2026年3月25日水曜日

Report on TENGU Tour held on 15 March 2026

 

Our guests was a Master’s student from Vietnam majoring in biology at Tokyo Metropolitan University.

TENGU guides included Satomi, Yamada and Shiro as tour leader. Two observers who are prospective future TENGU members also joined the tour.

Obviously, there were a little too many guides from the perspective of our guest.

In fact, we originally planned a guiding training without any guests as we had received no application for the tour in time for the application deadline.

Having said that, I do believe that our guest was not upset to see too many guides partly because we didn’t charge any fees and expenses to him.

The weather was reasonably good during the tour.

So, we were able to see high-rise buildings in Shinjuku and Tokyo Skytree from Sumika-mae Observation Deck while we were not able to see Mt. Fuji from the peak of Mt. Takao.

On the way, we took a cable car leaving Kiyotaki Station around 10:00 am.

Soon after we got off the cable car, we followed Trail 1, the front approach to Yakuo-in Temple, effectively a monastery of mountain priests who practice Shugendo, the fusion of Buddhism and Shinto.


At Kasumidai Observation Deck


We showed our guest various landmarks such as Monkey Park, some 500-year-old Octopus Cedar Tree, Joshin-mon tori-i gate symbolizing the fusion of Shinto and Shingon sect of Buddhism, a photogenic Thai style white stupa in Yuki-en (Joyful Garden), etc


In front of Thai style white stupa

 

Needless to say, we showed our guest a wooden plate mentioning TENGU as a donor to Yakuo-in Temple to demonstrate our loyalty to Mt. Takao. 


In front of a wooden plate mentioning TENGU as a donor to Yakuo-in Temple

 

When we went into the grounds of Yakuo-in Temple going through Shitenno-mon (the Gate of Four Heavenly Kings), it was around 11:30 am.

In front of Shitenno-mon (the Gate of Four Heavenly Kings)

 

After purifying ourselves at the purification basin, we took a group photo in front of a pair of Tengu statues.


In front of a pair of Tengu statues

 

In the grounds of Yakuo-in Temple, our guest drew an omikuji (fortune slip).

Generally, Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines tend to minimize the share of great misfortune and bad fortune by reducing them down to 5% or less to be more friendly to visitors.

Having said that, unfortunately, his fortune said “bad fortune“.

We cheered him up by saying that in a sense his fortune is within the top 5%? of all the fortunes and/or his fortune would surely become better in the future and otherwise.

Further, we suggested, irrespective of 'Don't leave any garbage behind campaign' in Mt. Takao, that he should leave it behind by tying his fortune slip to a designed wire in the grounds of Yakuo-in Temple to keep his bad fortune away.

We got to the peak of the mountain around 12:30 pm.

 As more or less expected, due to the bad fortune of our guest or otherwise, our guest and we were not able to see a graceful figure of Mt. Fuji from the peak of the mountain.

Having said that, our fortune turned out better when we tried to find a lunch table. 

In fact, a group of school students kindly let us use one of the tables they had already occupied.

At the lunch table

 

We had a good time over lunch and happened to find that our guest is studying insects, especially, bees.


At the peak of the mountain

 

After taking another group photo at the peak of the mountain, we left there around 1:30 pm via Trail 4 going through a suspension bridge.

 

Coming down Trail 4



Crossing Miyama-bashi bridge

 

After coming back to the mountain base taking a chairlift, we took the final group photo in front of to cable car Kiyotaki Station around 2:30 pm, which was the end of the tour.


In front of Kiyotaki Station

 

Written by Shiro

Dated: 21 March 2026






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