Out of Monbetsu, north up the Okhotsk coast. Today's destination is Wakkanai. A day of riding straight up to the very top of northern Hokkaido.
The national road along the Sea of Okhotsk alternates between sea and pasture, a great route. Riding with the sea on the right keeps reminding you that yes — this is Hokkaido.
Lost the wallet in Esashi Town
Just after pulling out of the roadside station "Marine Island Okajima" in Esashi Town, something felt off. I checked the side case — wallet gone.
The zipper was open. The wallet must have flown out while I was riding.
I doubled back immediately and searched the road. Nothing. Even after retracing the road for over thirty minutes, no sign of it. At one point I thought, "It's gone." Forget the cash — replacing the cards, the insurance ID… worst-case scenarios started cycling in my head.
The notification from the AirTag
Just as I was about to give up, my phone buzzed. A notification from an AirTag: "Wallet has moved."
I'd put an AirTag inside the wallet. The location showed — Esashi Police Station.
I rushed over. At the front desk: "I think someone may have turned in a wallet." It came out right away. A local had picked it up and brought it in. Everything still inside.
Picking up the wallet, I almost cried — honestly. Someone had taken the time to bring a stranger-traveler's wallet all the way to the police. A moment of touching the kindness of people in Hokkaido.
Hokkaido is the best. Esashi Town is the best. Always put an AirTag in your wallet.
Composed myself and rode on to Wakkanai. Lesson of the day: always check your side case zipper.
Wakkanai night
Made it to central Wakkanai. Dinner: a meaty rice bowl.
Travel guide (general info)
※ This section combines public information with the author's notes; please confirm the latest fares, hours, and road conditions on the official sites.
Lost-item prevention with AirTag
- How it works: An Apple AirTag relays its location anonymously through the Find My network of nearby iPhones, and the location appears on the owner's map.
- Effective range: In cities, roadside stations, and convenience stores with foot traffic, location updates within minutes; in sparsely populated areas, intervals are longer.
- Where to place them: Distribute across high-loss-risk items — wallet, passport pouch, sub-bags inside the side cases.
- Limits: In completely no-signal zones (deep mountains, open sea, deep underground), the location won't update — don't over-trust it.
Loss-prevention tips for motorcycle touring
- Side cases: Always check the zipper and lock before riding off; cases that can pop open under hard braking deserve extra attention.
- Keys: Store the spare key separately — at the hotel front desk or with a travel companion is safer.
- Credit cards: Carry one as the primary; tuck a backup in a different pocket of your bag for redundancy.
- Card freeze: Major card issuers can freeze cards 24/7 by phone or app — note the numbers in advance.
Esashi → Wakkanai route
- Route 238 (Okhotsk Line): Hugs the coast heading north, with a turnoff onto the Esanuka Line (Sarufutsu Village).
- Roadside Station Marine Island Okajima: A distinctive ship-shaped building, busy in the Sea of Okhotsk and hairy crab seasons.
- Cellular coverage: Some sections through hills are weak — note emergency contacts ahead of time.