Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Odawara and Tokyo

(Sunday, March 15)

There are days when you pack in too much stuff to do and this was that day. We left Kevin and his family to head back to Tokyo eventually, but we decided to check out the Odawara Castle. On our way to the Odawara Castle we met George Ono who was telling us to stay on the left side when crossing the cross walk. We talked with him for a little while and then another Japanese man came up to us and starting talking. He had worked for 45 years prior to retiring and had spent the last 6 years of retirement learning English from scratch. He was very talkative and provided us with some facts about the US that we did not even know or had forgotten. Prior to leaving us he sang the National Anthem and got almost all of the words right. We were very impressed.



We kept walking with George since he was interested in our company. George was from Odawara, but has worked in Canada and Germany. We exchanged e-mails, took pictures, and he left prior to us going inside the castle. The castle grounds had an old elephant that was given to the city from India. There was also a monkey which was very strange to me. The Odawara castle was very similar to the Nagoya castle, but there was some additional interesting items in the museum portion of the castle. The views from the top were pretty amazing. You could see all of Odawara and even the Miura Peninsula where Yokosuka is.



After checking out Odawara Castle we started taking the trains to Tokyo. We got to Tokyo around 4 pm and decided to check in at the New Sanno Hotel first, so we could drop off our bags. After checking in we checked out the Japanese gift shop inside the hotel and bought some good souvenirs. We had grander plans on what to check out in Tokyo, but with it getting late, we decided to check out the Toyota show room in Asakusa part of Tokyo.



We got on the subway and headed to Asakusa. Asakusa was a lot more busy than I thought it would be and the station was jam packed with people. We made it to the show room with 20 minutes left to check out floors 2-4 prior to them closing. The show room had a lot of Japanese models of Toyota cars that you could sit in and check out. It also had a hybrid section that showed the different hybrid engines and how they work. They even had a little simulator game that allowed you to control the car between the gasoline side and the electric side. The show room was interesting, but it was not worth missing dinner over.

After leaving the show room we went to check out a crazy everything type store called Tokyu Hands which had games, kitchen stuff, toys, cat rooms to hang out with cats, etc. Finally, after leaving there around 8:30 pm we went to grab a bite to eat. We made it back to the New Sanno to shower up and go to sleep. We had an early morning rise planned.

(Monday, March 16)

We got up at 4:10 am this morning, so that we could check out the Tsukiji Fish Market. 80% of the worlds fish goes through Tokyo and most of it goes through Tsukiji. They have tuna auctions in the morning that tourists are allowed to see from 5:30 am until 6:15 am. We caught the 5:05 am subway from nearby the New Sanno Hotel and got to the market around 5:30 am after finding some fellow Americans to follow. We followed them to the live tuna auction which was interesting to watch for about 1 minute prior to workers shoeing us away. We were only allowed to watch the frozen tuna auction which was one building over.
We headed to the frozen tuna auction and checked it out for 30 minutes or so. The people buying the tuna check out the tuna by shining their flashlight at tail area of the fish where a small piece of meat is shown. They use a crow bar to pry at the meat to see how it flakes off. We did not see them lick the fish, but maybe they do that with the fresh tuna auction. There were some huge frozen tunas and just a lot of tunas in that warehouse that were being auctioned.On the way to and from the market there is a ton of other workers in the area moving around on little carts with their fish in the back. It is crazy how fast they are moving around that area. You really had to watch yourself because I don’t think they would have cared if they hit you. It was more industrialized than the shipyard. We left there to take the trains back to Yokosuka, so that I could get to work in the morning. I was only a couple hours late.

Yunessun

(Saturday, March 14)

We made a last minute decision to go back to the Hakone area with my coworker Kevin, his wife Hiromi, and their daughter Mia to go to the Yunnesun. The Yunnesun is a hot springs resort that is family friendly, so most of the resort requires a bathing suit. We took the trains back to the Odawara and then took a bus to the Yunnesun. We did not get there until around 1:30 pm or so, but we first checked into our lodging for the night at the nearby B&B, so we could drop off our bags.

The Yunnesun is really cool and included three different areas. There were two co-ed areas that required bathing suits, and then a separated male and female area that did not (traditional onsen). The first area had a bunch of themed hot spring pools like coffee, green tea, sake, red wine, and charcoal, and a few regular hot spring pools. The coffee pool was my favorite, but the green tea pool was a close second. The coffee pool smelled just like fresh roasted coffee and was brown in color. We stayed in it for the fresh coffee dumping that had been brewing for an hour or so. It was quite refreshing and woke you right up. The green tea pool was nice because it has a pleasant smell with the green tea constantly being pumped into the pool. Green tea is supposedly good for your skin. The sake pool was interesting since they had a barrel that was dripping real sake into the water flowing into the pool. The red wine pool left a lot up to the imagination. It did not really smell like red wine and was disappointing.


The other co-ed area was mostly indoors except for the three waterslides and wading pool with waterfalls outside. The indoor area had a huge Mediterranean themed pool that was fun to play around in. There was a dead sea pool that was very salty and was hard to sink in. You just floated on top without any effort. There was a honey pool which was a lot of fun and smelled very sweet. There was a strawberry pool which was okay, but did not really smell like strawberries. We even got the chance to have our dead skin eaten off by fish in a small little pool. It was intense and ticklish at the same time with the 40 or so small fish that would be munching on your foot. The waterslides on the outside were awesome, but by the time we got out there it was dark and cold outside. You walked up those steps to the slide very fast prior to getting into the warm water and going down the slide.


With only 45 minutes left prior to the last shuttle bus to take us back to the B&B we went into the traditional onsen portion of the Yunnesun. I went in to the boys side with Kevin while Denise, Mia, and Hiromi went in the girls side. Most of the hot spring pools were outdoors. We tried out most of them with the ones further away from the building being the hottest. We sat in bucket ones which was kinda fun. I really enjoyed the one with the waterfall. I just hung out there for about 15 minutes letting all my worries go away.

We ended up missing the last shuttle bus, but it was a quick and easy walk back to the B&B. We got a good deal on the B&B and now I know why. It is more of a glorified hostel with individual twin bed rooms. Denise and I had separate rooms right next to each other. The room I was staying in had been used by someone rather large before me because the springs were broken in the middle. I tried to sleep on the outer edges of the bed, but it was difficult. Eventually early in the morning, I joined Denise in her twin bed and I was able to get a few hours of good sleep next to my lovely wife.

Nagoya

(Friday, March 6)

We headed down to Nagoya this weekend to visit Denise’s friend from college, Misako and her family. Nagoya is located about halfway between Yokohama and Kyoto. We took the bullet train from Yokohama to Nagoya. We were on the slow bullet train, so it took us 2.5 hours to get there. The slow bullet train still goes fast, but it makes more stops along the way.

Misako and her husband David found us at the Nagoya train station. Unfortunately, Misako injured her ankle going down the steps to get to the train station, so she was limping. We took a taxi cab to get some of the famous Nagoya chicken wings called Tebasaki. They are salty and spicy chicken wings that are very tasty and some of the best chicken wings I have ever had. We went to a place called Yamachan which is a chain restaurant. The one we went to was about 5 buildings down from another one and about 3 blocks down from another one, but it was still busy. We had our chicken wings, beer, and chu-hi. Yummy…yummy…yummy. I had a Japanese wheat beer which was almost as good as home.

We stayed at Misako and David’s house in Kasugai which is a suburb north of Nagoya. Nagoya is the fourth largest city in Japan, so it is quite spread out. Their house was a four bedroom traditional Japanese house. We stayed in the tatami room on the first floor sleeping on some futons under lots of blankets to keep warm. You have to be tough to live in a Japanese house because they don’t have central heating and their houses are not well insulated.

(Saturday, March 7)

This morning we got up and had breakfast and then headed over to Misako’s parents house. Their two daughters were staying with the grandparents the night before, but we were all going to head out to do some strawberry picking. I had no idea what we were getting ourselves into. It took about 1 hour to drive out to the strawberry picking area going through multiple toll roads. It costs us about 1500 yen ($15) to drive out to the strawberry picking area. In Japan their roads are maintained through tolls, so those that don’t drive don’t have to pay to maintain the roads. I think it is much easier to take public transit than drive.

The strawberry picking area was a huge indoor greenhouse with rows upon rows of strawberry plants. The strawberry plants were raised up about 4 feet and the strawberries were hanging down from there. They gave us a row to pick and eat as many strawberries as we wanted. They gave us some condensed milk to dip the strawberries in, but I thought it tasted better just plain. Misako’s dad is a botanist, so he was trying to show and tell us how to pick the best strawberry. It was a lot of fun with the kids and we ate a lot of strawberries.

After picking strawberries we headed to the beach near Tokoname on the Chita Peninsula. The beach was beautiful and overlooked upon the Ise Bay. We watched a wind surfer play around for a little while in the water. Across from the beach was a sake museum that we checked out. The museum was dedicated to Akio Morita who was the founder of Sony. His family was big into the sake business since the 1600s, but he went on to found Sony. We tried a few different sakes, but I am still not much of a fan.

We drove back and had dinner at a Korean BBQ joint where we ate intestines, cow tongue, and other random meats. The cow tongue was okay, but the intestines were too chewy. The Korean BBQ place has a grill at your table that you cook your own food on. It is a lot of fun.

After dinner we stopped by Ichiro’s parent’s house and their adjoining museum. It was not open since it was dark, but it was really cool to see where Ichiro grew up. Of course, his parent’s house has probably been remodeled since he lived there, but it was still neat. Ichiro is from the same town that Misako and David live in. Misako had a cousin or cousin’s friend that went to high school with Ichiro. We use Ichiro’s name whenever Japanese people ask us where we are from since they recognize him and the Seattle Mariners.

(Sunday, March 8)

We started out this morning by going to have a famous Nagoya breakfast set at a Bali themed restaurant. You pay the price of a drink and get a breakfast set that included a mini sandwich, salad, and potato salad. It was very tasty and only costs 400 yen ($4) which was the price of the Mango juice I got. The restaurant was really cool because it was spread out in an open dining room setting with a waterfall outside. Afterwards, we headed to the Bali themed store that had souvenirs from Bali, but we held out since we plan on getting a lot of souvenirs in Thailand.

After breakfast Misako, David and the kids dropped us off at a train station near their house, so we could head back to Nagoya. We took the train to Nagoya to check out the Nagoya castle. The Nagoya castle was a neat castle, but its biggest draw was the museum artifacts inside like swords, golden dolphins, armor, etc. The castle burned down during WWII, but has since been rebuilt using concrete. A lot of Japanese castles have been rebuilt using concrete due to the overwhelming problem of wood burning. The castle grounds were neat. We rushed to catch a subway back to the train station and then catch our bullet train ride home.

We were hoping to check out the Toyota show room in Nagoya, but we ran out of time. The Toyota factory and headquarters are in the Nagoya area. The Toyota factory requires you to make a reservation up to 2 weeks in advance, but we did not realize this until a few days before our trip. We had a lot of fun hanging out with Misako, David, Hana, and Maya over the weekend.

Kyoto

(Saturday, February 28)

For Denise’s birthday we headed to Kyoto. Kyoto is about a 3 hour train ride southwest of Yokosuka. We took the bullet train from Yokohama to Kyoto. This was Denise’s first experience on the bullet train and she really enjoyed it. The train cars are spacious, comfortable, and give you plenty of leg room. The train is more comfortable than an airplane and I think it takes less overall time than flying. The train is very fast. The one we rode can get up to 165 mph, but it is the middle of the line for bullet trains.

Kyoto was the capital of Japan from around 800 until 1860 when the capital was moved to Tokyo. Kyoto has a lot of historical influence with lots of famous monuments and Geisha. Denise is obsessed with Geisha. We were chasing after quite a few to get their photographs. I would compare visiting Kyoto with visiting Washington DC. We saw lots of Japanese tourists checking out the same sites as us.



We arrived in Kyoto around 10:00 am on Saturday morning and went to the tourist information center to figure out how to get around the city. We got a day bus pass for 500 yen that made it easy to get to all the sites. The Pasmo card that we use for trains in Yokosuka, Yokohama, and Tokyo area do not work in Kyoto. Kyoto is a big city and the temples, shrines, and other sites are far apart from each other, so the bus made sense. We boarded the bus at Kyoto station and headed to Kinkakuji Temple (Golden Pavilion).


We had great weather in Kyoto. It was sunny and warm and just felt wonderful. The Golden Pavilion got its name because it is a three story building that is totally covered in gold leaf. On top of the temple is a bronze phoenix. The temple is surrounded by a pond, wooded hills, gardens, and great walking paths. The temple grounds were very majestic and provided a great start to our wonderful weekend in Kyoto. It was very peaceful walking along the paths and taking pictures.


After the Golden Pavilion we headed to Ryoanji Temple (Rock Garden). This was about a 20 minute walk down from the Golden Pavilion. This temple had a large pond with a small island near the other side that we eventually made it to. We strolled along the side of the pond to get to the temple. We walked around the pond clockwise, but quickly determined that everyone was coming towards us. It did not matter since the temple was on the other side of the pond. We eventually made it to the temple with the famed rock garden or Zen garden. The rock garden was about 60 feet long and 20 feet wide with seven rocks and carefully combed rocks. We sat there for about 15 minutes, but our Zen must not have been there because I did not get what all the fuss was about. We would not recommend this temple to tourists because there are other Zen gardens at other temples that are better laid out.


After the Ryoanji Temple we headed to Ninna-ji Temple. We walked for about 10-15 minutes before we found this Temple. This temple was part of an old imperial palace, so it had some expansive grounds with a five-story pagoda, cherry blossom trees, palace, huge Zen garden, and lots of walking paths. The palace was cool with some thatched roofs and painted wall panels. The palace grounds were wonderful, but they would have been remarkable when the cherry blossoms come out. The cherry blossoms start coming out the end of March, so we were there too early.

After the Ninna-ji Temple we got back on the bus and headed to the Imperial Palace. The Imperial Palace was just a large park with the emperors palace in the middle and the retired emperors palace on the bottom part of the grounds. The palace is not open to visitors on weekends and can only be seen with a reservation on weekdays. We just walked around the palace grounds for awhile before heading out. It took us awhile to find out hotel, but once we did we found that it was a very nice hotel. The room was quite large with two twin beds.

(Sunday, March 1)

We tried to get going early this morning, but most of the sites don’t open up until around 9 am. We had breakfast at Starbucks which was quite delicious and helped us get through our morning. We had a deadline to get back to Kyoto Station by 2 pm to catch our bullet train ride back to Yokohama. We found out at the station and verified the next day that we could have taken a later train, we would have just had a non-reserved seat. It made Sunday a quick day to see the sites.



We started out the day by going to Sanjusangendo Temple. This was a remarkable temple that my friend Patrick Kern recommended to us. It is the longest wooden structure in the world. They use the outside gravel pit as an archery competition for women to shoot from one end of the temple to the other end. Inside the temple is 1000 Kannons (goddess of mercy) that are about 6 feet tall and just lined up one after another. It was quite a site to see, but unfortunately you were not supposed to take pictures. In the middle was a large Kannon where some monks were having a service. It was interesting to watch them chanting, praying, bowing, etc. We had no idea what was going on, but it was interesting to watch anyways.


After Sanjusangendo Temple we headed to Kiyomizu-dera Temple which is probably the most famous temple in Kyoto that you can easily recognize in pictures. The temple is built along the hillside with a huge wooden structure underneath holding it up. We walked along some old streets of Kyoto to get to the Temple since we got off on the wrong bus stop. Along the way we found some Geisha that were willing to pose for Denise. There was a lot to see in the temple grounds with a three story Pagoda, the temple, views of the city, the love shrine, and the people. It is a very picturesque area with a lot to see. The love shrine was funny because you are supposed to walk with your eyes closed from one love stone to another love stone about 30 feet away and we watched this young Japanese guy walking. He never made it to the other stone, but he did make it to a girl’s hand, so I don’t know if that was his intension or not.



We made it back to the train station with enough time to catch our 2 pm bullet train ride back. There was still a lot to see and do in Kyoto, but we knew that we would be back again when the family got here. We returned to the rain, which was a bummer after the beautiful weather we had in Kyoto.

Hakone

(Sunday, February 22)

Today, we headed to the Hakone region which is very outdoorsy with views of Mt. Fuji, mountains, lakes, hot springs, etc. It is located about 2 hour train ride southwest of Yokosuka. The train ride down there was nice since the weather was nice. Once you get to Odawara, you switch trains, then you switch trains again at Hakone-Yumoto. The train ride from Hakone-Yumoto to Gora is a winding train ride that goes up the sides of the mountains. The cool part was that the train actually switch-backed along the way at a couple locations. It would be going right to left, then switch and start going left to right up the mountain side.


Once we got to Gora, we got onto a cable car that goes straight up the side of the mountain to Sounzan. The train was angled with steps to move throughout the train car. Onboard the train we met some nice Japanese ladies that we shared our pictures of Disneyland and Denise’s kimono class. They were laughing and having a good time. One of the ladies ended up giving Denise a collar pin of a hat after we got off the train.

Once we got to Sounzan we realized that the weather was starting to change for the worse. It was windy at Sounzan, so the gondola that goes to Owakudani at the top of the mountain was not running. We got in a long line to wait to take a bus. We finally got on the bus and headed to Owakudani. At Owakudani, they had some steaming sulfur pits and great views of Mt. Fuji. The problem was it was extremely windy and cold at the top that we only stayed the minimum amount of time to catch the bus to go to the other side of the mountain. Mt. Fuji was starting to get covered in clouds, so the view was nice, but not as amazing as it could have been. Owakudani is famous for the black eggs you can get which are eggs that are hard boiled in hot sulfur water.

We took the bus down the other side of the mountain to Lake Ashi. From Lake Ashi, you can take a boat ride to Hakone Machi on the other side of the lake. Along the way you are supposed to get great views of Mt. Fuji, but it was clouded in by this point. There was a ferry you can take across the lake or a pirate ship. We made the mistake of taking the ferry because we did not realize where the pirate ships took off from until after we were on the ferry boat. The funny part was there were only 6 people on a ferry that held 750 people.
We definitely choice the wrong day to go to Hakone. We should have gone on Saturday, but we were both tired and wanted to sleep in. We did make it back in time to have dinner with my coworkers. It was a birthday party dinner for my friend Trevor. We had some tasty chili which took the days chills right out.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Long Long Time

We are on the last stretch of our trip in Japan and we have been busy being tourist and learning Japanese which is why the blog has been slacking. Here is a short update with more to come.

(Wednesday, February 18)

(Japanese Bar - Chi Cha Ra?)

This evening we spent with some of Sean’s co-workers. Trevor, Patrick, Sean and I had Indian food of all things. Yes, I know we are in Japan of all places and having Indian food. It was really good just like one of my favorite place back at home, Taste of India. We had two types of curry, nan (Indian bread), Simonas, rice, and a mango yogurt type dessert. After dessert we went to listen to music at a local bar. The Japanese man that was performing was excellent. He placed guitar, trumpet, and several other small trumpet-like horns. One of his favorite singers is Neil Young, so he did several Neil Young cover songs. It was a lot of fun. We were some of the first people at the bar. The Japanese don’t tend to start going out until later and it was around 8:00 pm. We left around 10:00 pm when more people started coming into the little bar. We definitely miss the smoke-free restaurants and bars back at home.

(Kimono Class)


The Navy base offers several different classes. I thought it would be fun to take the Kimono class. I took the class with two other ladies that were here visiting their husbands. These were the ladies on the same flight from Seattle. The class was a lot of fun and it was only Ann, Carol, and me. The women teaching was a Japanese woman who had about ten different Kimonos to choose from. It was amazing the amount of time it took to get all wrapped up in the Kimono. It definitely is an art form and I can’t imagine someone getting themselves ready without help. The Kimono with long sleeves is meant for single women and short sleeves for married women. The lady teaching the class joked that it was different because the married women have work to do so they have to have short sleeves. After you put on the Kimono, you wrap a belt around you called an obie which is tied in a bow or in other fun ways. The bow is tied in a box shape if you are married, but our teacher tied our obie’s in different fun ways.

(Thursday, February 19)

Sean and I started to take Japanese class through a program called Kumon on the Navy base. We have class twice a week either with Monday/Thursday or Tuesday/Friday. Class goes from 2:30pm to 6:30pm. We usually go on Tuesday and Thursday from 4:00pm to 6;30pm. At our first class I arrived first because Sean was still at work. I wondered if I was in the right place because there were lots of kids. Then I saw a few adults and then spoke with one of the lead teachers. The program Kumon offers help to kids and adults who need help with Math, English, and Japanese. There are very few adults there but it is fun to watch the kids and remember the days of being so little and care free. We are learning the Hiragana characters. We are given 4 to 5 lessons to work on. You are supposed to have those done by the next class, so Sean and I get to do homework!!! Once the lessons are done we go over them individually with one of the Komun teachers. Each lesson has about 3 Hiragana characters to learn using associated words. Sean and I are proud to tell you we can now say deer (shika), cow (ushi), moon (tsuki), crane (tsuru), chopsticks (hashi), legs (ashi), and shoes (kutsu). Shoes is good to know when shopping. The only problem is that for me wearing a size 8 is a little big by Japanese standards.

(Friday, February 20)

Today, was a very rainy day. My friends Ann and Carol and I walked to the Navy base for a class on Japanese tea ceremony. I know that I should be used to the rain being from Seattle, but normally I’m in my car driving instead of walking several miles in the rain. By the time we arrived at our class we were soaked. My shoes, socks, and pants were all wet. The only dry part of me was under my jacket since it is waterproof.


We had a fun time at the tea ceremony class, but it sure is hard. You are supposed to fold the napkin in a particular way and it was hard to understand what exactly we were supposed to do. Everything in the tea ceremony has it’s particular place. If we were graded, I would not have passed. The tea we had was green tea and it was made from a fine green powder. We first rinsed the cups we were using with hot water and dipped the bamboo whisk in the hot water. Then we poured out the water. Then we scooped the tea with this very small wooden spoon and put it in the cups. Then you pour in the hot water and start whisking the tea. I wasn’t doing the best job, so the teacher came over and whisked my green tea until it was nice and foamy and frothy. Then we got to enjoy the tea and it was good. Afterwards we cleaned the cup with the cloth napkin. The class was a great learning experience, but I don’t think I will be holding a tea ceremony on my own any time soon.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

From Monkeys to Mice

Howdy from Japan. Denise and I had a super exciting 3 day weekend last weekend that we are still trying to recover from, so we can get ready for this weekend's adventures.

(Saturday, February 14)

We woke up especially early this morning, so that we could get on base prior to our bus leaving at 5 am. We got up at 4 am and left the apartment at 4:30 am. Believe it or not there were some party animals still having a good time in the bars nearby our apartment. We spent 10 hours of our Valentines Day sitting next to each other and holding hands on our bus ride to see the wild snow monkeys and Matsumoto castle. It took about 5 hours to get to see the snow monkeys which were near Nagano (think Winter Olympics). We had our Nintendo DS to keep busy during the long bus ride.

We stopped along the way at a few rest stops to take a break, buy souvenirs, go to the bathroom, and eat. They were pretty cool with a huge parking lot and a long building with sit-down restaurants, fast food restaurants, snack shops, pastry shops, souvenirs, restrooms, traffic conditions, and free hot tea (similar to our coffee). We had plenty of snacks to eat, but we did eat at one of the fast food restaurants on the way home.

We arrived at the snow monkey area around 10:45 am and then we had to walk along a wooded trail to see the snow monkeys. Along the way we went by an old hotel where there was a geyser that was spewing out of a small hole in the ground. We started to see snow monkeys here. They are called snow monkeys because the area usually has a lot of snow and the monkeys use the hot spring to keep warm during the cold winter months. There was not a lot of snow on the ground and the weather was quite warm for the day. We finally got into the park area where there were more monkeys hanging around. We went down to the hot springs and there was one monkey in there due to the warm weather. Before we left another three monkeys got in for a soak. It was fun seeing the monkeys cruise around the valley area, play fight with each other, walk right by tourists, and clean each other. The monkeys got very close to you, but if you stared them in the eyes they got scared and moved away.

After we left the snow monkeys we got back on the bus to head to Matsumoto to see the castle. It was another hour drive to get to Matsumoto and we got to the castle around 4:15 pm. We only had 45 minutes to explore the castle and the castle grounds. The castle was awesome and had a very wide water moat around it. It was five stories high, all wood, and the original castle. It was well preserved over the years and was not destroyed and rebuilt. We had to put on slippers to walk around the inside of the castle. It was very cool inside. The stairs to go to the different floors were in different locations around got steeper and steeper the higher up the castle you went. They had some exhibits inside including an old samurai outfit.

We left Matsumoto around 5 pm and ended up getting back to the apartment at 10:30 pm that night. It was an extremely long day, but both areas were awesome and well worth it to visit.

(Sunday, February 15)

We slept in this morning until 10:30 am or so. I made us our famous breakfast burritos. It was the first time I have made and Denise has had the breakfast burritos since right before I left to come to Japan. They were quite tasty especially with the New Mexico Hatch green chiles from Trader Joes. We left Yokosuka around 2 pm to catch the train up to Tokyo.

We went to Meiji Shrine in Tokyo which is near the Roppongi area. The Meiji Shrine is the largest shinto shrine in Tokyo and was built in the 1920s in honor the previous Emperor and Empress. There were over a 1000 trees imported into the park that surrounds the shrine. It was very peaceful walking through the woods to the shrine. It was a nice relief from the hustle and bustle of the city. We hung out at the shrine for over an hour before it started to get too dark.

We left the shrine and headed south on the train to the next train station on our way to the New Sanno hotel that we were going to stay at. The New Sanno is a 4 star hotel in Tokyo that is for armed forces use only and was reasonably priced at $65 a night for a western style room. At the next train station we headed to the Tokyo subways. This was the first time I have ever taken the subway, but we only had one stop to go before we got to our subway station. We walked for about 15-20 minutes before we got to the hotel.

The New Sanno hotel was awesome with only about 130 rooms, a small Navy exchange, American restaurant, deli, Japanese restaurant, and gift shop. We met up with one of my fellow engineers who was staying with his wife. We talked with them for quite awhile until we went to have dinner at the American restaurant. I have been in Japan for over a month, so I missed our good old American food. I have had some great hamburgers in town and on base, but I wanted something that was not quite fast food. I got an awesome Cajun chicken sandwich and Denise got a good old American burger. After dinner we walked around town and made sure that we did not get lost.

(Monday, February 16)

This was the day Denise was waiting for ever since I told her we were going to Japan. Denise has a dream to visit every Disneyland resort in the world, so this was one of her top things to do while in Japan. We headed to Disneyland for the day. Disneyland was about a 30 minute subway and train ride from the New Sanno hotel, so we got there around 9:45 am. The train station is location right between the two Disney parks. There is also a private Disney train that goes between the two parks and might even go around the park. We just walked 15 minutes to get to the entrance of Disneyland. There is also DisneySea which is similar to California Adventure except it has different rides. We decided to go to the original which was celebrating their 25th Anniversary.

We got our picture taken soon after getting into the park with the castle in the background. After that we started hitting the rides. We went on the Pirates of the Caribbean, Jungle Cruise, Winnie the Pooh, Roger Rabbit, Tom Sawyers Treehouse, Haunted House, Western Train Ride, Honey I Shrunk the Kids, and Small World. The rides were very similar except a majority of the dialog was in Japanese. There were a lot of Japanese youngsters at the park. Most of them had funny mouse hats which we tried on to see what we looked like. We ate some curry popcorn which we had to wait 30 minutes to get, but it was worth it. Splash Mountain was being maintained so we did not get to go on that ride. It got really cold mid afternoon and then were getting tired, so we ended up leaving the park around 8 pm.

Denise did get her lanyard pins after some hard searching. The Japanese are crazy souvenir shoppers, so every store we went into to look for lanyards was jam packed with people buying Disney goodies. The prices were not that cheap, but people still threw down lots of money to buy stuff. I was surprised especially after reading that the Japanese economy is hurting.

We left Disneyland onboard the train headed back into Tokyo. The interesting part was that the train tracks we got to in Tokyo station were located way deep below the station. It took us 15 minutes or so to walk from that train track to the train track that would get us to Yokosuka. We walked three or four floors of stairs and at least two floors of escalators. As we were walking up we passed the signs for the subways prior to getting to the surface trains that we needed to get back to Yokosuka. We got back to our apartment around 9:45 pm and I used the last few days of work to recover from the fun packed weekend.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Better Together

Denise is back, the blog is back, and we are ready to bring on the excitement from Japan. We will get better at this blog thing since we are getting a few helpful reminders that we need to keep it up to date. For the record, Denise did make it here safely. Since the last blog entry and this one; Denise arrived (Yes!), I got sick, we celebrated Valentines Day, we went on our first Japanese weekend trip together, and now the blog is back. Sit back, relax, and read about the last week and half.

Nothing exciting happened until Denise got here. I worked lots of hours up until the Sunday Denise arrived here.

(Sunday, February 8)

I started out this day by talking with Denise before she boarded her plane in Seattle. Afterwards, I went back to sleep before eventually waking up and actually checking out different parts of Yokosuka. I have not spent a lot of time strolling through the local streets unless I had to get somewhere or get something to eat. I had two missions today with finding a nice flower to give to my wife upon her arrival and getting to the airport on time. I looked forever, but I finally found a flower that was worthy of my lovely wife. I later learned that it was a carnation, but it was beautiful.

I took the bus from Yokosuka Navy base to Narita airport for Denise's arrival. I knew that she was going to be late from the voicemails she left on Skype while I was sleeping in. Silly me, I forgot to bring the flower with me when I left the apartment to go on base to catch the bus. The bus was quick and got me to the airport about the time she was planning on arriving, so I had two hours or so to kill before she arrived. It was a magical time once I saw Denise coming out of the arrivals gate even though it took me a few moments to see her behind her stack of luggage.

{D} I arrived on Sunday. It was definately a long flight. Our plane left SeaTac 3 hours late because they were having some kind of computer problem. They had us on the plane the entire time as they tried to fix the problem. We arrived in Japan around 6:30pm local time. The customs process was fairly easy and quick. It took about 20 minutes from when I got off the plane to go through customs and meet up with Sean. The van ride from the airport went pretty fast.

(Monday, February 9)

The infamous cold bug that had been hitting everyone at work and at the hotel finally got it's grips on me starting on Monday. I was not very happy to be at work and was starting to become a space cadet. I was looking forward to seeing Denise when I got home from work, but I also felt bad because I was feeling so bad and she had just arrived.

{D} I spent the morning with another girl that was on my same flight and her boyfriend who is one of Sean's co-workers. He had the day off to show his girlfriend around since she is only here for two weeks. It's so easy to walk to places here. The three of us went to a shopping center and looked around at shoes, clothes, and also went to the 100 yen store which is like our $1 stores. I came back around lunch time and got some rest since I was feeling a little tired. On Monday when Sean came home from work he wasn't feeling very good. He was coming down with a cold and just wanted to go to bed. He rested a while and then we went to the Navy base so I could get my pass to go on base. Then we went to dinner at this great place called Pepper Lunch which is a place Sean had been to before. It kind of reminds me of when you get fajitas at a Mexican restaurant. They bring you a hot skillet with the steak, rice, and green beans that you move around the skillet and finish cooking yourself. After dinner we just came back to the the hotel/apartment.

(Tuesday, February, 10)

I felt like a ragged doll that was all stuffed up with who knows what. I was feeling so bad that I did not even get up for the free breakfast. I thought that I could go into work after a few hours of rest, but I made it as far as the commissary to get medicine and walk back to the hotel. I had been quite healthy up to this point, but with the stress of work piling on my body could not fight it anymore. I rested the rest of the day.

{D} I got up and went to breakfast in the hotel lobby. We get breakfast everyday which is nice. For me to get breakfast everyday Sean had to give up his laundry service, but we are lucky to have a washer/dryer in our room since we are in the apartments. I would call this more of a studio instead of an apartment, but other people have far smaller rooms and don't have washer/dryer or a small kitchen area like us.

Well Tuesday was more walking around and exploring the general area with two ladies, Carol and Anne, whose husbands also work at the shipyard with Sean and happened to be on the same flight from Seattle as me. I took them back to the shopping center I had been to before since they really hadn't been out to see much. We also found a shrine up on this hill that we walked to. Sean stayed home from work on Tuesday since he was not feeling too well. I told him that his co-workers would think he was playing hooky since I was in town now. He definitely wasn't play hooky since I couldn't even get him to leave the room. On Tuesday I made grilled cheese sandwiches and soup for dinner and we just watched some TV.

(Wednesday, February 11)

Another day of sickness for me. I of course thought that after a few hours rest I could make it in, but I was wrong. I felt bad for calling in sick again because work has been quite busy lately that I did not want to let down my coworkers.

{D} Sean was going to try going into work a little later this morning. He and I went over to breakfast but he felt like he was burning up so he went back to the room and went to bed. I spent the day with Carol and Anne and we went to see the historic Japanese battleship here in Yokosuka near where we are staying. That afternoon after getting back from the battleship I came back and made tacos for Sean since he misses Mexican food. They turned out great. After dinner we got Sean out of the studio apartment for awhile and went for a walk. He took me to the train station where I got a train card and went on a short train ride so I could learn the system.

(Thursday, February 12)

I made it back to work today and struggled to get through the day. I was definitely feeling like a better day, but I was coughing really good at work most of the day. Today, was my mother's birthday, but I had to wait until Friday to call her since the time change. We sent her some local Japanese gifts that she received just before she took off on a vacation of her own to Florida.

{D} Sean returned to work. I went with friends Carol and Anne to Yokohama which is about a 30 minute train ride from Yokosuka where we are staying. With my new train riding skills I just learned the night before we made a trip to a very large train station. When we arrived it took us awhile to even figure out how to get out of the station. Once we got out of the station we didn’t go far since there was a big mall right above where we spent several hours. We went to this great market in the mall that had all kinds of different vendors – seafood, teas, chocolates, cookies, pastries, and potstickers also known as gyoza. We sometimes had to look away as because I was not accustomed to some of the things I was trying. My friend Anne said she knew when not to try something because I didn’t do a good job hiding when I didn’t like something I tasted.

We went into the department store at the mall where most of the stores were small shops. The department store was very expensive with most items costing $100 or more when I looked at the price tag. We made our way up to the Kimono floor where we were in awe of the beauty and the price. The robe part of the Kimono cost around $3000 depending on the one you choose or what accessories you got like the wide belts which alone costs $5000. I could hardly believe the belt cost more than the robe. Then there were the little sandal shoes that cost around $400. It was crazy but they are so beautiful. I’m actually going to be taking a class on Kimonos here in a couple days so I’m sure I will find out more about the different parts and the true names for them. After looking at all the kimonos we had lunch and headed back to Yokosuka. We wanted to make sure we hit the trains before rush hour so that if we had any problems we had time to figure it out.

That evening after getting back, Sean and I joined some friends of his from work for a wonderful little restaurant near base. The name is in Japanese and so is the menu and there is no plastic food to point to. The chef is amazing. He could probably only fit about 10 people in the restaurant and you watch him prepare every piece in front of you. We had breaded pork also called tankatsu in addition to all the other wonderful things that came along with the meal. Definitely don’t go there hungry because the chef takes his time to prepare everything perfectly. You watch him prepare everything for close to an hour before you get to eat your dinner.


We will be writing again tomorrow evening about our past weekend, so you can find out about the longest tourist day, followed by relaxation in Tokyo, and finishing the weekend at the happiest place on earth. Stay tuned...

Monday, February 2, 2009

Kamakura

I apologize for not being on top of this blogging thing and waiting until a week has passed before I add any blog postings. This last week of work was extremely stressful and difficult and required a lot of overtime to keep the ball rolling. Once I got home I was angry at the world especially because I could not talk to my lovely wife from the peace of this apartment I call home. I will get better at this and next week there will be the added bonus of blogs by both Denise and myself. I am sorry that my posts are long, but that is how I roll.

(Wednesday, January 28)

This was the last night I hung out with my good friend Karen before she flew out on Friday. I finally got to experience yakitori. I should be eating yakitori everyday because it is different forms of grilled chicken and other meats. For my seafood allergy this is a great choice for me. I went to the yakitori restaurant nearby the hotel with Karen, Patrick, and Trevor. We sat at the bar and there were two cooks there along with a group of three local Japanese patrons. They have the barbeque coal grill located at the end of the bar that was smoking with someone elses meal.


I ordered some form of chicken, quail eggs, vienna sausage, grilled rice ball, and some vegetable skewers for dinner. All the meals are bite size pieces on skewers that they cook on the grill after you order them. The vegetable skewer was good, but someone gave me some of their asparagus skewer which was even better. It was wrapped in cheese and was almost as good as Sarah's baked asparagus. I am not sure if I was tricked into this, but the chicken I ate was a young chicken and it tasted very spongy. The vienna sausages tasted like little smokies from my Boy Scout days. The quail eggs were awesome and after that I tried some chicken balls which were not awesome. I did not puke, but they just did not taste good. The grilled rice ball was not that great and I would rather just have regular rice.

After we were done eating the cooks started preparing another meal. They greased up a pie dish, laid out a tortilla, and started putting slices of American cheese on top. They put 9 slices of cheese on top, turned the tortilla over and cut of the excess cheese from around the tortilla, then flipped it back to throw some jalapenos on it. They then took it to the back to start baking it. We were mesmerized on what they were making because it looked like a quesadilla. They bring it out, start slicing it up, and actually served it to us. We said it was a quesadilla and the cooks said it was nachos. Lost in translation, but it was very tasty none the less. They said they were testing it out and we were the guinea pigs.

That concluded my last night with Karen before she headed back to Washington.

(Friday, January 30)

After two crappy days at work, I went to an event on base called Nippon Night. It was an evening packed with Japanese culture that included dinner and entertainment. This was the first year they have ever done the event and it was a lot of fun. I went by myself, but met up with and shared a table with Don and Joyce. The night started out with two Japanese ladies playing a Koto which looked like a chello on the ground. The Koto has 13 strings that are plucked by one of three picks worn on the thumb and fingers. It was very soothing music to take your mind of work.



While they were playing the Koto, we helped ourself to the buffet for some authentic Japanese cuisine. They had tempura (fried shrimp), kushiage (beef), sushi, buta no kakuni (pork), steamed cod, and mitsumame (fruit salad). I stayed away from the seafood and just enjoyed the other non seafood items. The food was good, but it was hard to eat because of the entertainment going on. I did not want to look towards my food and miss something on stage.

The first entertainment of the night was the Shi Shi Mai Lion dance which is a January ritual for many Japanese neighborhoods to celebrate the new year. There was some drummers and silly performers. The fun part was the two guys dressed up as flying lions that had some cool masks. The lions left the stage and walked around to bite your head to remove bad spirits and ailments.


After the dancing was a samurai sword fighting performance. The performers play faught on stage with fake looking swords. They even brought in a Kabuki theatre actor who looked like a woman, but actually looked quite different. At the end of the normal performance a 11 year old kid came out and kicked everyone's butt. After the normal performance they grabbed three people from the audience to experience the ways of the samurai. They picked one guy who was 7 feet tall and just towered over the Japanese performers. The crowd people learned a few moves and went through them on stage in a comical matter.


After the samurai performance there was an awesome performance of the taiko drummers. There were eight women and one lead man playing the drums. The noise coming from the drums was quite powerful especially the big drum in the middle. Check out the video and you can get to experience part of the magic. It was a well needed night of relaxation and entertainment to get my mind off of work.
(Sunday, February 1)

This was not Super Bowl Sunday for us, it was a regular day off of work. The Super Bowl was today on Monday. I worked on Saturday, January 31, so there was nothing exciting to talk about. Today, I talked with Denise and my brother-in-law Matt prior to heading off on my adventure to Kamakura. Kamakura was the capitol of Japan in the 12th century and stayed the capitol for 100 years or so. The city is surrounded with Buddhist Temples, Shinto Shrines, and the Great Buddha (Daibutsu).


I headed up to Kamakura with Trevor. It was just the two of us because everyone else I know has already been there. There is too much to see in Kamakura for just one day, so I left a lot to do with Denise when she gets here. Trevor and I took a couple different trains to get to the Hase Station in Kamakura which was the same direction I went to Enoshima Island the week before. From the Hase Station we started walking north towards the Great Buddha. We did not get very far before I saw a temple to the left that looked interesting. We headed towards this temple which happened to be the Hase-Dera Temple.

The Hase-Dera Temple costs us 300 yen to get into, but was well worth the price. The grounds for the temple are beautiful and reminded me of a Japanese Garden with the trees, bushes, and waterways. There was also a cave that we could explore with some stone statues inside. It was a small cave, but it was a lot of fun to explore. We walked around checking out the grounds and taking pictures. We walked up the stairs up the hillside to the halls. There were three halls with bronze statues inside including Daikokuten and Benzaiten. Daikokuten is one of the seven Japanese Gods of Fortune. You could not take pictures of the statues. This temple area was very peaceful. We spent almost two hours just checking out everything. The temple area grounds will be very beautiful in the spring when all the flowers, flowering trees, and bushes come back to life. I can't wait to take Denise there.


After we left the temple, we headed to the Great Buddha. The Great Buddha costs us 200 yen to enter and then another 20 yen to get inside the bronze statue. The Great Buddha is huge and made out of bronze, but was smaller than the stone Buddha I saw at Mt. Nokogiri. It was cool to check out the Buddha, but the rest of the area was quite boring compared to the temple. There was these cool straw sandles on the wall that were huge and I imagine they are big enough to fit Buddha's feet. There were a lot of people at the Great Buddha. After the Great Buddha we walked through town to find some more temples.


We found a few more temples along the way, but nothing nearly as exciting. We finally made it to the Tsurugaoka Hachiman Shrine which was a huge complex and very busy with people. We got there about the time it started getting dark and cold, so a lot of people were on their way out. They were having some sort of service there with people sitting down and praying in front of some elders. It is hard to explain what they were doing being an outsider like myself. We found a huge pile of sake containers that we had to take a picture in front of. I will have to go back to this magestic place with Denise once she gets here because there was a lot to see and we ran out of time.


It took awhile to get home because we were waiting at the Kamakura Station for 45 minutes since none of our trains were coming or were being cancelled. That sucked since it was getting very cold by then. Once we finally got back to Yokosuka we went to a resturant called the Station Grill and had some hamburgers. The interesting part was the hostess/waitress that sat us was a white, blonde haired girl. I was not sure if I should talk to her with my few Japanese words or use English. It was quite strange since 99% of the people in Japan are Japanese. Food was good and we got done in time for me to get back here to watch Lost. Such a great show, thank you Katrina for getting me hooked.

(Monday, February 2)

Super Bowl Monday! The only problem was that I had to work today. I know this has little to do with Japan, but I am American. The game started at 8:30 am here, so we watched the first three quarters online via gametracker. During the middle of the third quarter we left for an early lunch to watch the remainder of the game. It was a great game to watch, even though the Steelers won. We were watching the game on the Armed Forces Network which does not have any commercials, so hopefully there were no good commercials this year. I got back to my room at a reasonable hour, so that I could Skype my wife since she is staying at her parents this week. I miss her so much and I am super duper excited to see her on Sunday. Let this week pass by super fly fast.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Chinese New Year

(Friday, January 23)

It was a relatively relaxing evening planned with just dinner. I met up with Trevor, Kevin, and Karen to go have dinner at a secret place. Karen took us to a small restaurant that is nearby the main gate of the naval base that she was not supposed to take us to. The place was so small that Karen's friend was worried about letting too many people know about it and having it get too crowded. It was a small place with enough recessed seats for 10 people and one cook/waiter/cashier.
We took off our shoes at the door and then had to step into our seats at a bar type table. The menu consisted of 8 wood boards with kanji letters up on the wall. The cook specialized in katsu which is the breaded meat that is fried. I ordered curry chicken. The cook takes out the chicken and every elses meats and then starts preparing all of them at the same time in front of us. It reminded me of In-and-Out Burger with the preparation line that you can watch them prepare your food for you. Denise thought my comparison was silly. Anyways, the food took a little while to come out, but it was so good going down. I can't wait to take Denise there soon after she gets here.
(Saturday, January 24)

We headed to Enoshima Island which is northwest of Yokosuka. It is located just across the water and is connected to the land by a car bridge and pedestrian bridge. The way used to open up during low tide when people could walk across to the island. We took two separate trains to Enoshima with the second train going right next to the water with lots of beaches and surfers. That is right, there were a ton of surfers out there. It was quite crowded and reminded me of the good surf spots at Waikiki Beach in Hawaii. The waves were San Diego sized in spots.
Enoshima is a mythical island that has been part of the Japanese culture for a long time. Dragons are a big theme with the island, so there are dragons everywhere. There are a couple big shrines, flowers, performers, shopping, observation tower, and caves on the backside. The weather was nice while we were there, but the sunny skies hid the cold air and super wind that tried to knock us off the observation tower. Once I put on my third layer, I was good to go.
We experienced some Shinto rituals with this knot circle that we had to go through three times; twice counter-clockwise and once clockwise. Then there was the water bins all over where you fill a ladle with water and use it to wash one hand, drink out of that hand, then wash the other hand. There was also a spring that you can wash your coins with holes in them (5 and 50 yen) to bring you great riches. You can also throw your coins into a metal bin with bars. It reminded me of a fair game after my coin bounced out after a great shot.
We got to the top of the island and went up the observation tower. From the observation tower you can see the entire island and the surrounding area. It was quite a few, but the wind was howling. You could see Miami Beach. Not the Miami Beach you are thinking of, but the Japanese version. I could not see the resemblance. There was also a garden near the observation tower with daffodils of different colors. It reminded me of Denise and I taking our engagement pictures.
After cresting the island we headed back down to the other side where there was a cave to explore. The views from this side of the island were amazing with the sun hiding behind the clouds and the rock formations. It was quite peaceful just looking out over the water. The cave was formed by years of the waves eating away at the side of the island building the cave. The cave was cool, but not as rustic as I would like. There was electric lights lining the sides and grating above to protect any rocks from falling on you. There was one part that was fun where they give you a candle on a ladle and you walk along a darker part of the cave. There were some relics along the sides of the wall.
Afterwards we headed back towards Yokosuka, but we took a suspended monorail northeast from Enoshima to Ofuna. It was a lot of fun especially with the corners where the car moved up and towards the outside of the corner. It was like a cheap roller coaster ride cruising above the local streets. From Ofuna we took the train south back to Yokosuka. We headed to Patrick's rental house for a little get together. We cooked up some burgers and hot dogs to have a good old American barbecue. Once the sun went down it got super cold, but we did have the barbecue indoors.
(Sunday, January 25)
Two weeks until Denise will be arriving from Seattle. I can not wait until she gets here. These next couple of weeks are going to be tough waiting for her since I miss her so much and I am excited that she is coming soon.
We headed to Yokohama in the morning. Yokohama is the second largest city in Japan and is a short 30 minute train ride north of Yokosuka. We planned on visiting the Kirin Brewery and checking out Chinatown. Kirin is the number one beer in Japan and can be related to Budweiser in the states. I think the beer is very tasty and it is about the only beer I have been drinking in Japan. The brewery was located in the suburbs, so it took another 30 minutes to get there from the Yokohama train station.
We went on the brewery tour that lasted about one hour. Everything was in Japanese, but they did give us an English guide to help us through the tour. The guide was very basic, but gave you a good idea on what the different parts of the tour entailed. It was a guided tour that did not allow much stopping to check things out. They did have screens that had animations or video of the brewery operations. Being a Sunday, the brewery was not in operation so no conveyor belts were moving and no beer bottles were being filled up. At the end of the tour we had two drink coupons to use on three different types of Kirin beer.
After we were done with the brewery we jumped back on the train to head back towards Yokohama station. From the main station we took the local subway line to get within walking distance of Chinatown. Yes, Japan has a Chinatown and Yokohama has the largest Chinatown in Japan. We wanted to go to Chinatown today because it was Chinese New Year's Eve. I was thinking that we have huge New Year's Eve celebrations in the states, but not in Chinatown. It was jam packed with people, but there was nothing special happening inside. Today, I found out that the celebration starts today and lasts for two weeks. I might go back once Denise gets here or just forget about it. The Chinatown in San Francisco was much cooler.
We left early and headed back to Yokosuka. I was okay with that since I wanted to get back in time for Lost. Lost is on the Armed Forces Network on Sunday nights here in Japan. I am happy enough to actually be able to watch my favorite TV show. I tried to watch it online at abc.com, but I could not view it since I live outside the USA. I think they block it because the commercials only apply to an American audience and they are probably worried about pirating. I watched 3 hours of Lost to finish off the weekend.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Minakami

(Friday, January 16)

My next great adventure in Japan was to go snowboarding. There was Patrick, Ruben, Mike, Josh, Brian, Jo, Rylynn, and myself. We started the night by meeting up at the lounge at the Hotel New Yokosuka for some drinks prior to heading out for some grub for dinner. We headed to the Pepper Steak restaurant for dinner which is just off Blue Street on the way to Yokosuka-Chuo station. I had heard of the Pepper Steak restaurant, but I thought it was the nickname for the place like the Green Leaf restaurant that I went to. But, it was actually called Pepper Steak and they served different kinds of meat.

It was neat because you ordered your meal from a vending machine with pictures and prices for the meals. You put money into the vending machine and pick the meal you want. The machine then gives you a ticket and you take that to the counter with the waitress who asks what size of rice you want and what you want to drink besides the beer you can order from the machine. The meat and veggies comes to you in a hot black skillet still raw, but cooking. You turn the meat over and allow it to cook for 5-10 minutes on the skillet until it is ready. It was very good and you could definitely taste the pepper flavoring in the steak I got.

We left the restaurant and headed to the train station to head north towards Tokyo. We took the Keiku train from Yokosuka-Chuo to Shanagawa which is the loop line on the outskirts of Tokyo. From there we took the JR Tokaido line from Shangawa to Tokyo Station. From Tokyo station we caught the bullet train (shinkansen) to Jomokogen station which is near Minakami. Patrick bought the bullet train tickets for us, so that we could sit together but it did not work. We were all spread out within two cars of the train. The bullet train ride was interesting, but it was nothing special. It was a quick trip (1 hr 20 min) to our destination and since we were traveling at night you could not see much.

We arrived at Jomokogen station and got on a shuttle bus with a bunch of Irish guys. The shuttle bus took us 20 minutes from the station to the Canyons Lodge were we were staying. We stopped at the rental shop to pick up our snowboards, skis, and boots. We were prepared and had already provided the shop with our information, but we had to wait an hour for the Irish guys to get their gear. The Irish guys worked in Tokyo and spoke good Japanese, but were not the best of skiers. We finally got to the lodge around 11:30 pm. We paid 13,000 yen ($130) for three nights stay and three breakfast tickets.

The rooms were dorm style with three bunk beds. The beds had a very thin layer of padding that made up the mattress, a comforter, a sheet, and a thin blanket. The beds were very uncomfortable and I slept very little the first night. We realized after the first night that we were staying in a glorified hostel.

(Saturday, January 17)



We got up relatively early around 8 am to have breakfast at the lodge. I had a delicious french toast breakfast and some tea. We signed up for the shuttle bus to Tanagawa ski resort at 9:40 am in the morning. The lodge provided shuttle service to three different ski resorts. We headed to the mountain in a nice snow storm. It snowed all day long, which is funny since the lodge worker the night before told us that it was going to be a sunny day. The resort had a tram that went up the mountain and then three lifts that went up from there. The middle lift was a short lift compared to the other two, but the runs were short unless you went all the way to the bottom of the gondola.

It was a great first half of snowboarding at the resort. The snow was awesome, there was so much untouched powder to play in. Our tracks were being filled in by the snow that continued to come down. We were having a lot of fun and it was tough to stop for lunch. On our way to lunch we found an unfortunate event that occurred. One of our peeps, Josh, had twisted his knee severely enough to be carted off the mountain and taken to the hospital. That put a damper on the rest of the ski day.

That night while Josh was on his way back to Yokosuka, we partied down at the lodge. There were people setup to meet Josh along the way to get him back, so we were only worried about the long term consequences of the injury affecting his work. Back at the lodge, they had an Irish band that was playing that night. The Irish band had one Irish guy on guitar, an American on fiddle and vocals, and a Japanese girl on drums. They rocked the house. I ended up eating some Shephard's Pie from the dinner menu and it was tasty. The lodge and bar was made up of 2/3 English speakers and the rest were Japanese. I performed an Irish jig to the delights of the crowd.

(Sunday, January 18)



We woke up Sunday morning with slight hangovers, but we still attacked the morning breakfast. We headed back to Tanagawa again since we had so much fun the day before and there was probably still some good powder. It was not snowing today and the weather was quite a bit warmer on the slopes. We snowboarded pretty hard most of the day, but we did find some time to goof off at the top of the mountain where there was shrine gates. We also hiked up to a picnic table on top of the hill nearby where we were able to get a couple turns in some fresh powder. The tree skiing was quite a bit different here since the trees are deciduous and not evergreen like in most places I had skied before in the West.


We stayed at the resort until 4 pm or so and then headed back to the lodge. We were in dire need of some cash since we had spent most of it the night before. The closest ATM was at the 7-11 which was all the way across town. We could afford to take the bus from the lodge to the Minakami train station, but we did not think we could afford to make it to the ATM. We started walking towards the ATM and walked for about 30 minutes before we pasted an onsen that we wanted to check out. We combined our money to pay 500 yen ($5) a piece to enter the onsen.



An onsen is a Japanese bath house that has a hot tub with piped in hot spring water. There are three bath houses in an onsen including one for men, one for women, and one for a family. We split up into boys and girls to head to respective onsen. You go through a door into a bathroom/locker area where you undress completely. From there you head to the next room where the Japanese showers and the hot tub are located. A Japanese shower involves sitting on a stool and using a low hung shower nozzle to completely clean yourself with soap and water. After you are clean you can step into the recessed hot tub with is super hot.

We stayed in the water for as long as it took for our fingers to look like prunes before we got out. After leaving the onsen well relaxed, we headed towards 7-11 and money to pay for dinner. We got to 7-11 about 15 minutes later to load up on money and snacks. After that we headed to a cow-meat restaurant for dinner. I got tonkatsu which was breaded pork with an A-1 type barbecue sauce. After filling up on food we caught taxis back to the lodge for 1000 yen ($10) each.

Back at the lodge we started playing cards (up/down) and drank saki until it was very late at night.

(Monday, January 19)

We got up at the regular time to find out that the lodge did not serve breakfast on Mondays. We walked to a liquor/convenience store to buy snacks and drinks to have for breakfast. We then caught a shuttle to the Minakami train station. From the Minakami train station we took a bus to the Jomokogen train station for 600 yen ($6). We purchased our bullet train tickets for 5200 yen ($52). We got non-reserved seat tickets, but we only saved about 500 yen ($5) from getting the reserved tickets.

Upon out arrival at the Tokyo station, I departed from the group to try and get back quicker so that I could talk with Denise before it got too late. They stayed around to have lunch and hang out in Tokyo. This was the first time that I have taken the trains all by myself. I made it back to Yokosuka with only small issues finding the right train track in Shinagawa. I got back to my apartment about 3:30 pm, so that I could talk with the love of my life!

The only energy I had left in me was used up in talking with Denise. I was wasted tired after the weekend, so I watched The Dark Knight and went to sleep shortly after.

(Tuesday, January 20)

I finally purchased some new jeans today at the exchange. I have been in dire straits with my old pair of Eddie Bauer jeans since they had a nice hole developing in the crotch area. I can now put those pants in the burnable trash bin. They were great pants for the amount of time they lasted, so hopefully my new Calvin Kleins can hold up to the challenge.

(Wednesday, January 21)

I love short weeks because it gets me closer to the time when my lovely wife flies out. I can't wait to see her, hold her, and kiss her when she gets here. I did find out that she purchased her airline tickets to come out here on February 7. I am super excited now and she is super worried with everything she needs to do before coming out here. Tonight, I talked to Denise on her cell phone via Skype which works very well and does not costs too much.

After talking with Denise I headed to the lounge to have a drink prior to heading out for dinner. I met up with Patrick, Kevin, Mike, Trevor, Bill, Norris, John, and some other dude who I forgot his name. We headed to a Thai restaurant across from TGI Fridays on a side street of Blue Street. I got a fried rice dish with green chile paste and chicken. It was tasty and a little toasty with the spices. I can't wait to bring Denise there once she gets here since we both love Thai food so much. The best part was dessert which was a raspberry jello dish with ice and frog eggs which was surprisingly good. It is an authentic Thai dessert.

That is all for tonight. Hope you have enjoyed this long winded story session I have provided this evening. An hour of typing is plenty enough for me.