KAGOSHIMA to KUMAMOTO via SHINKANSEN
Kagoshima is pretty much the bottom of the island of Kyushu. My options were to ride the ferry to Sakurajima and then head to Miyazaki prefecture or go north towards Kumamoto. I only had about five days left on the trip and I was planning on spending 2 of those in Fukuoka. The riding on the coast north did not look particularly interesting. From Kagoshima I could take an hour and forty five minute ride on the Shinkasen and spend a whole day visiting Kumamoto. Hmmm air conditioned ride on the fastest train on the world? Yes!
I had the free breakfast and then walked a couple of blocks to the train station. When I buy train tickets in Japan I like to buy them in the ticket office. When you have large baggage such as the bicycle you need to purchase a reserved seat. I could buy the ticket at the machine but having the agent at the counter is a good way to practice my Japanese and to make sure I don't screw up and buy the wrong ticket. One of the cool things about the Shinkasen is that there are trains every hour. Pretty amazing because I believe the train goes all the way to Osaka and then you can transfer to say Tokyo or elsewhere. With the Shinkansen everywhere in Japan becomes a day trip.

And like magic I am in Kumamoto! It was around 11 which means I had 6 hrs to explore the city. The big attraction is Kumamoto castle which is located pretty much in the center of the city. It took me about 20 minutes to get the bike assembled and then I was off. The castle was about 10 minutes from the train station. Right across the street I found a bicycle parking lot. This was the first time I encountered such a thing on my trip and it seemed like a great place to put the bike. The concept is just like a parking deck here in the U.S. Take a ticket, come back later insert ticket in the machine pay and use ticket to exit. Cool.

lots of mamachari or mom bikes!

with the bike parked I headed over to the castle. The castle was severely damaged in the 2016 earthquake. Many building and the walls fell down. This made it kind of tricky to find the entrance. Of course I took the long way and ended up having to navigate through a bunch of sections that were closed for construction before I coud find the main entrance. This was actually a cool accident becasue it allowed me to see the process of putting the castle back together which is amazing.
Here's a section of wall that they have not gotten to yet that looks like it is in the exact state of after the earthquake.

Stones sorted and laid out in preparation for reassembly.

The process for reassembling is pretty bananas. Every stone has a number painted on it that lets the construction workers know it location and orientation. That's right every stone is being put back in it's exact original location. Think about that for a minute cause it's pretty mind blowing.
Putting a wall back together

They were out there in 98 degree heat toiling away.
I was glad I took the long way to the entrance but it sure was hot.
Check out the corners of the walls and think about putting something like that back together. sheesh.

The castle has 6 floors and it would take few hours if you read all of the exhibits. They were all in Japanese so not possible for me to read. They did have an app to download for other languages but seemed like something that would kill my phone battery. There was plenty to look at. Each floor showcases a different century or era and the top floor is a 360 observation room of the city.
model of castle in the castle


View of the city.

Kumamoto is the 3rd largest city in Kyushu. The population is about the same as San Francisco