"You used to climb in Izu?"
That's usually the reaction I get. First comes the inevitable question: "Where exactly is Izu?" Japan conjures images of Tokyo's skyline or Kyoto's ancient temples - the rock climbing areas tend to stay off the radar for most visitors.
Mention that it's near Mount Fuji, and people start to get the picture. Bring up Hakone, and it gets a little clearer.
Ninety minutes by train from Tokyo. A small peninsula jutting out into the Pacific Ocean, where, quietly but unmistakably, a world-class climbing destination exists.
The Izu Peninsula. Known across Japan for its hot springs, this stretch of land is surrounded by ocean on three sides. Massive tuff walls, sea cliffs, crags tucked among plum orchards, and even a historically significant route — the first 5.12 (7b) ever climbed in Japan, back in 1983 — are all waiting here, spread across a landscape that feels nothing like your typical climbing trip.
Whether you're just starting out or pushing your limits on hard projects, Izu has something for you.
I first started coming here over fifteen years ago. The feel of cold rock on a clear winter morning. Soaking in an onsen as the sun goes down after a long day on the wall. A bowl of kinmedai — local golden-eye snapper — at a small harbor restaurant. These memories have stayed with me. I started this blog because climbing friends kept asking: "So what's the climbing actually like over there?"
This guide covers everything you need to plan a climbing trip to Izu — access, seasons, crag-by-crag breakdowns, accommodation, hot springs, and more. If you're thinking about two or three weeks in Japan with a rope in your bag, I hope this helps.
Essential Information
When to Go — Seasons
One of Izu's greatest strengths is that you can climb here almost year-round. That said, conditions vary significantly depending on the season.
Winter (December – February)
The best time to visit. Temperatures hover around 50–60°F (10–15°C), the rock is dry, and friction is excellent. Many walls face south, so you'll often find yourself climbing in warm winter sunshine. Weekends draw crowds from Tokyo, which gives the crags a lively atmosphere — but even the busiest days have a charm that feels distinctly Izu.
Spring (March – May)
Temperatures start to climb and conditions remain pleasant. The one caveat: Golden Week, Japan's major national holiday period running from late April to early May, brings serious crowds. If your trip overlaps with Golden Week, aim for weekdays or get to the crag early.
Summer (June – September)
Let's be honest: it's hot. Japan's summers are humid, and temperatures regularly exceed 86°F (30°C). Compared to most climbing destinations, the humidity makes it feel significantly hotter than the temperature alone suggests. That said, it's not impossible. The key is choosing shaded crags and starting early. Areas like the North Wall at Joyama (Wild Turkey Gorge), which sees little direct sun, can still be climbable even in the height of summer.
Fall (October – November)
A close second to winter. The air clears, rock conditions return to their best, and you might find yourself climbing among autumn foliage. October in Izu is particularly good.
Getting There — Access
By Train
Train is the easiest way to get to Izu from Tokyo. The Tokaido Shinkansen (Kodama or Hikari services) covers the stretch from Tokyo Station to Mishima Station in around 45–55 minutes. From Mishima, the Izu-Hakone Railway takes you to Shuzenji in another 30 minutes.
For Joyama, the closest station is Ohito on the Izu-Hakone Railway — about a 25-minute walk to the trailhead, with the South Wall another 10 minutes beyond that.
For Washizuyama, take a bus from JR Numazu Station and get off at Shita Kokaido-mae, then walk around 30 minutes.
Yugawara Makuiwa is the most Tokyo-accessible crag in the Izu area. Take the JR Tokaido Line to Yugawara Station (about 90 minutes from Tokyo), then a bus toward Kajiya for around 20 minutes, followed by a 25-minute walk to the crag.
For Jogasaki, take the JR Ito Line to Izu-Kogen Station (about 2 hours from Tokyo). The Seaside Area is within walking distance from the station.
By Car
If you're planning to visit multiple areas or traveling with a lot of gear, renting a car makes life considerably easier. The drive from Tokyo via the Tomei Expressway takes about 90 minutes to the Numazu interchange, putting Joyama and Washizuyama within 30 minutes from there. Weekend traffic on the Tomei can be heavy — an early start is strongly recommended.
Picking up a rental car at Mishima or Shuzenji after taking the train from Tokyo is another solid option, especially if you're carrying a lot of gear.
Rock Types
Izu's geology is the result of multiple volcanic events, which is why the rock type varies so much from crag to crag. Joyama and Washizuyama are primarily tuff, while Jogasaki and Yugawara Makuiwa are mainly andesite. Each area has its own distinct feel, which we'll get into in the crag-by-crag sections below.
Gear and Topos
Gear
Most areas in Izu are bolt-protected sport climbing. A set of 12–16 quickdraws and a 50m rope will cover the majority of routes. For longer routes at Jogasaki, a 60m rope is worth bringing.
Gear shops are scarce near the crags, so stock up in Tokyo before heading out. The Kanda/Ochanomizu neighborhood in central Tokyo has a high concentration of outdoor and climbing shops. For climbing-specific gear, Calafate is particularly well-stocked and worth a visit.
Topos
English topos for Izu are virtually nonexistent. Japanese guidebooks are the standard, but between the photos and grade markings, you can get a reasonable sense of the routes even without reading Japanese. Links to online route information (in Japanese) for each area are included in the individual crag sections below.
IZU・Joyama (城山)
When climbers talk about Izu, Joyama is usually the first name that comes up. Located in Izu no Kuni City, Shizuoka Prefecture, on the banks of the Kano River, this impressive volcanic formation is defined by its massive tuff wall — roughly 200 meters tall and over 300 meters wide — facing south to southwest. The first time I stood at the base of the South Wall, I couldn't move for a while. I just looked up.
The Areas
Joyama isn't a single crag — it's a collection of distinct sectors, each with its own character.
South Wall (南壁)
The face of Joyama. A wide range of routes from slab to vertical, with a strong selection in the 5.9–5.11 range. If it's your first visit, start here. This is where I spent most of my early climbing days in Izu — learning footwork on the slab, building confidence on the steeper lines. There are also multi-pitch routes that take you to the top of the wall, where the Kano River valley and the mountains of Izu open up below you.
Wild Boar Gorge (ワイルドボアゴージ)
About 50 minutes on foot from the South Wall, this sector offers some of Joyama's most sustained climbing. Routes are concentrated in the 5.11–5.13 range, and the approach alone filters out the casual visitor. I spent a lot of time here working projects. In winter, it draws a dedicated crowd — don't expect solitude on weekends.
Tube Rock (チューブロック)
A small sector on the way to Wild Boar Gorge. Mostly used for warm-ups, it's a convenient stop on the way in or out.
Niken Band (二間バンド)
Just past Tube Rock, this upper-tier sector is known for its dramatic rock formations — the kind that end up as profile photos. A destination in its own right for stronger climbers, and genuinely stunning to look at even if you're not climbing there.
Wild Turkey Gorge / North Wall (北壁)
A shaded sector that sees little direct sun. Worth knowing about in summer, or any time you want to escape the crowds on the main wall.
Recommended Routes
These are routes I've personally climbed or attempted. There's plenty more out there — treat this as a starting point, not a complete list.
South Wall
・Another Step (5.9) — A great introduction to Joyama's slab. The fundamentals are all here.
・Kamagata Hang Route P1 (5.10a) — The crux finish over a small overhang makes this one fun. A solid target if 5.10a is your current benchmark.
・Tanabata no Tanabota (5.10c) — A satisfying sequence over a small roof.
・Heart Route (5.10d) — The signature route of the South Wall. Climb this and its neighbor Brown Sugar (5.11a), and you've got a good read on where you stand at Joyama.
・Excursion (5.10c) — My pick for the best multi-pitch on the South Wall. The exposure builds gradually, and the view from the top is worth every move.
Wild Boar Gorge
・Gigolo (5.11b/c) — The crux sequence is harder to read than it looks.
・Jambalaya (5.11c) — A long reach to a sharp crimp in the crux section.
・Overdrive (5.11d) — The signature route of Wild Boar Gorge.
These three are known among local climbers as the "Wild Boar 5.11 Trilogy" — three distinct styles, all worth doing back to back if you're dialing in the grade.
Tube Rock
・Stone Free (5.10c) — The go-to warm-up. The final moves are a fun surprise.
Niken Band
・Fate (5.12a) — Still a project for me. Photogenic doesn't begin to cover it — the setting and the movement feel like Joyama at its most itself.
One Night on the Wall
There's one memory from Joyama that has never faded. The first time I climbed Inner Wall 4, I spent so long fumbling with quickdraw retrieval on the descent that by the time I got down, it was dark. Below me, the lights along the Kano River had come on, quiet and scattered across the valley. I hadn't planned to see that. I'm glad I did.
Access
By train
Ohito Station on the Izu-Hakone Railway. Around 25 minutes on foot to the trailhead, then another 10 minutes to the South Wall. Allow about 50 minutes from the trailhead to reach Wild Boar Gorge.
By car
For the South Wall, take Route 129 from Kamishima Bridge to the Joyama trailhead parking lot. For Wild Boar Gorge, skip the South Wall approach entirely — from Kamishima Bridge, follow the forest road to the pass parking area. This is the standard approach for the gorge.
Topos
Route information is available (in Japanese) at climbing-net.com. Grade markings and route diagrams are useful even without Japanese.
Yugawara Makuiwa (湯河原幕岩)
Of all the crags in the Izu area, Yugawara Makuiwa is the closest to Tokyo — and in some ways, the most distinctly Japanese climbing experience you'll find.
The crag sits on the mid-slopes of Makuyama in Yugawara Town, Kanagawa Prefecture, tucked inside a plum orchard. From February through March, around 4,000 plum trees come into bloom, and you'll find yourself climbing with the scent of plum blossoms drifting through the air. It's the kind of thing that doesn't happen anywhere else. The approach is short too — just a few minutes from the parking lot to the first routes.
Where Joyama impresses with scale, Makuiwa wins on density. Over 370 routes packed into a compact area, with grades ranging from 5.8 to 5.13, though the sweet spot is firmly in the 5.10 range — 154 routes at that grade alone. The wall angle sits between 80 and 90 degrees throughout, and the rock is loaded with small, sharp crimps. Routes here tend to be short and technical — the kind that shut you down fast if you're not precise. Power and technique both get tested.
The Areas
Togenkyou (桃源郷)
The heart of Makuiwa. The name translates roughly as "paradise" or "shangri-la," and the atmosphere lives up to it. Entry-level routes dominate here, making it the natural starting point for first-time visitors.
Alibaba Rock (アリババの岩)
Where you get your first real introduction to Makuiwa's crimps. If you're coming from a gym background, this is where the holds start to feel very different — smaller, sharper, less forgiving. A genuine baptism of fire for newcomers.
Kibouhou (希望峰)
One of the few areas at Makuiwa where the routes run long. More open feel, with routes that suit climbers in the upper beginner to lower intermediate range.
Macaron Land (マコロンランド)
Short, punchy, crimp-intensive. If you love small holds and precise footwork, this is your corner of the crag.
Main Wall (正面壁)
The most imposing sector at Makuiwa. When I was climbing regularly in Izu, this wall was off-limits — closed to climbing for an extended period. It has since reopened, and it's now on the list for my next visit.
Recommended Routes
Personal impressions only — plenty of great routes beyond what's listed here.
Togenkyou
・Sunset (5.10a) — The go-to warm-up and entry route at Makuiwa. A good way to calibrate to the rock.
・Yugure-doki (5.10b) — Climbs harder than the grade suggests. One of those routes that earns its reputation as a sandbagged classic.
Alibaba Rock
・Alibaba (5.10b) — Steep wall, crimps all the way. A baptism of fire for anyone new to Makuiwa. If you're used to gym holds, this one will recalibrate your expectations fast.
Kibouhou
・Shakushain (5.10d) — The most popular route at Makuiwa, and for good reason. Unusually long for this crag, technical from the start through the upper crux, with deceptively committing climbing near the top. Sending this one feels like graduating from the beginner tier.
・Kikanhei (5.10c) — Haven't sent it yet, but the movement is big and satisfying. One I keep coming back to.
Macaron Land
・Geisha Waltz (5.11b) — My favorite route at Makuiwa, and the one I'm most proud of sending here. There's a no-right-wall restriction, but within that constraint, the sequence flows beautifully — crimping left and right across the face in a movement that feels exactly like what this crag is about.
The Plum Orchard
I've been to Makuiwa in plum blossom season and in the heavy green of early summer, just before the rainy season sets in. Both versions of the crag are worth experiencing. But the plum season is something else. Climbing while the scent drifts past you — that's something you won't find anywhere else.
Access
By train
JR Tokaido Line to Yugawara Station (approximately 90 minutes from Tokyo). Take the bus toward Kajiya, ride for about 20 minutes, and get off at the Makuiwa Koen stop. From there it's a 25-minute walk to the crag.
By car
Use the Makuiwa Koen parking lot. The walk from the parking area to the first routes is just a few minutes — one of the shortest approaches of any crag in Izu.
Topos
Route information is available (in Japanese) at climbing-net.com. Grade markings and route diagrams are useful even without Japanese.
Jogasaki (城ヶ崎)
Jogasaki occupies a different category from the other crags in this guide. Located on the eastern coast of the Izu Peninsula, it's built on lava flows that cooled into the sea — a dramatic stretch of andesite cliffs, 20 to 30 meters tall, running along the coastline. You climb here with the sound of waves below you. The feel is similar to any great coastal crag — rock meeting open water, with all the atmosphere that comes with it.
I want to be upfront about something. When I was climbing regularly in Izu, Jogasaki was always the crag I looked up to — but my level wasn't there yet. I visited several times and soaked in the atmosphere, but I never got to really climb it properly. So what follows is honest about that limitation. For the harder lines — anything 5.12a and above — you'll want to supplement this with other sources. What I can offer is the feel of the place, the access, and the routes I did manage to get on.
The Areas
Seaside Area (シーサイドエリア)
When people say "Jogasaki," this is usually what they mean — bolt-protected sport routes with the ocean directly in front of you. The setting alone is worth the trip. Routes start around 5.11, but Jogasaki's real identity is in the 5.12 and above territory. If that's your range, you'll find no shortage of quality lines here.
Other Areas
Further along the coastline, areas like the Family Area offer crack climbing alongside the sport routes. I made one visit to Funamushi Rock — a small sector well suited to crack practice for beginners — and that remains my one and only crack climbing area experience to this day. I also climbed Flash Dance (5.9) on top rope at the Funamushi Rock, and despite the grade, it left an impression.
Recommended Routes
Given my limited experience here, this list is modest — but honest.
Seaside Area
・Kaze ni Fukarete (5.11a) — The entry route for the Seaside Area. The moves over the overhang are the highlight.
・Tight Boy (5.10d) — There are holds, but the angle keeps building and the pump doesn't stop. A baptism of fire for anyone new to Jogasaki.
・White Shark (5.11c) — The last time I tried this was January 2011. Time moves fast. I still find myself looking at photos of it on social media, wondering what it would feel like now.
The Memory That Stayed
I remember the first time I approached the Seaside Area clearly. You walk along the coastline, then rappel down to reach the base of the routes. It's not unlike certain coastal crags where rappelling in is part of the deal. But Jogasaki added something that hadn't prepared me for: the quiet understanding that getting down was easy, and getting back up was entirely up to me. I wasn't a strong climber then, and that fact felt very present at the bottom of those cliffs.
Waves hitting the rock below. The smell of the ocean. Climbers working their routes in silence. I didn't send what I came for. But I left wanting to come back stronger. That feeling hasn't gone away.
Access
By train
JR Ito Line to Izu-Kogen Station (approximately 2 hours from Tokyo). The Seaside Area is around 20–25 minutes on foot from the station.
By car
Use the Jogasaki Coast parking area. The walk to the Seaside Area takes just a few minutes from the lot.
Topos
Route information is available (in Japanese) at climbing-net.com. Grade markings and route diagrams are useful even without Japanese.
Washizuyama (鷲頭山)
Washizuyama holds a unique place in Japanese climbing history. Located in Numazu City, Shizuoka Prefecture, overlooking Suruga Bay from a summit of 392 meters, this crag was where Japan's first 5.12 route was climbed — in January 1983.
To understand what that meant at the time: decimal grades were barely established in Japan. Routes with clear, specific grade designations were rare. Then, almost overnight, four routes appeared at Washizuyama that changed everything — Meizu (5.10d), ET Hang (5.11a), Cosmic Dancer (5.11d), and Jet (5.12a). Climbers came from across the country just to test themselves against these grades. Think of what Smith Rock did for American sport climbing, or what Buoux and the Verdon did for European climbing in the 1980s. Washizuyama was that moment for Japan.
The rock is tuff, wall angles sit between 80 and 90 degrees, and the style is old-school — precise footwork, small crimps, nothing handed to you. In spring, cherry blossoms frame the approach. From the crag, on a clear day, Suruga Bay stretches out below. And the atmosphere is genuinely local — unhurried, unpretentious, a long way from anything resembling a tourist destination.
The Areas
Main Area
The historical core of Washizuyama. This is where the landmark routes live, and where the story of Japanese free climbing effectively begins.
Kacchin Rock, Sankyu Rock, Jagaimo Rock
Smaller sectors scattered around the main area, each with its own character. Good for warming up and winding down, with enough variety to fill a full day.
Recommended Routes
Personal impressions — use as a starting point.
・Manbou (5.10a) — Frequently used as a warm-up, but don't be fooled by the grade. This route has a way of reminding you exactly where you stand. A classic Washizuyama welcome.
・Hokurei Direct (5.10a?) — Trust the grade at your own risk. I also had an unexpected encounter with a snake mid-route, which gives this one a special place in my memory.
・ET Hang (5.11a) — One of the original 1983 routes. Old-school movement, condensed into a single pitch. Climbing it feels like touching a piece of history.
・Cosmic Dancer (5.11d) — Moderate angle, crimps that just keep coming, and a pump that builds slowly until it isn't slow anymore. Haven't sent it yet, but the feeling of climbing it has never left me.
A Somersault Before the Climb
There's a memory from Washizuyama that still makes me laugh. One day, walking from the parking area toward the crag, I bent down to pick something up — and my pack went straight over my head. Full somersault. A local fisherman who happened to be passing by looked over and said something along the lines of: "Hey, you're supposed to fall on the wall, not before you get there."
That exchange probably says more about Washizuyama than any route description could. This is a crag where the local community is still very much present — fishermen, farmers, people who have watched climbers come and go for decades. It's a rare thing, and worth appreciating.
Access
By train and bus
JR Tokaido Line to Numazu Station, then bus to Shita Kokaido-mae stop, followed by approximately 30 minutes on foot.
By car
Around 30 minutes from the Numazu interchange. Parking is available near the crag.
Topos
Route information is available (in Japanese) at climbing-net.com. Grade markings and route diagrams are useful even without Japanese.
Local Crags: Kamenoko-iwa & Crayon Wall
Once you've worked through the main crags, or if you find yourself with extra days in Izu, there are two smaller spots worth knowing about. Kamenoko-iwa and Crayon Wall don't appear in most guidebooks, and English-language information is virtually nonexistent. That's exactly why they're here.
Kamenoko-iwa (亀の甲岩)
Kamenoko-iwa sits roughly halfway between Tokurasan (256m) and Washizuyama (392m) in the Numazu Alps, on the inland side of the ridge. Note that the Washizuyama climbing area is on the ocean-facing side — same general mountain range, very different feel.
The routes lean toward the beginner-to-intermediate range, but don't mistake compact for easy. Every route here has real movement, and the crag rewards repeat visits. On weekends you'll rarely encounter more than a handful of local climbers, which gives the place a quieter, more personal atmosphere than anywhere else in the Izu area.
There's one route that deserves special mention: Mukade no Tokimeki (5.12b). Locals will tell you it's worth a dedicated trip just for this line. I haven't sent it yet, but I understand completely why people make the journey.
Crayon Wall (クレヨンウォール)
Crayon Wall is a small intermediate-level crag on the path toward Kamenoko-iwa. The wall faces away from direct sun, which makes it one of the better options in Izu during summer — genuinely climbable even when the main crags are baking.
The route count is modest, but each line has its own personality. I remember climbing here on a hot day when the bigger crags were out of the question. Just a shaded wall, no crowds, and the kind of quiet focus that's hard to find at the popular spots. Knowing about places like this changes how you experience an Izu summer.
Access
Both crags are accessed via the hiking trail from the Ooi settlement (大井集落). Detailed access information is best sourced from local climbers or recent online posts — part of the charm of finding these places is the process of tracking them down.
Practical Information
Accommodation
Izu is well set up for overnight stays — as one of Japan's premier hot spring destinations, the accommodation options are extensive. The key is choosing a base that works for the crags you're focusing on.
Shuzenji Onsen area (base for Joyama and Washizuyama)
Shuzenji is the oldest hot spring town in Izu, with everything from traditional ryokan inns to guesthouses and budget options. The atmosphere is genuinely beautiful — bamboo groves, a small river running through the center of town, and that particular quiet that comes with old Japanese spa towns. A great base for multiple days at Joyama.
Ohito area (base for Joyama)
The closest accommodation to Joyama itself. Options are simpler here, but if you're planning consecutive days on the wall, being close to the crag is hard to beat.
Yugawara Onsen area (base for Yugawara Makuiwa)
Yugawara combines hot springs with excellent seafood, and access to Makuiwa is straightforward from here. A short trip further along the coast puts you in Atami, which adds another layer of options.
Izu-Kogen area (base for Jogasaki)
A popular area with tourists as well as climbers. Pensions and small hotels are common, and the Seaside Area at Jogasaki is within walking distance.
Camping
I don't have personal experience camping in Izu, but there are sites in both the Ohito/Joyama area and around Jogasaki that are well suited to climbers. Search "城ヶ崎 キャンプ場" or "大仁 キャンプ場" for current options and availability.
Hot Springs
Finishing a day at the crag with an onsen is one of the defining experiences of climbing in Izu. Day-use bathing is widely available at most facilities, typically for around 500–2,000 yen.
Shuzenji Onsen, Yugawara Onsen, and Atami Onsen are the main options, each within easy reach of the climbing areas. Shuzenji in particular has a quality that's hard to describe — bamboo groves, traditional architecture, and water that seems to pull the fatigue straight out of your hands. Small public bathhouses used by locals are worth seeking out if you want the less tourist-facing version of the experience.
Food
Being surrounded by ocean on three sides, Izu takes its seafood seriously.
Kinmedai (金目鯛 — Golden-eye snapper)
The signature dish of the region. Braised in a sweet soy glaze until the flesh is just falling apart — this is the thing to order. The fishing ports of Shimoda and Inatori both have small restaurants serving it fresh.
Yugawara and Atami seafood
The coastal towns offer daily catches straight from the harbor. A sashimi set or seafood rice bowl after a day on the wall is hard to improve on.
Shuzenji area
More mountain-influenced cuisine here — local vegetables, river fish, and wasabi, which is one of Izu's most celebrated products. Having freshly grated wasabi at the table is an experience that's hard to find anywhere outside Japan.
Local diners
Every hot spring town has its share of small, affordable restaurants serving set meals with local ingredients. Eat where the locals eat — the food is better and the prices are lower.
Grade Conversion
Japanese crags use the Yosemite Decimal System (YDS), so the grades will be familiar to most climbers.
One important note: older-style crags like Washizuyama and Makuiwa tend to climb harder than their grades suggest. If you're not sure, start a grade below what you'd normally warm up on. You can always move up.
A full interactive grade converter is also available on this site 👉🏻 here — useful if you're working across multiple grading systems.
FAQ
Q: Will I manage without speaking Japanese?
In short, yes. A few things help: Google Translate's camera function handles menus, signs, and topos remarkably well. At the crags, gesture and goodwill go a long way — Japanese climbers are generally welcoming toward visiting climbers, and someone will usually step in if you look lost. Learning a few basic phrases doesn't hurt either.
Q: Are convenience stores really as useful as people say?
Yes, completely. FamilyMart, 7-Eleven, and Lawson are everywhere in Japan, including in smaller towns near the climbing areas. Hot food, onigiri, sports drinks, basic first aid supplies, and ATMs that accept international cards — all under one roof. The morning routine of grabbing an onigiri and a coffee before driving to the crag becomes a ritual surprisingly quickly.
Final Thoughts
Writing this guide brought back more memories than I expected. The lights along the Kano River seen from the wall at Joyama after dark. The smell of plum blossoms at Makuiwa on a cold February morning. A somersault in a parking lot at Washizuyama, and a fisherman who found it funnier than I did. Standing at the base of Jogasaki's sea cliffs, knowing I wasn't ready — and wanting, badly, to come back.
These are the things that stay. Not just the sends, not just the grades — the whole texture of being somewhere specific, climbing on specific rock, in a specific season, with specific people nearby.
Izu is not just a climbing destination. There are hot springs waiting after every session. There's seafood that you won't find at altitude in the Alps. On a clear day, there's Fuji. Whether you send your project or spend a week getting shut down, the trip holds together on its own terms.
It's a long way to go. But once you've been, it doesn't feel that far.
I hope this guide gives you enough to make the trip happen. The grades are there, the access is there, the seasons are mapped out. The rest is up to you.
A record of the routes I've sent — including Izu — is available 👉🏻 here.
See you on the rock in Izu — someday.
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