Masunaga Michio, who served for many years as the planning and judging committee chairman of the Fukui Literature Award and the executive committee chairman of the Hokuriku Contemporary Poets Award, and contributed greatly to the promotion of culture in Fukui Prefecture, passed away at 4:25 AM on the 25th at the University of Fukui Hospital due to multiple organ failure. He was 92 years old …
Somehow, we thought he’d go on forever. Well into his eighties, he was still leading hikes as the president of the city’s mountaineering club. A decade ago, we’d both had the privilege of accompanying him, at a brisk pace, up Kyōgatake and hearing him expatiate on the defunct volcano’s history. And the Sensei had walked with him up our local hill just six months ago.
Arriving early at the o-tsuya, we find that many of the local mountaineers are already there. Behind the reception desk is the club’s current president, and we exchange a few words. It remains to say a prayer for Masunaga-san and, on the way out, inspect a tableau of photos illustrating his life – there he is in the uniform of Fukui Middle School, then rock-climbing in his student days at Hiroshima University in the fifties, leading an expedition to make a first ascent in Afghanistan in 1967, winter climbing with his wife…
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| Middle school mountaineering days. |
There was much more to him than mountaineering, of course. A prolific writer himself, he also invested time and effort to bringing up the next generation. This he did by teaching literature and writing courses for high school students and others. These contributions of his later years were recognised with a Prefectural Culture Award in 1999 and a similar distinction from the local newspaper ten years later.
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| Rock-climbing while at Hiroshima University. |
Yet the real memorials to Masunaga-san sit in the home libraries of local mountaineers. Scanning the Sensei’s shelves, I see she has no fewer than nine of his books – by no means an exhaustive collection – with titles such as Misty Mountains (Kiri no yama) or Encounters with Landscape (Fūkei to no deai). As Fukada Kyūya was to the hundred mountains of Japan, or Alfred Wainwright to the Lakeland fells, so Masunaga-san was to the mountains of Echizen.
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| Masunaga-san (right) as the expedition leader in Afghanistan. |
The book we keep coming back to is his One Hundred and Fifty Mountains of Fukui, a Hyakumeizan-like gazetteer of local eminences (though it has to be admitted that two of these peaks, Hakusan and Bessan, were exfiltrated from a neighbouring prefecture).
“Because I was born and bred in Fukui, I regard the mountains of Fukui as if they were my own family,” Masunaga-san wrote in his epilogue. And, of all those mountains, it was the pathless ones that attracted him most:
Although forest roads now extend deep into the valleys in many areas, except for a few places with mountain trails, the quickest route to the summit is via the stream gullies. In Fukui’s northern mountains, you meet up with unexpected waterfalls and feel the sense of achievement that is the very essence of mountaineering. The joy of finding your direction by reading a map, forging through the undergrowth, and so winning your way to the summit is unforgettable, even if trees are hiding the view.
Masunaga-san knew the mountains of Fukui as well as any mountaineer could. Yet, once upon a peak, his gaze sweeping his native mountains, he realised that even the longest lifespan would be too short to explore all their ridges and valleys:
Of course, I'd already climbed most of the peaks I was looking at, including many I've climbed in all four seasons. Gazing at them, as they gleamed in various shades of green under the wash of sunlight, I was reminded once again that my journey through these vast mountains has been nothing more than a single thin line towards the summit.
A single thin line towards the summit… But what a line it was.


























