Cape Nosappu (Nemuro)
By Thursday I had changed my plan again and decided not to stay at Nemuro after all. I would still go there as a day-trip for Cape Nosappu but I would (at least for now) skip Cape Ochiishi because I had already seen Sea Otters at Cape Kiritappu, and I'd also skip Lake Furen.
It is 2.5 hours by train from Kushiro to Nemuro. I caught the 5.35am train, which gets to Nemuro at 8am. From the station there was a bus to the cape at 8.20am, which was a forty minute ride. The return bus was at either 9.55am or 12.50pm - the former gives plenty of time if a person is just there to say they've been at the easternmost point of Japan, but not nearly enough time to look for birds.
There were lots of Sika on the train ride. This is the same railway line I caught to get to Cape Kiritappu (and later for Cape Ochiishi), and every ride there were dozens of Sika seen. The Steller's Sea Eagles were still in the same place as the other day when I went to Chanai Station, and I also saw a Red Fox walking along the rail. I saw another Red Fox on the bus ride to the cape. In Hokkaido I only ever saw foxes from buses or trains which was a bit annoying because I never had any opportunities to try and photograph them.
Cape Nosappu is the easternmost point in Japan. Technically the easternmost point of Japan is Minami Torishima, which is a tiny island
way to the southeast of Japan in the Pacific Ocean, but the easternmost point of "mainland" Japan (aka "real" Japan) is Cape Nosappu.
There was not much wind when I was there - a bit but not bad - and it was not extremely cold.
A rock just offshore from the viewpoint was covered in Pelagic Cormorants. The rarer Red-faced Cormorant also gets reported from here, and they mix with Pelagics at roosts, but I didn't see any.
Pelagic Cormorants
An exhibition building at the site has telescopes set up on the upper floor which is handy for scanning the scattered groups of ducks on the sea.
There were lots of sea-ducks, some flocks being close enough to shore that I could view them easily through my binoculars but others were much further out, too far even for the telescopes to be much help in identifying them sufficiently well (for me, at least). The bulk of the flocks were Harlequin Ducks - possibly the most spectacular duck in the world - and Black Scoters. The former tended to be the ones closest to shore, along with Common Goldeneyes and Red-breasted Mergansers (and Red-necked Grebes). The Black Scoters were mostly further out and I used the scopes to confirm those ones because they were lifers. Long-tailed Ducks were also seen adequately through the scopes, another one of my "most-wanted" ducks.
Harlequin Duck
Common Goldeneye
In winter, Cape Nosappu is the only place in Japan that Steller's Eider occurs. I looked for ages through all the scopes (they line the windows of the building, so cover a good area) but couldn't see any ducks that I could say were Steller's Eiders, nor any scoters other than the Black Scoters. I did, however, manage to see several Ancient Murrelets which were the first auks I have ever seen in the wild. They are very small and even though they were actually quite close to shore I wouldn't have been able to see them properly with just the binoculars.
I was surprised to see a Sea Otter cruising the shoreline, especially with it being in the crashing surf. I have always imagined Sea Otters as being lazy floating-around-on-calm-water sort of creatures because that's all you see them doing in photos. But they are fast! Not just motoring backwards across the surface like I saw at Cape Kiritappu, but underwater as well. This one would dive and while waiting for it to surface to try and get more photos, I would see it out of the corner of my eye come up way off to the side.
Sea Otter
I saw another Kuril Seal here as well, making a four-mammal day.
I had intended to go to Lake Furen afterwards because is only fifteen minutes away from Nemuro by bus, but the timings were way too awkward. I was back at the station from Cape Nosappu at 1.30pm, the next bus to the Tobai stop (for Lake Furen) wasn't until 3pm and the return bus was at 4.29pm - which would give me an hour there - but that return bus got back to Nemuro at 4.46pm and the train back to Kushiro was at 4.08pm with the next (and last) one at 7.04pm, and that wouldn't reach Kushiro until 9.45pm. So it would have been hours of waiting for connections for just one hour at Lake Furen and I had a pretty good idea that I wasn't really going to see much there anyway. I didn't think it was worth it.
On the train back to Kushiro the Sika were even more plentiful. During most train trips the deer were usually seen alongside the tracks, and the driver blows his whistle to tell any deer on the tracks to get out of the way which they quickly do. But at dusk the deer seem to lose all sense of self-preservation. Several times the train had to come to a complete stop until groups of deer decided to move casually to the side. And, unfortunately, this came at an inevitable cost. As the train came around a curve in the track a couple of deer appeared out of nowhere and the driver didn't have time to stop. One deer leapt off to the side, but the other one tried to run forwards along the track. The driver had already laid on the brakes but it was too late and the train went right over it. The train came to a stop, and the driver hopped into the night. Hopefully the deer was already dead and he hadn't had to put it out of its misery.