I confirm the mistletoe identification, looks identical to the British one.
I just looked it up - the Japanese Mistletoe is the same species as the European one, Viscum album, but of the East Asian subspecies coloratum (treated as a distinct species in some sources).I confirm the mistletoe identification, looks identical to the British one.
I just looked it up - the Japanese Mistletoe is the same species as the European one, Viscum album, but of the East Asian subspecies coloratum (treated as a distinct species in some sources).
I don't think so. I saw it here and there on trees, and it was obvious because the trees were otherwise bare of leaves, but I didn't see lots of it.Had that Japanese region you visited big problems with mistletoe invasion? Because in parts of my country, mistletoe got "invasive" in last decade (despite being native here, go figure) to the point it destroys large amount of grown trees, decimating both city parks and dispersed trees and windbreaks in countryside. It´s quete distressing to see dying trees everywhere so mistletoe pics trigger sort of pstd reaction in me.
Arasaki Crane Observatory (Izumi)
Seeing the wintering cranes at Arasaki was one of my main "goals" for Japan. It's not a difficult goal to achieve, you just need to go there in winter and you'll see them, but not all goals need to be difficult!
There is some accommodation actually at Arasaki which would be ideal if you wanted to spend as much time there as you could just photographing cranes (say, @Lafone), but I couldn't figure out how to book it in advance, and I didn't know how I'd get there from town when I arrived at night on the bus from the airport, and it would have been awkward getting back to the train station to catch that bus at 6am on my departure morning.
The Hotel Wing International was more expensive but logistically in a better place, and it could be easily booked online (on booking. com) before leaving New Zealand. They have a free coffee machine in the lobby which was appreciated, as well as free bicycles which I thought about but didn't use, and a free laundry room. There is a restaurant by the lobby which I only used for breakfast (12,000 Yen and it's a buffet so eat as much as you like). For other meals I just bought the takeaway meals they sell at Lawson and FamilyMart, which get discounted at the end of the day. They are good meals, lots of selections, and they only cost a few dollars so eating was quite cheap (roughly about 300 to 600 Yen per meal, depending on what it was).
In the little park directly opposite the hotel I saw my first Japanese Grosbeaks while having breakfast. They are huge! Like bulbul-size. I didn’t think the Yellow-billed Grosbeaks in China were that big, although they were also bigger than most finches.
Brown-eared Bulbuls, one of which I also saw outside the hotel on the first morning, are also very large, like thrush-sized (so, quite a bit bigger than the "bulbul size" that the Japanese Grosbeaks were!). Every time I saw one flying I thought it was a thrush at first. They are everywhere around Izumi, and sound like a dog’s squeaky toy when they aren't hissing.
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Brown-eared Bulbul
Speaking of thrushes, I was seeing about equal numbers of Dusky and Pale Thrushes here. The Pale Thrushes are really nice.
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Dusky Thrush
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Pale Thrush
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From internet sources I had thought there was a dedicated crane bus going from the train station to the Crane Observatory each day in winter, but this seems to not be the case any more. The chap at reception looked up the local bus timetables on his computer, and found that there is a regular bus Monday to Friday with limited times, which (from what I gather) stops on the main road not at the observatory itself, although it isn't far to walk. At the information centre inside the train station they told me the same thing. Because my first day in Izumi was a Saturday that counted that bus out.
The alternative I chose was to get the hotel to call the special taxi service for the Crane Observatory, which costs 2000 Yen. This is advertised on the flier as being half the price of a regular taxi fare, which seems to be a genuine thing - when I went out there the driver had the meter running and it came to somewhere around 3600 Yen but he only charged me the 2000 Yen. The taxi driver, incidentally, was dressed in a uniform like a chauffeur with white gloves and hat. Very classy.
When we got to the Observatory the driver asked me what time I wanted him to come back to pick me up, but as I had no idea how long I'd be out there for I said I would just walk back to town. I figured I'd probably be able to find a bus somewhere along the main road heading towards Izumi, although in the event I did not. I mean, I found bus stops with (I assume) weekend times listed but they were so infrequent - as in, hours apart - that I ended up walking the whole way.
It is a trouble-free walk and it’s all flat, but it is a long way. When you reach the main road south of the Observatory you simply walk east in a straight line for about 10km, and when north of Izumi turn right and walk another 5km or so. Simple as that.
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Arasaki is the main wintering ground for two species of cranes, the Hooded Crane and the White-naped Crane. Something like 90% of the world's Hooded Cranes winter here. There are up to 15,000 of them here each winter, and maybe 1000 White-naped Cranes. Both species are extremely easy to see here. When driving to the Observatory they are in fields all about, but it is directly around the Observatory that the numbers are greatest. They spend the night right here, and in the morning fly in flocks across the river to the east to feed. They are fed artificially at the Observatory though, so even in the middle of the day there are hundreds of cranes in plain view.
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White-naped Cranes
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Hooded Cranes
The Observatory has telescopes on the upper deck and they also provide binoculars if you don't have your own. I spent maybe an hour up here when I arrived, scanning through all the cranes trying to find the few rare ones which I knew were also here.
Every year there are a bare handful of Common Cranes and Sandhill Cranes at Arasaki, a lone Siberian Crane used to turn up yearly, and very very occasionally there are Red-crowned Cranes and Demoiselle Cranes. There is a whiteboard inside the Observatory with daily crane numbers, so I knew there were five Common Cranes and two Sandhill Cranes here somewhere.
Amongst the flocks of cranes squabbling over the supplementary food were Grey Herons, Little and Great Egrets, and Black Kites. Spot-billed Ducks and Northern Lapwings dotted the fields, and a pool in the back held Common Shelducks. There were also lots of little birds like pipits and buntings down in the grass but I only saw them when I was walking around the roads leading to and from the Observatory, and that was only when they flew suddenly up into the air so I never managed to identify any of them.
The fields were also covered in Rooks, which like the cranes appear here only in winter. I checked through the Rooks as well, until I found a Daurian Jackdaw. These jackdaws come in two phases - all black, and black and white - but I only saw the black phase. The other two black corvids here are the Large-billed Crow and Carrion Crow, so I made sure I kept checking until I'd definitely seen all four.
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Rooks
The time spent in the Observatory was well-spent, and eventually I even saw one of the Common Cranes although it was too far back for any of the photos to turn out well. It was a very angry sort of bird, too, and kept chasing any of the smaller Hooded Cranes which came near it.
Once I felt like I'd seen most of what I could from the Observatory area, I walked to the river (about a minute to the east), seeing a Bull-headed Shrike on the way, some Japanese White-eyes, and a flock of Russet Sparrows.
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Bull-headed Shrike
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Russet Sparroow
It was really cold out here due to a biting wind. Out of the wind it was okay, but in the fields there was nothing to break it. Back in Izumi it had been so still and warm that I, like an idiot, had left my bush-shirt at the hotel and was just wearing a sweatshirt. A bush-shirt, in case that doesn't translate, is a thick woollen shirt worn when tramping. It's mostly what I've been wearing in the "cold" places because most of them haven't been cold enough for anything more than that.
I crossed over the river and walked along the road towards the cranes' feeding grounds. I could see a large flock congregated much further down the road. I didn't really want to walk down there because the wind was chilling, but cranes were why I was here and I hadn't seen the Sandhill Cranes yet.
I walked down, stopping all along the way to check out other cranes and take their photos, and trying unsuccessfully to see pipits before they disappeared into the grass. Once at the main crane flock I started scanning. Hmm, those ones look too grey to be Hooded Cranes. All morning I had been getting scammed by Hooded Cranes looking different - they are so variable in plumage with age (and probably other reasons). Were these ones actual Sandhill Cranes? They were almost the first ones I'd looked at in this flock.
Both of them had their heads tucked into their back feathers but they definitely looked small and grey. Then one popped its head up. That looked like a Sandhill Crane head! I took some photos to zoom in on to double-check. Then a Hooded Crane walked past them and I realised just how small these two cranes were. I had no idea Sandhill Cranes were that small!
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Hooded Crane and Sandhill Cranes
Seeing a Sandhill Crane won't sound that exciting to a North American, but they are really rare in Asia and with only two birds amongst many thousands of other cranes I wouldn't have been surprised if I hadn't see them at all. Also, of the four cranes I saw today only the Sandhill Crane was a lifer because I had seen all three of the others very recently in China.
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Three species of cranes in one photo: Hooded, Sandhill, and White-naped Cranes
After that success I wandered around some of the other roads in the area, seeing numerous Common Snipe and Dunlin along a canal-like river branching off the main river, and an Osprey and various ducks on the main river. On the walk back to town I also came across a pair of the endemic Japanese Wagtails on another stream, making a three-wagtail day (along with the ubiquitous White Wagtails and an Eastern Yellow Wagtail).
Today was an excellent start to my Japan trip. Technically yesterday was my first day but that was entirely a travel day, so I'm counting Arasaki as my first "real" day in Japan. I saw 41 bird species today, with five being lifers (Japanese Grosbeak, Bull-headed Shrike, Sandhill Crane, Dunlin, and Japanese Wagtail), but even without those just the spectacle of the crane flocks was something else to behold. I'm really glad I started out in Japan with Arasaki.
I just found out about this. Darn, that's rather unfortunate, would've been a nice stop for the species. I think I'll have to make my way back someday for Hokkaido in the winter anyways.All the bird reports talk about the moats of the Imperial Palace in Tokyo as the place to see these, so I had that down in my plans as a must-visit.
Hokkaido is great, although today I am stuck inside. There is currently a severe snowstorm warning with an alert level 3, which the Japanese met service defines as "Elderly people, those with disabilities, and others who may need more time to evacuate should evacuate from affected areas."I just found out about this. Darn, that's rather unfortunate, would've been a nice stop for the species. I think I'll have to make my way back someday for Hokkaido in the winter anyways.

Supposedly Tokyo has an established population of Budgies as well, which is even crazier than the Ringnecks!A day in Tokyo
After Izumi I was heading to Hokkaido, the northernmost island of Japan which should right now be in a death-grip of ice and snow. I had booked a flight with Jetstar from Kagoshima Airport to Narita Airport in Tokyo, and from there would be catching a ferry to Hokkaido.
Jetstar takes safety seriously. Before their pre-flight safety instructions they said in English that the instructions would be only in Japanese and if you have any questions to ask! Jetstar is an Australian airline by the way. In contrast the Shanghai to Osaka flight with Peach (which is a Japanese airline) did the safety instructions in both Japanese and English, and had a recorded version in Chinese; and the connecting Peach flight to Kagoshima also did them in both Japanese and English.
I was in Tokyo for just two nights, giving me one full day which I had pencilled in for the Inokashira Park Zoo because it is quite small and specialises in Japanese animals, and is situated in Inokashira Park which is supposed to be a good birding spot, and then planned to go to the Sumida Aquarium in the evening because it was relatively close to my hotel.
The hotel I'd booked was the Tokyo SA Ryokan which was 7920 Yen for the two nights (about NZ$45 per night - about half what the hotel in Izumi had cost me). It took me a while to find it. Getting from Narita Airport to the street the hotel was on was straightforward, via first the airport bus and then a subway, but the actual hotel itself took a bit more effort to locate.
The next morning I left early for Inokashira Park. Gotta say, I do not like the Tokyo metro system. The metros in China are a breeze. In Tokyo they are a nightmare. Maybe it needs a few days to get the hang of it, but what a disaster I made of today. I'm going back to Tokyo later in the trip so we'll see how I fare with more time, but I'm really not a big city person.
Just as another point of interest, in China every time you enter a train or metro station you have to go through airport-style security. In Japan, nothing. You could be carrying a cobra stuffed with Agent Orange in your bag and nobody would know.
When I finally got to Inokashira Park it was still before the zoo opens so I had time to wander around looking for birds. First stop was the small lake I could see ahead of me. A pair of Gadwalls was nice, as my first in Japan, but what's that other duck in front of me I hear you ask. Why, it's just a Falcated Duck.
I had of course already seen lots of Falcated Ducks and Baikal Teal at Izumi, so I wasn't going to bother with the Imperial Palace moats any more. But here was another Falcated Duck cruising around just awaiting a photo to be taken.
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Falcated Duck - you can see why it was a duck I really wanted to see!
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Gadwall
There were quite a few bird photographers around the park this morning (and probably every morning). That didn't stop some tourist asking me what I was photographing. You know, while I was pointing the camera at the ducks on the lake! Idiot. There are too many foreigners in Japan I tell you. They should vette them at the airport. "Do you watch birds? No? Then you have to go home."
Azure-winged Magpies were new for my Japan list, and I was startled to hear Indian Ringnecks screeching as they flew in over the trees. I didn't even know they were here, but I looked it up and they are well established in Tokyo. Following the lake around I came to the entrance of the Aquatic Life Park section of the zoo. It was still too early so I kept going, seeing a pair of Northern Shovellers (lots of other ducks too, with Mallards, Eastern Spot-billed Ducks, Tufted Ducks, Common Pochards, and other expected water-dwelling birds like Coots and Little Grebes).
Moving away from the lake flurries of movement in the trees drew me to a flock of Long-tailed Tits, accompanied by a Japanese Pigmy Woodpecker and a Japanese Bush Warbler. I spent some time trying to get acceptable photos of them but without any success.
After visiting the zoo I did some more birding, this time finding a pair of Northern Goshawks in the bird reserve at the park (a fenced area of trees), one of which was perched in an exposed position allowing photographs to be taken.
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Northern Goshawk
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Inokashira Park Zoo
The Inokashira Park Zoo is a small zoo which specialises in native Japanese fauna. I loved this zoo. I spent 3.5 hours there altogether. It is very well presented and feels like the sort of place a person could open for themselves. There are very few cages which are too small although, equally, few are very large.
Highlights at the zoo were the Yakushima Sika (a dwarf form of Sika which looks almost goat-like with its little short legs), Japanese and Tsushima Martens, Tsushima Leopard Cats, and the walk-through squirrel "aviary".
I posted a little review and species list here: Inokashira Park Zoo species list, January 2025 [Inokashira Park Zoo]
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Yakushima Sika Deer
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Japanese Marten, like a day-glo ferret
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Tsushima Leopard Cat
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Sumida Aquarium
After a series of unfortunate events and very late in the day - when darkness had already overtaken both the city and my soul - I managed to finally triumph over the Tokyo subway system and arrive at the Skytree Tower, in which is located the Sumida Aquarium.
There are some people on the forum who have raved about Sumida, but it's not for me. It just feels so shallow, and there really isn't much there for the price you're paying. The entry fee was 2500 Yen and I was only there for an hour, whereas the Aqua World Ibaraki Oarai which is coming up next cost 2300 Yen and I only left because they told me to.
The first tanks you see upon entry are fantastic - like beautifully aquascaped gardens. Completely lacking in signage but they look amazing. Then there is a series of jellyfish tanks, including a wonderful-looking open-topped pool, and that's when you realise that the whole of Sumida is just going to be "look at this flashy thing we did". And it's so dark in there! The tanks are mostly brightly-lit which makes the visitor side even darker and makes the visitors more prone to walking into walls and other visitors (not even joking!).
There are sofas and little tables everywhere, with some tanks completely blocked from viewing unless you can snag a comfy chair. It's like a coffee shop - slash - art gallery. There is signage on most of the tanks but it is minimal and sometimes takes an effort to find where they have hidden it.
A large percentage of the floor area is taken up with an exhibit for Magellanic Penguins. Lots of swimming space, very little land space, and all I could think was how the penguins must be spending their whole lives in semi-darkness.
Not a fan at all of Sumida, and it's not somewhere I would recommend visiting except to people who just want to add a number to their list.
Photos in the gallery: Sumida Aquarium - ZooChat
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One of the Amano aquascaped tanks - the best part of the aquarium.
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Jellyfish pool
Supposedly Tokyo has an established population of Budgies as well, which is even crazier than the Ringnecks!