feat: add March–April trip fixture entries, remove stale test entry
Seven fixture entries (March 25 Narita through April 1 Seoul) used as Playwright test fixtures for tracker ordering and entry-page tests. Removes the leftover June 18 test entry. Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
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---
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title: 'Summit Clouds and Snow'
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date: '2026-03-27 07:15'
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template: entry
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published: true
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hero_image: ''
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lat: '35.5095'
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lng: '138.7646'
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location_city: 'Kawaguchiko'
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location_country: 'Japan'
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weather_temp_c: 1
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weather_desc: 'Snow'
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---
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Nobody told me it would snow.
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I took the early bus from Shinjuku at 6:45am because the forecast for the Fuji Five Lakes region said "clear morning, clouds by noon." That is the window you want — Fuji is notorious for hiding inside its own weather system, and most visitors spend an entire day staring at a blank white sky where a mountain ought to be.
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I got the mountain. For about forty minutes.
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By the time the bus pulled into Kawaguchiko, the first flakes were already coming down. Light at first — the decorative kind that you hold your hand out for. Then, steadily, not decorative at all. I walked down to the lake with my bag under my jacket and stood at the water's edge while the snow thickened and Fuji turned from a sharply defined white cone into a suggestion, and then into nothing.
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The lake surface was perfectly still. The snow fell straight down. There were no other tourists on the path, or if there were I could not see them. It was one of those moments of completely accidental solitude that you cannot plan for and would not trade.
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I sat on a wooden bench on the lakefront for longer than made any meteorological sense. The snow kept falling. A single cormorant sat on a rock offshore and did not move the entire time I was there.
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Caught the bus back to Shinjuku in the afternoon. The mountain never reappeared. I do not mind even slightly.
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