Miyagi 宮城県
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Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day1 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Soma, the Southern Terminus 相馬市
The first morning of our Michinoku Coastal Trail journey broke over a quiet sea in Soma, blue and endless. We set out northbound—against the usual flow—hoping spring would follow our steps. The day carried us through farmlands and shrines, soft wind and the season’s first cherry blossoms. By evening, tired but unhurt, we reached the foot of Mt. Karou, our next climb waiting. The road ahead stretched north for a thousand kilometers, and it already felt like the beginning of something vast. -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 2 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Mt. Karou 鹿狼山
Day 2 opened bright and clear as we climbed Mt. Karou, where the summit offered a full circle of mountains, farmland, and the shining sea. Springs and early cherry blossoms eased the way down before the road stretched into flat, sun-baked silence—just heat, wind, and one lonely red vending machine that felt like salvation. Later, the ruins of a seaside school brought the day to a quiet pause, and somewhere beyond that, a small unexpected kindness reminded us that the trail still had surprises waiting. -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 3 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Watari Horst Mountains Traverse 亘理地塁山地縦走
Day 3 led us over the Watari Horst Mountains — a string of small peaks that looked gentle on the map but proved quietly demanding underfoot. The trail rolled from one ridge to the next, sometimes through open views, sometimes under cedar shade, until rain found us near the end. By the time we reached Watari’s quiet streets and the promise of a seaside onsen, our bodies finally understood how even low hills can add up. It wasn’t dramatic, but it was one of those steady, satisfying hiking days that leave you both worn out and content. -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 4 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Abukuma River & Iwanuma 阿武隈川と岩沼市
Day 4 began with easy steps through quiet neighborhoods. We met a local elder with his dog—little did we know he was the oldest MCT thru-hiker still in the making then. The trail followed the wide Abukuma River, past stone-carved Buddhas and across long, flat coastal plains where the horizon never seemed to move. Just when the monotony started to wear us down, we found a small sheep village—a cheerful surprise in the middle of nowhere—and later, the last standing house from a vanished seaside town. By the time Sendai Airport came into view, we were simply glad to have walked it all. -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 5 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Natori 名取市
Day 5 began under a sky as white as paper—eerily still after days of blazing blue. From Sendai Airport to the quiet bay of Yuriage, we followed the line between the sea and the city, where traces of the 2011 tsunami still lingered. The road stretched straight for miles, flat as the horizon itself, testing both patience and feet. By the time the factories of Sendai Port appeared through the haze, all we wanted was rest, hot water, and a place to breathe. -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 6 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Tagajo & Shiogama 多賀城市&塩竈市
Day 6 began with easy feet and clear skies — a rare combination on the MCT so far. From the port of Sendai to Tagajo, a city whose history stretches back more than a thousand years, the trail led us through layers of ancient culture and sacred hills. Cherry blossoms lined the path, softening the air with spring. By day’s end, we stood at Shiogama Shrine overlooking the bay, knowing that tomorrow, the trail would carry us across the sea to the islands beyond. -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Urato Islands by Boat: How to Plan the MCT’s Island Section
This guide explains how to plan the Urato Islands section of the Michinoku Coastal Trail — one of the route’s most logistics-heavy days — and why hiking northbound (NOBO) makes it easier. It outlines the four required boat rides across the Urato Islands and clarifies which boats run where. You’ll learn when and how to reserve the special boat to cross the sea between Sabusawajima and Miyatojima islands, plus why getting these island legs done in your first 10 days removes a major planning headache. -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 7 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Urato Islands 浦戸諸島
Day 7 begins on water, not trail. Three quiet islands ask less of our legs and more of our timing—boats that move when the sea allows, a call that has to land, and small buffers that keep a walk from turning into a sprint. We slip past shrines and a strip of sand, then meet one person whose story quietly reshapes the afternoon. The crossings themselves are easy; the puzzle is pace—wait, move, decide—until it all lines up. By afternoon, our planned pickup becomes a short small-boat cruise off the islands, the kind that turns logistics into memory. It isn’t dramatic—just sea air, a narrow strait, and the reminder that on this trail, timing counts as much as distance. -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 8 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Ishinomaki 石巻市
The Only Unbooked Night During the fifty days of our hike on the Michinoku Coastal Trail, we always booked accommodations to secure our beds in the walls and roofs for the next seven days or eight. It was mainly because we needed to plan how and where to send our camping gear boxes.We always used Yamato delivery ser… -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 9 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Tashirojima & Ajishima islands 田代島 & 網地島
MCT thru-hikers need at least three days to cover all the island parts on the official route. They are concentrated in the southern parts of the MCT route. That means sea travel happens at a very early stage of the MCT thru-hike for the northbound hikers. On the other hand, the southbound hikers will come just befor… -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 10 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Mt. Kinkasan Island 金華山
Throughout the MCT, which section is the hardest to reach? It is, no doubt, Mt. Kinkasan Island 金華山, the last one of the three “islands” sections. It is not only the hardest to reach but also the most expensive place to get to — at least for us- and the most thorough preplanning is required. Too… -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 11 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): The Oshika Peninsula 牡鹿半島
After we returned to our hotel last evening, the drizzle quickly turned into pouring and continued all night. Still, we were very optimistic and relaxed because the evening weather forecast expected the rain to calm down by this morning. We soaked in a big hot onsen all to ourselves, enjoyed our dinner, and ha… -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 12 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Mt.Dairokutenyama 大六天山
The excellent view through the windows of our room at Zuiko was even better this morning. The seawater was lighter blue and more transparent, calmly shimmering under the morning sun. The rain clouds and cold wind had gone. We slept well last night as Zuiko was pretty quiet inside and outside. Surprisingly, tho… -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 13-14 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Onagawa 女川町
Onagawa, an ideal rest-day town Almost two weeks had passed since we started from the MCT Southern Terminus in Soma. It was about time to take a much-needed rest day.As much as we wished we could spontaneously stop and take a rest day, the lodging situation and hiking environment in Japan don’t work well with it. We… -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 15 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Mt. Ishinageyama 石投山
Back on Track We were excited to get back on the trail after two full days of rest in Onagawa Town—especially since the day began with a 10-kilometer stretch of nature trails leading up and down the town’s highest mountain, Mt. Ishinageyama 石投山 (455.5 m). After reaching our goal point for the day, we planned to r… -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 16 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Ogatsu Peninsula 雄勝半島
When Finding a Bed Felt Impossible We honestly thought we might finally have to do stealth camping when we looked at the route map around the Ogatsu Peninsula 雄勝半島. On Day 16 of our MCT thru-hiking, our plan was to walk all the way around the peninsula to Hamanasu Café はまなすカフェ by Lake Nagatsuraura 長面浦,… -
Michinoku Coastal Trail
Day 17 of MCT (Michinoku Coastal Trail): Kitakami River & Cape Kamiwarizaki 北上川&神割崎
The Only Way Is Up — Keep Walking “If you hit rock bottom, you can only go up from there.”Is it true? We would find out today. Last evening, on the way to our hotel from Lake Nagatsuraura, we arranged this morning’s pickup with the taxi driver. So when we checked out of the hotel, the taxi was already waiting (again…
