Setting off along a river valley, we make good progress – until a side stream blocks our path. Forget Kanmuri, it’s decided, we’ll turn left, up this ridge, and climb Wakamaru-yama (1,286 metres) instead.
We snowshoe up a steep slope, weaving through brushwood, until we reach the open halls of the beech groves. Unlike on Kanmuri, where a well-trodden trench must lead to the top, the snow is untracked. With nine of us taking turns, though, we should be able to “russell” our way up nicely.
This is not the only difference with Kanmuri. If that “Echizen Matterhorn” is your hail-fellow-well-met kind of mountain, flaunting its rocky summit block far and wide – heck, it even has an English-language Wikipedia page – then Wakamaru is the strong, silent type, shy and retiring. Indeed, an hour after we start up the ridge, I’m still wondering when we’ll actually set eyes on it.
Not that Wakamaru has ever lacked for discerning admirers. One fan was none other than Imanishi Kinji (1902–1992), the ecologist, ethnographer and anthropologist who helped to found the Academic Alpine Club of Kyoto and led a reconnaissance expedition to Manaslu, “Japan’s eight-thousander”, in the 1950s.
Having seen the mountain from a distance during his student days, Imanishi (left) set his heart on climbing it. And when, half a century later, the chance finally presented itself, he asked the doyen of Fukui’s mountaineering community, Masunaga Michio, to guide him. For then as now, no path leads up Wakamaru.
The two men set out on a cloudless May morning in 1978. Wrens had started to sing, but the air was still chilly and frost sheened the grassy flats on the mountain’s northern side. At the end of the forest road, they had to ford a river before taking to a curving gully that was still crammed with snow. Above them the sky was an “incredible blue”…
Right now, we’re not much bothered with the sky because we’re descending a wooded spur. Using our snowshoes as crampons, we carefully side-step down over tree roots and rock steps. Appreciable declivities open up on either side as we come down to the ridge that leads towards Wakamaru.
Only when we’ve regrouped do we notice that the sky is no longer blue. Grey clouds float on a sea of haze – the wind must be freighting in a new cargo of kosa dust from China. Now and then, a pallid spot of sunlight drifts over the nearby hills.
Feeble as it is, the sunlight is softening the snow by the minute. So when the slope starts to steepen again, where the connecting ridge abuts on Wakamaru’s southern flank, our snowshoes start to sink dauntingly deep.
It’s my turn up front. At first, I try zig-zagging, as if tackling a slope on a Swiss ski-tour. But then the narrowing ridge forces us to go straight up. Wow: while following the leaders, I had no idea the snow was this soft – the sludge slides backwards under my snow shoes at every step.
Falling backwards out of a rotten snowstep, I go sprawling. Without a word, our two senior members pick up the lead. One of them is senior enough to have contributed an article to Arashima no Fuyu. Embarrassed, I hasten after them. But there’s no catching up with these veterans. We overcome a small rockstep by climbing a tree (A0), and the way is free to Wakamaru’s summit ridge.
“All at once, the world seemed to open up,” records Masunaga-san when he reached the same spot almost half a century ago. And so it does for us too. Over there is the magnificent hulk of Nogo-Hakusan, the mountain from which the youthful Imanishi first saw Wakamaru.
And all around us are mountains as far as the eye can see. Indeed, I gradually realise that mountains are all we can see – there's no trace of human habitation: no villages, no roads, no river works … although it may be that today's low clouds and haze are helping to hide them.
And instantly it’s obvious why Imanishi Kinji – scholar-alpinist, Himalayan pioneer and aficionado of vast open spaces – so cherished this remote and retiring peak.













































