Sunday 21st July
200 km journey back to Sapporo along the motorway. It didn't take very long, compared to our more remote driving at 60km/hr. |
Naka Satsunai to Sapporo
It was a busy day. We packed up after breakfast and headed off to Sunday school and church, at the local civic centre, with our colleague. This church is just as small as the one we went to last week, but with a big difference. A larger church in the nearby regional centre has a pastor with a vision to plant seven churches in the region. This town is the place they began to work out their vision. Our OMF colleague has been here for five years with the support of the church and one local couple. They’ve seen no fruit for their labours.
More lovely flat fields. If only the spiritual work here produced such harvests. |
Part of the Hidaka Mountain Range that separates
the Tokachi Plain from Sapporo.
|
It rips your heart out to realise that all the work that has been put into this location hasn't
produced fruit. It is, unfortunately, the reality of church work in Japan. Much seed sowing, but little fruit. In the rural settings, it is even harder so this isn't an isolated incident.
produced fruit. It is, unfortunately, the reality of church work in Japan. Much seed sowing, but little fruit. In the rural settings, it is even harder so this isn't an isolated incident.
The other Australian OMF missionaries there have just begun a work in another nearby town, the second town that the mother church has turned her eyes towards.
Driving towards the Hidaka Range |
Special Lunch
Lunch at the school summer festival. |
We’d been invited by the local Christian
family to the summer festival at their son’s local high school for lunch. We
enjoyed some Japanese fast food: fried pork noodles (Yakisoba). Additionally some kebabs, local ice cream (including a
tub of pumpkin ice cream), and drinking yoghurt. I especially enjoyed some rich
coffee milk (equivalent to the the best coffee-flavoured milk you’d buy in
Australia). But I drank too much and suffered with headaches in the next couple
of days!
We also left lunch
quickly as we had to get to Sapporo in time to set up camp before dark. We had
access to an expressway for the first time in a couple of weeks and took
advantage of it to get through the mountains separating us from the capital of the
island.
This was our "fridge" for two weeks while camping. |
Food while camping
On the way to our campsite we had to find a grocery store to provide us food for our last two camping meals of our trip. One of the big differences for this camping trip was the necessity of buying food along the way. It was one thing that worried me, knowing what little rural shops can look like in Japan.
Camp cooking was fun. |
However, we found Hokkaido not to be as isolated and rural as we’d expected. If we’d been stopped for many days in a very isolated spot, it would have been a different story. But because we moved along regularly, each travel day we encountered towns of several thousand people, with more than adequate grocery stores.
Our last camping spot. It felt naked without our familiar blue annex! |
Lacking a fridge, it was a challenge to buy and cook just the right amount of food. Every day we bought ice and we didn't have any spoiled food, though the milk wasn’t always as cold as the guys would have liked (but they weren't allowed to drink as much of it anyway). The boys got used to the “no leftovers” policy for main meals and in our two weeks of camping we didn't have to throw out much food at all.
Couldn't see the sunset for we were surrounded by tall trees, but the clouds were gorgeous. |
So I’m really happy to say that the food aspect of our trip went really well. We had a good variety of meals, and a fairly balanced diet. I loved the challenge of it too. I've kept a list of all our meals, I'm wondering if anyone would be interested in a blog post about what specific meals we ate?
One-nighter
That Sunday night we eventually found our campsite, which was just on the east-north-east edge of Sapporo. It was a picnic spot hidden in a forest. It had toilets and a shelter with sinks for washing up dishes, like most camping spots, but no showers, so for the third or fourth time in our trip, we skipped showers for the night. There were many campers (it was a long weekend), and for the first time since leaving Sapporo a fortnight earlier, we encountered young families camping. Mostly, on our journey, we’d met bikers and older couples/singles, because it wasn't yet holiday time for Japanese schools.
A slightly strange photo. After two weeks of living outside, I found my arms were as brown as they ever get. |
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