbers share a two-person tent — cramped, but warm. Outside, the rain continues.

As the light faded, darkness pressed in. At 6:30 PM, at 1,040 meters elevation, we made the call to bivouac. Four people in a two-person tent. Cramped, yes — but sharing body heat offered a warmth no Zelt (tarp shelter) can replicate. Outside, the rain continued. We lay in silence and shared it.


Part Three: The Solemn Lesson the Mountain Left

On the morning of the third day, the rain had stopped. But before us stretched the same deep brush. We started moving again at 6:19 AM.

 Abandoned trail ridge traversal Day 3 Iide Mountains Japan yabukogi bushwhacking
Third morning on the ridge. The team continues pushing through dense brush on the abandoned Kuroishi-yama circuit, their food and water supplies now critically low.

The broad ridge continued to confuse. We lost the trail repeatedly, forcing our way through the undergrowth, advancing at a pace that barely registered. An hour of effort, a glance back — perhaps a few hundred meters gained. Old tape tied to a tree here and there quietly testified that this had once been a trail. We held onto that evidence and kept moving.

Dense brush yabukogi Day 3 abandoned ridge Iide Mountains Japan bushwhacking
The abandoned ridge on Day 3. Dense brush and bamboo grass crowd the route, with no clear trail visible. Progress remained painfully slow as food and water ran low.

A helicopter passed low overhead more than once. We noted it uneasily. But by now we faced a more pressing concern than navigation: we were running out of food and water. One day beyond our planned timeline, our supplies had not been packed for this contingency. We divided emergency alpha-rice (freeze-dried rice rations) and calorie bars, sharing a hydration bladder among the four of us. Thirst and hunger worked steadily at our reserves of strength.

Kuroishi-yama summit survey marker trig point Iide Mountains Japan Day 3
The triangulation marker at the summit of Kuroishi-yama, reached at 8:10 AM on Day 3. A small but meaningful milestone after two days of punishing yabukogi.

At 8:10 AM, we reached Kuroishi-yama. From here the trace of the old trail became more readable — still brushy, still demanding — but the path forward grew clearer. At 12:35 PM, we crossed Nariba Peak. The descent was finally in sight.

Descent from Kuroishi-yama abandoned trail Iide Mountains Japan Day 3
The descent from Kuroishi-yama on Day 3. The trail remains rough, but the direction is finally downward — the end of three days in the mountains within reach.

Just after 3:00 PM, we reached Oku-Tainai Hütte. Exhausted, deeply so. But the relief of descent lasted only a moment before the next surprise arrived.

Landslide road closure isolation notice car windshield Oku-Tainai Japan mountains
The notice on the windshield says it all: “Massive landslide. Area isolated. Vehicle descent impossible.” Arriving exhausted after three days in the mountains, the team faced one final obstacle.

The hütte was closed. No signs of life. On the windshield of our car, a placard: “Massive landslide. Area isolated. Vehicle descent impossible.” That explained the empty hütte.

We used an emergency phone to contact Tainai City. A rescue helicopter would be dispatched. We later learned that police had already traced the car’s license plate to its owner and contacted my family. We had caused significant worry to those who cared about us.

Boarding rescue helicopter evacuation Oku-Tainai Iide Mountains Japan
The team boards the disaster-response rescue helicopter at Oku-Tainai. The rotor noise, the lift-off, the trailhead shrinking below — a fitting end to three unexpected nights in the Iide Mountains.

We gathered our gear and moved to the designated point. The rescue helicopter came in with a roar, lifting slowly from the earth. Through the window, Oku-Tainai Hütte shrank away below us — and our car, left behind, grew small and then invisible.

Fire truck evacuation rescue Oku-Tainai Iide Mountains Japan
After the helicopter transfer, the team boards a fire department vehicle for the final leg of the evacuation — faces obscured to protect privacy. Three days in the mountains, and still not home.

That night we could not return home. We stayed at Royal Tainai Park Hotel. A wide bed, a clean room, the ability to sleep fully stretched out. After a night of four adults in a two-person tent, this was something close to paradise. A hot shower. Clean sheets. The profound, renewed appreciation for what ordinary comfort means.

Post-expedition breakfast buffet recovery Royal Tainai Park Hotel Niigata Japan
The morning after evacuation: a full buffet breakfast at Royal Tainai Park Hotel. After days of rationed emergency food, warm meals in abundance carried a meaning all their own.

The following morning’s lavish breakfast buffet temporarily erased the memory of dividing meager rations. Warm food, abundant variety, the simple freedom to eat one’s fill. The four of us worked through plate after plate without speaking much.

We took the train from Nakajo Station to Shibata, then rented a car for the journey home. Our own vehicle would remain stranded at the trailhead for approximately one month.

There were forces beyond our control. But there were also failures of planning, execution, and communication that we must own. Our time estimate for the abandoned trail section was far too optimistic. Our food and water margins were insufficient. We caused real concern to people who mattered.

And yet: we never encountered a genuinely dangerous situation. No injuries. Everyone came off the mountain. That outcome, I believe, was the product of teamwork — four people with different strengths and weaknesses, trusting each other and holding each other up through difficulty.

The deep valleys of Iide, and three unexpected nights of wandering. This experience will become a quiet compass point I return to each time I set out for the mountains — something singular, unrepeatable, and mine.


[LOG SUMMARY]

  • Date: September 14 (Sat) – 16 (Mon), 2024; return home September 17 (Tue)
  • Team: 4 Members
  • Area: Iide Mountains (Niigata Prefecture)
  • Route: Oku-Tainai Hütte → Agemaino-Katchi → Entering Naranokisawa → Kamosawa Confluence → Ridgeline (1,320m) → Kuroishi-yama → Nariba Peak → Tainai First Dam → Oku-Tainai Hütte
  • Activity Time:
    • Day 1: 10 hours 04 minutes
    • Day 2: 12 hours 08 minutes
    • Day 3: 9 hours 27 minutes
  • Accommodation: Bivouac at 590m elevation, Bivouac at 1,040m elevation
  • Weather:
    • Day 1: Partly cloudy
    • Day 2: Cloudy, then rain
    • Day 3: Partly cloudy
  • Water Level: Normal (rising from Day 2 morning onward)
  • Grade: Stream Climbing Grade 3, Climbing Grade III (Based on Japanese Alpine Club / Local Standard)
  • Start Point: Miyagi Prefecture → Oku-Tainai Hütte
  • Notes: Heavy rain on Night 2 caused flooding. Yabukogi on the abandoned trail section took far longer than anticipated (estimated 5 hours; actual 15 hours), necessitating emergency bivouac. After descent, team was isolated by landslide and evacuated by helicopter. Vehicle remained at trailhead for approximately one month. Police contacted family.

Download file: track-gm-7254503.gpx

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北村智明
北村智明
登山ガイド
日本山岳ガイド協会認定登山ガイドステージ2。ガイド歴10年。東北マウンテンガイドネットワーク及び社会人山岳会に所属し、東北を拠点に全国の山域でガイド活動を展開。沢登り、アルパインクライミング、山岳スキー、アイスクライミング、フリークライミングと幅広い山行スタイルに対応。「稜線ディープダイブ」では、山行の記憶を物語として紡ぎ、技術と装備の選択を語る。
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