So we visited Tokyo...just about all of Tokyo- Ikebukuro, Asakusa, Shibuya, Shinjuku, Ginza, Tsukiji, etc.
We hit up the famed Tsukiji fish market twice because once just isn't enough (totalling 5 times for P!) to catch the crazy stock market like fish market. We saw tuna the size of ourselves, frozen like a brick, then sawed through like wood. Just about everything that lives in the ocean is for sale at this market, what a treat! Sushi for breakfast was a real treat as well (minus the fish for P, she decided she couldn't stomach it at 7 am). We spent our days drinking coffee, people watching, and feeling amazed that everyone was Japanese. Of course we already know this. And we do mean everyone. You can point out the gaijin from a mile away. But it had been nearly 5 years and this really did surprise us...again. Actually, we spent hours sitting in Starbucks (so excited for some real coffee after 4 months of nescafe, I mean "no es cafe") above the famous Shibuya crossing watching the intersection explode with people the moment the crosswalk turned green. M literally took over 100 pics, if you flip through quickly it looks like a video so go ahead and try it out. Crazy Shibuya and Shinjuku were a real treat, we found it difficult to avoid purchasing all of the electronics we saw, especially from the huge Bic Camera and Sakura stores. Asakusa, though a tourist trap, was as always a pleasure to visit with its huge pagoda and Buddhist temple at the end of the street filled with everything Japanese. We ate 14 red bean buns in the shape of birds and pagodas walking down that street alone. Impressive. We also spent a good chunk of time playing video games in Japanese at the Ginza Sony building. And we became Japanese Secret Agents playing the scavenger hunt James Bond game they had set up for us. How do we get suckered into these things?
We stayed in Ikebukuro with a couple and their roomate we got hooked up with on couchsurfing. com. Check it out if you don't know about it. Ikebukuro was a blast as well, a mix of old and new Japan. Tiny roads, lanterns, and ramen shops competing with Tokyu Hands and ABC Mart. Why did P decide this was a great place to get new glasses and an eye exam in Japanese? (She had to get new lenses upon arrival in Malaysia bc she couldn't see!)
We then headed to Kyoto via the super fast Nozomi Shinkansen train. Will fill you in about that in the next blog.
02 March 2009
Turning Japanese...
was as exciting as it was 5 years ago. As P reminisced about everything Japanese, M was fascinated by her first real visits to Tokyo and Kyoto. We tried really hard not to gawk and giggle, but Japan is so damn fun, it was so damn hard not to! Man, we love Japan.
We left South America on a Wednesday and arrived at Narita Airport in Tokyo, Japan on a Friday night...um, what happened to Thursday? We stopped in the US for a quick layover in D.C. and had family and friends greet us. We also had some good ol' American style breakfast, open bottomed cups of coffee and all. After some sad goodbyes (for the second time), we briefly went on a buying binge of english mags and newspapers, then headed for the flight to Tokyo. 2 days of travel didn't matter as soon as we left baggage claim because our love of Japan took over, we couldn't get out of the airport without spending an hour discussing all the items in the "combini" in the airport. Playing the katakana game (like mad gab if you know what we mean, if not, google it) lasted a bit too long as we settled on some canned coffees, inari, and egg sanwiches. Oh, how we love Japan! (even if that meant blowing a month's budget in ONE week!)
Mata ne!
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1 comment:
This blog is starting to really get boring...post new shit! We're all a month or two behind..you may even be home already.
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