I haven’t forgotten you!

24 02 2010

No really, I haven’t!  things have been a little busy recently with exams starting this week.  I have been working on a few posts, but it’s taken me longer than I intended to finalize them.  In the meantime here are a few of my favourite photos from Sendai, 2005.  Oldies but goodies.  Man I miss my old digital camera!

The tomb of Date Masamune, first lord of Sendai-Han.  An example of Momoyama Architecture.

Blue Hydrangeas

A stone walk from the Sendai Wild Plants garden.  Lovely place, super big garden!

Not Sendai, but from Zao in Yamagata prefecture, the Okama crater lake.

Until next post! Ciao~





and so this is Christmas~

20 01 2010

About a month late…  but…  well…  anyway….

So with my parental units here for Christmas, my mother’s one wish was to have a ‘white one’.  And with that in mind, we planned to go to Yuzawa Onsen in Niigata.

Since we were away for Christmas Day, we had our family lunch of roast chicken on the Tuesday.  My local supermarket carried whole chickens this year, so it really was a proper christmas lunch

with pudding (^-^)b

The recipe for this pud is from Video Jug, and I highly recommend it.  Everyone (work mates too) said it was delish!

In the evening we went to the illumination at Tobu Zoo (because what’s Christmas in Japan without an illumination?).

The theme was ‘Four Seasons’ but really, they only focused on the cherry blossoms for spring (>_<).

Wednesday, Thursday and Friday were spent at the snow.  We had a good package, and despite none of us being able to ski or snowboard we had a good time.  Well, at least it was amusing for my parents to watch me fall down *trying* to snowboard…

To check out some more photos please head over to my flickr page!





Kyushu Photo Blog

5 01 2010

My apologies for the irregular postings over the last few months.  Between the parental unit invasion and travel I’ve hardly been on the internet.  But I finally got around to sorting out my photos from Kyushu, and without further ado, here’s the photographic evidence. (warning, very image heavy!)

Day one in Nagasaki:

Oura Catholic Church, which is Japan’s oldest standing wooden church.

Glover Garden, a garden that is the home to 7 western style residences from the Meiji period.

Kakuni Manju, BBQ pork in a steamed bun.  Very very yummy!

Dejima is the island where Dutch traders were allowed to trade with the Japanese during the Tokugawa period.  Due to the Shogun closing Japan to westerners, Dejima was built to allow trade with the Dutch to continue.  Over the years the island was lost to reclaimed land, but recently the island and the buildings have been restored.  I found Dejima to be really fascinating.

Saru Udon

Champon, a Nagasaki speciality, is a cross between Japanese and Chinese food.  Many of the dishes in Kyushu have Chinese influences.

Day Two in Nagasaki:

A visit to the Peace Park, which is just up the road from the hypocenter of the atomic bomb blast.

Here is the monument (on the right) which marks the hypocenter, and a piece of the Urakami Cathedral that survived the bomb blast.  The Atomic bomb museum is only a short walk from here, and really, I can’t use words to describe it.  Going to a museum like this is one of the most sobering and somber experiences you can have.  If you have the chance, go!

Another relic of the bomb blast, the other half of this Torii gate was knocked down by the explosion.

Kitties!

Nagasaki City night view, said to be one of the three best in Japan.  Here you can see Nagasaki Station in the center of the picture.

Day 3 from Nagasaki to Kumamoto via Shimabara:

We caught the train from Nagasaki to Shimabara this day, and had a quick look around Shimabara Castle.  Shimabara is the peninsula where many Japanese Christians were killed in a revolt, and the castle had many relics of hidden Christians in the area on display.  However, the castle was nothing compared to the one at Kumamoto, so I won’t post any photos apart from this –

A Shimabara food, Rokobe Manju, a black steamed bun with sweet potato inside.

After that we went to the ferry and were in Kumamoto by sundown.

Day 4 in Kumamoto:

We started out by going to Kumamoto Castle, which was built by Kato Kiyomasa (above).

A castle turret with the walls of Nimaru and Honmaru (inner and second circle of the grounds).

A close up of the stone walls.

The main tower of the castle.

View from the main tower, looking at the reconstructed palace.

The guided meeting room of the lord of the castle (inside the palace).

Although a lot of the building are reconstructed, there are a few originals, and plenty to see.  We literally spent all morning there, and didn’t even realize we had missed lunch!

Next off to Suizenji Jojuen garden, which was first started in 1632, and depicts the 53 stations of the old Tokaido highway.  You can even see a miniature Mt Fuji.

Dinner that night was Kumamoto ramen.

Firstly Tonkotsu ramen.

Then a salt flavored broth.

And finally a Chinese style simmered pork on rice.  All very very yum!

Day 5 in Kumamoto:

We wanted to make a day trip to Aso, but unfortunately the weather didn’t agree with us, and instead we went to the Former residence of Hosokawa Gyobu, a Samurai house.

Mum and Dad found it really interesting because they had never been into a Samurai house like this.  There were quite surprised at how big it was.

Day 6 returning home:

Finally, on the plane home we were able to see Mt Fuji, and final treat to the holiday.

To see some more photos, please check out my Flickr set!





Kyushu day 3- Nagasaki to Kumamoto via Shimabara

17 12 2009

So today we travelled from Nagasaki to Kumamoto. There are a few different ways to make this trip, but we decided to catch the train to Shimabara so we could see the castle there (there’s a picture below). The Shimabara castle isn’t the original, but contained some interesting displays on Christians in Kyushu and the local fedual families.
At the castle we stopped for lunch and I had a style of udon I had never seen before – maruten udon (pictured below). It was yummy, but as my mother commented, it was kinda like seafood extender. We also tried Rokube manju, a black steamed cake with sweet potato inside. It’s a Shimabara speciality and was quite yummy.
After the castle we had to catch a ferry to Kumamoto, where we will spend the rest of the trip. It doesn’t sound like we did much today, but we did spent over 3 hours travelling.
Hopefully we will have good weather for the last couple of days, but it seems we have the threat of snow. Fingers
crossed that if it does snow it won’t interfer with our plans!





Kyushu- Nagasaki day 2

16 12 2009

Oh I’m so tired! you are lucky to get a blog update today!
Okay, anyway, Nagasaki day 2! Today was a little slower, and certainly more introspective (not sure if that’s quite the right word…). We started the day out by catching a train to Urakami and the Peace Park. This park is built to commemorate peace and has a large statue to represent atomic weapons, peace and prayers for the victims of the atomic bomb blast. Down the road from here is also the epicentre of where the atomic bomb over Nagasaki exploded. And then right next to that was the Atomic Bomb Museum. Words really can’t describe what these places are like. It’s amazing that so much distruction occurred there, and yet now they are healthy clean places. And being able to see the affects of the bomb, walk around the few exsisting ruins. It’s a very sombering experience. Sad, but if you do ever go to Hiroshima or Nagasaki, the atomic bomb museums are a must visit.
We then walked a little further to the one legged Torii gate which is pictured below. The other half of the gate was blasted down by the bomb, while this half remains standing. Quite surreal really.
After having some lunch (no remarkable foods today) we went to some temples, and then back to our hotel. This was to rug up as just before dusk we caught the rope way up Mt Inasa to see the view of Nagasaki. Nagasaki is said to have one of the top three night views in Japan. You can also see a picture below. We have been to Hakodate (another one) and although Nagasaki doesn’t have such a nice shape as there, the city was quite clear and beautiful.
Tomorrow we will be travelling to our next city, so goodbye to Nagasaki!





Kyushu day 1- Nagasaki

15 12 2009

Well, I’ve been a little lax with updates these last couple of weeks, but with good reason! School exams have been happening, the JLPT was on the 6th, and my parents have come for a visit! Right now we are holidaying in Kyushu, where it’s surprisingly colder than Tokyo!
So our Kyushu trip has started in Nagasaki, home of Champon, Plate Udon, and Castella, to name a few food items. Today we went to Glover Garden, which is the site of a former residence of a foreign businessman. The gardens have been expanded and a number of other historically significant western style buildings have been moved there. It was very beautiful and reminded me of English gardens. Nearby is the Oura Catholic Church, the oldest Catholic church in Japan.
From there we walked to Dejima, the site of the former Dutch settlement. This tiny island was the only official contact Japan had with the western world during it’s isolation period. The original island and buildings had been lost due to land reclaimation and construction, but the reconstruction of the site is really well done. The best word I can find to describe it was fascinating. Quite a mix of Japan and the west.
Next it was a walk along the local shopping arcade and a quick look at Sofukuji Temple, a temple built in Ming dynasty style. It has surprised me how much Chinese infulence there is in Nagasaki. Not only is there a Chinatown, but it also appears that they have dragon dances quite like lion dances. And there are Chinese style restaurants everywhere!
Which brings me to food. Nagasaki is famous for Champon, a ramen soup dish with very salty broth, lots of cabbage, and mixed seafood. The other dish it’s famous for is Plate Udon, which is dried noodles with cabbage, seafood and sauce served on top. Both are very yummy! I’ve tried to attach photos, but as I’m doing this from my phone I don’t know how successful I’ll be.
The other things we tried today were Castella, a sponge cake with a slight sweet cheese flavour, and a type of manju (of which the name escapes me). The manju is unusual as it’s savoury not sweet. Instead of bean paste in a steamed bread bun is was a very juicy, tender, fatty piece of pork. Oh it was yummy!
Okay, that’s all for tonight, more adventures (and food) tomorrow!





ACK!

10 09 2009

ACK! It’s been over a month!?! Boy you must be thinking I’m slack. But I have a good reason, really!

Um… okay….

Maybe not that great. But yeah, things have been happening to conspire against me blogging. I think summer holidays do that to me. Either I’m incredibly busy or sleeping. However, that’s all over now, and I will endeavor to stick to Goal #1. Both Goal #1s…

My school’s summer holidays are from about mid-July until September. I always have the best intentions to spend as much of my vacations travelling around. Last year I managed to go to Kyoto with a friend, travelled to Aizu Wakamatsu and Sendai for the Tanabata festival, climbed Mt Fuji, visited my family and friends in Australia, then travelled with my parents to Hakodate, Sapporo and Furano in Hokkaido. It was a very successful vacation! A number of these trips were part of my ‘Things I MUST do in Japan’ list, so I was really happy. This year I intended to do a number of things from that list too, however time and money constraints limited what I was able to achieve.

As I mentioned in my last few updates, I did go to Hakone and Nikko, but apart from that I didn’t have the chance to travel much in Japan. Some of the events I did manage to go to however included the Sumida River Fireworks and Summer Sonic.

Japan is very big on summer festivals, particularly fireworks. Sumida River is the biggest and oldest firework festival in Tokyo. The fireworks themselves go for about 90 minutes, but it is near impossible to get a good vantage point unless you reserve your spot some insane time in the morning. That being said, it’s still an experience going. Festivals are a lot of fun, with people in yukata, food stalls, and a fun atmosphere. However, I think next year I will go to my local city’s festival instead, because I actually want to see the fireworks.

In recent years, as well as summer festivals, summer music festivals have become popular in Japan. Summer Sonic, which is held in Chiba and Osaka, and Fuji Rock, in Niigata, are the two biggest. I really want to go to Fuji Rock, however this year the line up wasn’t great, and Niigata is quite a way away. So I went to one day of Summer Sonic instead (it’s a 3 day festival). Although there weren’t any acts that I was dying to see, I did enjoy Dragon Ash, Phoenix, Mercury Rev, the Silent Disco, and Nine Inch Nails(totally surprised me, but NIN were the best act of the day). Overall the day was more fun than I expected.

Apart from those couple of events, there wasn’t much else to my vacation. I did spend a day at the ‘seaside’ (or bayside to be precise). Odaiba is an island of reclaimed land in Tokyo Bay. You can catch a boat from Asakusa along the Sumida River to Hinode Pier, and from there across to Odaiba a ferry. During July and August a special life sized statue of a Gundam was built to promote ‘Green’ Tokyo. I have no idea what Green Tokyo was about, but the statue was very very cool. Every once in a while it would play theme music, move its head, and steam, which was pretty cool. But what really impressed me was the details, things like the decals, and hydraulics (fake of course), which made it look like it could have just walked off its stand. Too bad they are taking it down. I think it would have been a very good tourist attraction. Anyway.

While I was in Odaiba I took the time to go to Miraikan or MeSci as it’s known in English. It’s a museum that is supposed to ‘share’ innovative science. There are a lot of interactive displays, and it’s well set out and very funky, but I was disappointed that there didn’t seem to be that much. I suppose when I think of a science museum with interactive displays I think of basic sciences. There’s not many ways you can have a display of the International Space Station and make it interactive. And driving a robot remotely just isn’t my thing. However, the one exhibit that was really cool was the internet display, designed to show kids how information is sent around the internet. Using black and white balls as bits you try to send a word to another input station, but the balls have to go along all these ramps and through big windy things. Very cool. Overall, even though I found Miraikan to be a bit dull, young kids would like it.

Oh, and I finished off my day in Odaiba by conquering my fear of heights and walking across the Rainbow Bridge. Got some great pictures of Tokyo too, check them out!

For the rest of my vacation I knew money was going to be sparse, so I took up an offer from my company to teach at an English summer camp. The camp was a lot of fun, and really wasn’t very hard work. I got to meet 3 other teachers from my company who were lovely ladies, and my group of kids was friendly and tried hard. I think the most enjoyable part of the camp was the BBQ/bonfire/ghost walk evening. We ate a heap of meat, got to light small fireworks, dance around, and freak out the kids (we were the monsters)(and yes, I am kinda sadistic).

The final part of my vacation was two weeks spent in Australia. Two weeks seems like a long time on paper, but it really flew. I visited my grandfather, aunt, uncle and cousin, and also managed to catch up with a few friends. I went shopping for clothes (I just can’t buy pants/underwear in Japan), multiple doctor/dentist appointments and ate many foods I missed. It was really wonderful to go back home, I’ve been missing it a lot lately. And believe me, it was very sad to leave. It was also very distressing to get my credit card bill (4 days of shopping, and averaging $500 a day… you do the math) but at least I have clothes now.

And now it’s September and it’s back to school. Admittedly it’s only the first week of school, but things have been slow so far. I’m expecting to get slammed next week. But I would have to say the most interesting thing about being back at school is the ‘measures’ the school is taking in regards to Swine Flu… It’s not even flu season yet!?! Regardless, if a kid comes down with a fever during class time, we have to give them a mask, send them to the teacher’s room, and then to the nurse’s office. And on top of that, the school has decided to limit the Culture Festival in a few weeks time. Now, if you’ve ever watched a school-based anime, Culture Festival is when all the kids open a maid café or make a haunted house in their classroom. People from outside the school (family/friends/complete strangers) can come and look around, etc. This year however, the school has limited the festival to one day, no food will be sold, and only families that have returned their RSVP’s can come. I can tell you now a lot of the kids will be disappointed.

But such is life in a society prone to panic.

Did I ever tell you about how natto sold out when a TV show said eating it every day was good for dieting??? Crazy group mentality….

*edit – apparently the swine flu panic isn’t over reacting, at the moment about 12 kids from the school have contracted it…. great….





Lucy, you’ve got some ‘splainin’ to do!

9 04 2009

So…  its been a while….  okay, yes, I’m not the most regular blogger, and I wanted to explain why. 

I blog at work.  I know, I know, not really a good thing to do.  And I’m not saying that my work is boring *cough*, but the fact is I teach 21 hours a week, but I’m required to be at work over 40 hours a week.  And in terms of preparation, it does not take me an hour to plan for every lesson I teach, because I will teach the same lesson 2, 3 or 5 times.  Which gives me a lot of free time to look busy.  And so I blog.

But I haven’t blogged in a while because my school is a private school and we have lots of vacations.  And I mean lots.  In one year I have approximately 4 months vacations, plus extra days I’m not required to go to work.  So I’m a bit irregular.

Today is my first full day back at teaching.  We have been on spring vacation for just over three weeks.  It’s difficult to get back into the swing of things, but I like being back to a regular schedule.  I do love vacations, but I tend to sleep in far too late when I don’t have any requirements imposed on my time.

So, this year mum and Aunty Lyn came to visit for a couple of weeks.  We did a lot!  We went to Nagano for a few days to see the Snow Monkeys, and toured about many places in Tokyo, including Ginza,Asakusa, Shibuya, Harajuku, Akihabara, Ueno and Rikugien Park.  Unfortunately it was a little too early for cherry blossoms to fully bloom, but there were the occasional few.

It was really nice to have visitors, and to see my mummy!  Plus it was also nice to do some tourist things that I haven’t done in quite some time. Once I’ve sorted through my photos I’ll be putting a few on Flickr.  Speaking of, mum bought my new camera over with her, so now I have D90 love!

About a week ago cherry blossoms came into full bloom.  I went with a friend and her friends to a Sakura Festival in Chiba.  It was really crowded, but I love the vibe of Japanese festivals, so it was lots of fun.  I also tried my hand at a japanese fishing game, and despite losing, I am now the proud owner of a goldfish.  Haven’t decided weather to call it Fish/Sakura/Dinner or Mullet.  I think I’ll run a poll through twitter.

I also went on a stroll along a river a few stations over.  There are over 400 cherry blossoms along the river, and it was beautiful.  It was a little windy, so the cherry blossoms were falling off the trees, but to be honest, thats my favourite time, as it reminds me of snow, but is far less chilly   Here’s a couple of pictures –

a couple more can be seen on my flickr.





did i mention the japanese are crazy???

30 12 2007

yeah, just watching this tv show that basically involves cutting to various cold places were people are running around in their swimsuits….

just to give you an idea of how cold it is here, it actually snowed today.  first time this year.  (probably the last two, but some is better than none – it didn’t snow at all last winter in Tokyo)

snow.

…..

SNOW!

okay.  anyway, I’ve been on holidays for a week now, and mum came to visit.  Basically we ate a lot (that tends to be a trend when traveling with me).  Some of the highlights were christmas lunch and then lights at Roppongi, traveling to Kusatsu – a town famous for onsen, and just spending time with me mum

Will upload photos tomorrow and link them!

and I’ll say it again, japanese tv is crazy…..

i suggest looking at that before it’s taken down from youtube…