This winter, I fully enjoyed the ice trees in Zao, Yamagata and the drift ice along the Sea of Okhotsk in Hokkaido, but what left a little unsatisfied was Northern Tohoku area. During the New Year’s holidays, I visited Sukayu Onsen in Aomori just for one night, but I wished to enjoy the winter of Tohoku a little more. In a remnant of winter, I decided to visit Namari Onsen in Hanamaki, Iwate where had been in my mind for some time.
It was a time when COVID-19 was beginning to settle down. Before tourists were back, I also wished to visit Koganezaki Furofushi Onsen again as I did not like crowded onsen.
I took one day off in early April and traveled around the northeastern part of Tohoku to wrap up the winter season.
By the way, as I become a middle-aged man, I have had difficulties to cope with changes in atmospheric pressure and have suffered from headaches whenever a cyclone comes. I am not good at seasonal changes either. Due to aging, it seems that I have lost my adaptability, or I have difficulty in harmonizing my autonomic nervous system.
This year in Tokyo area, there were drastic changes in temperature between warm and cold days in March.
As typical to a middle-aged man, I am not a stylish person. I only wear one down jacket per season. Moreover, despite I check the weekly weather forecast of my travel destinations many times, basically I do not look at the weather forecast for my hometown. I had kept wearing the same down jacket even on warm days, and when I finally took out spring jacket some days later, it was too cold again. Even worse, I had hay fever for the first time in several years.
By the end of March, I was suffering from various physical ailments which seemed to be caused by autonomic nervous system problems caused my wrongdoings.
After suffering from such physical ailments for two weeks, I began to feel slightly better in early April. I guessed I was finally able to adapt to everything occurred in Tokyo.
Bad news was that Tohoku Shinkansen train service was suspended on March 16 due to a major earthquake. However, I did not give up the trip because of that. It was why I was who I was. I secured alternative transportations and headed for the northern Tohoku.
When I arrived at Aomori Airport in the morning of the first day, the temperature was 3 degrees Celsius. There were still snows around the airport. Just after I got used to spring in Tokyo, things were back to winter. It was true that I came to Aomori in search of the last remnants of winter. Although it was my desire at the time of planning, the ideal and the reality were often different.
I took JR Gono Line to Koganezaki Furofushi Onsen. I wore my one and only down jacket, but it was still cold. I was just used to the warm weather in Tokyo area, so the cold weather felt even harsher.
The next day was clear and sunny. Early in the morning, I went to the open-air onsen on the beach, but it was extremely cold. The wind was strong, which caused effective temperature even lower. The down jacket was surely useless in the open-air onsen. I left early and headed for the indoor onsen, but there was a high possibility that I caught a cold.
After the breakfast, I took JR Gono Line again and headed for Hanamaki via Akita. The temperature rose dramatically before noon time on that day. It was 23 degrees Celsius when I arrived Hanamaki. It was even a bit sweaty.
I felt tired and had a sore throat. At night, I started sneezing. I wondered if I must have caught a cold. Since it was in the COVID-19 era, my temperature was checked here and there, but fortunately there was no sign of fever. I sneezed, but it was not a cough. I had senses of taste and smell. Despite I was not feeling well, it was likely not infected with the COVID-19. I might have caught a common cold.
I stayed one night at Namari Onsen and returned home. At home, I took Chinese medicine Kakkonto, propolis from New Zealand, throat medicine, and hay fever medicine, then went to bed early. I was sure that I took medicines of all kinds and regions, I would be fine.
The next day, the sore throat was a little better. The pain was pinpointed and clearly different from a common cold. I looked in the mirror and sure enough, my throat was not swollen. I made a closer look, found a huge mouth ulcer in the center of the sublingual.
The sneezing also stopped. It must have been by hay fever. In Aomori, where the temperature was low, there was little or no pollen in the air. I was asymptomatic without medication. However, in Iwate, there were many pollens in the air due to the high temperature.
Then I assumed that I felt tired because I was in onsen hot water for a long time. After all, I did not catch a common cold.
There was a temperature difference of about 20 degrees Celsius in one day. My autonomic nervous system, which just had been recovered from various drastic March changes in Tokyo, was probably in a critical state.
For a middle-aged man, the change of season was very harsh.