News On Japan

Barricades placed on Mt. Fuji as mountain officially closes because of coronavirus

Jun 26 (soranews24.com) - Surveillance camera, alarm installed to discourage the uninformed and unconcerned.

In an ordinary year, we’d be just a few weeks away from the start of Mt. Fuji’s climbing season, with hikers headed up Japan’s tallest mountain to rise above the summer heat and appreciate the country’s natural beauty from a one-of-a-kind vantage point.

2020 has been anything but ordinary, though, with the coronavirus disrupting just about all aspects of life. So instead of officially opening the mountain to hikers on July 10, as had been the plan, the governments of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures recently announced that Mt. Fuji (which straddles the border between the two prefectures) will be closed to visitors for the entire summer, and in effect the remainder of the year, since the climbing season was scheduled to end on September 10.

They’re serious about the restriction, too. This week Yamanashi’s Fujiyoshida City, where the Yoshida Trail (one of the most popular routes to the peak) starts, installed barricades to prevent hikers from making their way up Fuji’s slopes.

Two barricades have been set up, with the first checkpoint consisting of metal bars that stretch across the footpath flanked by signs in Japanese, English, and Chinese explaining that the mountain is closed. Should would-be hikers ignore all that, about 30 meters (98 feet) further down the path is a sturdier fence with an alarm that sounds if anyone approaches, while a recording announces “Danger! Do not enter.” The area is also monitored with security cameras.

While the barricades look like they can be pretty easily bypassed with a half-dozen steps off the beaten path and into the underbrush, the purpose of the barricades is less to turn Mt. Fuji into an impregnable fortress and more to remind people that the “do not enter” order is more than just a friendly suggestion. The city also wants to make sure that those who haven’t heard about the hiking ban don’t start making an ascent, and posters explaining that Mt. Fuji is closed for 2020 are also going up at tourist attractions, travel facilities, and outdoor/sporting goods shops in Yamanashi.

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