Thursday, April 5

比叡山延暦寺 - Mt. Hiei and Enryakuji Temple. 20/03/2011

Kyoto from above, one of the hills leading to Mt. Hiei and Enryakuji, 20/03/2012
Couple of days ago I had an amazing opportunity to form a hiking team with few international students to join our lovely dorm manager (whom we nick-named ninja for his amazing personality and ability to achieve/ obtain/ fix the impossible) on a tiring but nevertheless brilliant hiking in Mt. Hiei to see Enryakuji temple, one of the most important temples in Japanese buddhism, and itself a Unesco National Heritage Site. The day was lovely, and we all had a great time (and delayed-onset muscle soreness, that's for sure, but it was certainly worth it! :-) 

Setting off through the giant toori gate marking the local shrine grounds.
We climbed a very steep ravine slope of Kirara-zaka, so very quickly the bird-eye views of Kyoto started to emerge.
Our steep path up! In the photo - F, my great Italian friend. She's gonna kill me for this one, but I will risk the statement that it's one hell of an energetic beast in her natural habitat. :-)

Sacred statues scattered around the woods. Some of them so weathered you can't see the details anymore.
Beautiful views on the way.
Yup, it really is snow up there!
That little patch between the hills is one of the tiny Kyoto nearby cities. Note the sky - doesn't it look like Magritte?
Tiny bit of Kyoto... and still unidentified white chapel-like building on the slope over there... Ninja-san suggested it might be a part of a film studio, Hmmm...
Approaching Enryakuji... more and more sacred statues.
The carving presenting Pure Land Buddhism Amida Triad - Amida Buddha in the middle, Kannon Bosatsu (representing compassion) on the right and Seishin (representing wisdom) on the left; more valuable information on this great site
Japanese cypresses (hinoki), planted by the sacred area below. They were MASSIVE!



Steep stairs leading to the Buddha Hall. See that person in red jacket not using the stairs? Guess who can that be, if not a real ninja!
Bad fortune omikuji tied up to the tree to ward off the bad luck.

The Great Buddha Hall. It was really beautiful and fragrant inside, I wish I could have taken a snap or two (unfortunatelly, not only forbidden, but there was also a very strict-looking Japanese granny sitting there, keeping an eye on things, I wouldn't stand a chance)
A bell. For a humble donation you can bang it yourself for good luck!And that's of course, what I did, applying slightly too much power and enthusiasm into it... My right ear's hearing will never be the same again...


As the kind monk explained to us, it's one of the old sanscrit letteres for Buddha's name, therefore cherished greatly.
Believe it or not, but down route was much steeper (and potentially more lethal) than climbing one! The water over there is lake Biwa, the biggest lake of Japan.
At this point, we were so tired we just wanted to run to the station and sit in the train...
An old shrine at the foot of the mountain. Felling Spirited Away, anyone? :-)

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