Mount Hakusan White Mountain — Sacred Alpine Hiking
Mount Hakusan (白山, 'White Mountain', 2,702m) is one of Japan's three sacred mountains alongside Mount Fuji and Mount Tate, revered in Shinto-Buddhist mountain worship (shugendo) for over 1,300 years. The mountain straddles Fukui, Ishikawa, and Gifu prefectures, with the Fukui side offering the most accessible and scenic approach via the Heisenji Temple trailhead. The summit crater contains seven sacred ponds believed to house mountain deities.
The standard climb from Betto-deai trailhead (1,260m) to the summit is 6–7 hours ascent, 5 hours descent, passing through beech forests, alpine meadows covered in July wildflowers (nikko-kisuge lilies, chinguruma), and volcanic rock fields. The final approach crosses permanent snowfields (crampons recommended until August) and reaches the Murodo hut and summit shrine. The sunrise from the summit, watched by pilgrims who've climbed through the night, is considered one of Hokuriku's most sacred experiences.
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