Today we head for home. We depart Narita at 5pm and arrive at YYZ at 3:50 pm. Last night we had our closing dinner on a boat that cruised around Tokyo harbor. The evening included karaoke with yours truly performing Elvis' "A Big Hunk O Love" to the delight of some and to the embarrassment of my children.
We had a great send off.
We'll post some additional Tokyo photos shortly
A blog to keep you updated on our trip to Japan and a great way to display some of our photos.
Saturday, March 27, 2010
The Tsukiji Fish Market
30% of the world's tuna is consumed in Japan - roughly 7.5% just in Tokyo alone. All of Tokyo's tuna and most other seafood comes through Tsukiji. The wholesale tuna auction occurs in a warehouse at the rear of a large covered but open air marketplace. The tuna lies in rows on the floor, the auctioneer is on a box in the middle and the auction proceeds quickly with a series of gestures, barks and signals. Once complete, the intermediate buyers then set to work prepping their purchases for sale to restaurants and other middlemen in a giant array of market stalls. The level of activity is astounding and the action in the market is chaotic. People, fish and motorized dollies and forklift are going in every direction. It was a surreal and incredibly genuine Japanese experience. More photos to follow.
The Canadian Embassy in Tokyo
Yesterday, we had a chance to visit the Canadian Embassy, a building designed by our trip leader Raymond Moriyama. The ever-modest Mr M, after some cajoling, talked about a number of the concepts upon which the building's design is based. Ajon also had a hand in the building so he too was an excellent tour guide. The Embassy occupies four acres of prime real estate in Central Tokyo, across from the Imperial Palace Gardens. When the new building was built during Japan's real estate bubble in the late 80's, the land value was $5 billion. The $220 m building was built with no cost to the Canadian tax-payers by virtue of long term financing secured against the leasing value of the 3 floors of commercial space built beneath the Embassy. From the 52 floor of the Mori Arts Center, the Embassy appears as a dark trapezoid in the upper left of the photo, just below the green of the Imperial Gardens. The Embassy had to be designed so it cast its shadow on The Gardens for a maximum of two hours a day. Hence the unique shape of the top floors and roof of the 4 storey structure.
Friday, March 26, 2010
Now that's an expensive melon!
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Looking east over Ginza
Hakone
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Beach Day in Ishigaki
Today we spent the day on the beach and in the pool. It was a great way to spend our day off from touring. We didn't miss the bus. Ishigaki is about the same latitude as Miami. The Pacific was 26C - a great temperature for swimming. Tomorrow, we head back north to Tokyo and the "real" Japan. We fly from Ishigaki to Tokyo Haneda and then head south to Hakone which is near Mt Fuji. We will be staying in a traditional Japanese inn called a Ryokan for one night.
Monday, March 22, 2010
Mr Miyagi - Karate Master of Okinawa
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Hence, I suppose the back story of Mr Miyagi, the master Karateka in
The Karate Kid. He hailed from a fishing village in Okinawa (recall the plot of KK 2 when Daniel-san and Miyagi return to Japan to defend his home and face his lifetime rival)
South to Ishigaki
Yesterday,we flew 413km south of Okinawa to an island called Ishigaki. It is the second largest of the Yaeyama Islands, a subgroup of the Okinawa archipelago. Here we are that very southern tip of Japan, considerably closer to Taiwan, only 273 Km, than to Kagoshima on the Japanese "mainland" ( over 1000km). The island is only 230 sq km and is very tropical. It is principally a resort island and today we are relaxing at our hotel which has a very nice pool and beachfront.
En route yesterday, we visited a small museum called Yaima Mura that featured early 20th homes that showed the way of the life of pre-WWII "uminchu" (Okninawan dialect for "Kings of the Sea" or fishermen). Interesting but not as much fun as monkeys! The museum had a small "monkey house" as Jack called it. There was a bunch of Bolivian Squirrel Monkeys. Cute but pesky. Given the chance, they were into your pockets or knapsacks looking for scraps of food.
The Battle of Okinawa
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The battle ended on June 21, 1945. It is impossible for us to fathom the scale of this battle and the loss of life. Understanding what happened in Okinawa does help to understand the decision to use the atomic bomb at Hiroshima.
Shuirjo Castle - Okinawa
Shuri Castle is Okinawa's most significant historical site. Built sometime in the 1400's, it was the palace of the Ryukyu Kingdom. For 450 years, Ryukyu was a significant trading empire with Okinawa acting as a focal point to inter-Asian trade involving China, Japan, Korea and SE Asia
. Ryukyu was eventually toppled by the Shimadzu in 1609 and the Okinawa archipelago was incorporated into the fiefdom system of Japan. Shuri has been beautifully restored and the kids enjoyed collecting stamps from the different locations within the castle. Like most everything on the island, Shuri Castle was flattened during the Battle of Okinawa.
One of the main icons of Okinawa is the Shisa , the lion-dog that acts as guardian for Okinawan residences. Similar to the Chinese "fu-dog", the Shisa keep the evil spirits out (if their mouth is open) and keep good spirits (if their mouth is closed).
Sunday, March 21, 2010
We loved this local hound
Though it was impossible to get him to smile for the camera.
We visited a Okinawan cultural "theme park" on Saturday. It was a little cheesy but also interesting in some ways. We have settled into a nice Marriott resort near the beach about halfway up the island. Okinawa is long and narrow - about 85 miles long and 10 miles wide. Weather remains warm and humid.
Welcome to Naha
We were welcomed to Naha, the main airport in Okinawa, by the sight of the ANA Pokemon plane. If only we could fly on that one!
We were also welcomed by the ground crew at the airport who lined up and waved to our plane as we taxi-ed to the gate. It is standard procedure. The Japanese are really into formal hello's and goodbye's. When our bus pulls out from the hotel, many of the staff line up for the big goodbye wave. It is quite nice actually.
We continue to be very lucky with the weather. After three days of sun in Kagoshima we travelled 800 km south for more sun and 25C temperatures. Okinawa is decribed by some as the Hawaii of Japan. It is certainly quite tropical in terms of the vegetation and coral reefs paralleling the shoreline. It has similar topography to the mainland, very hilly once removed from the coastline. Upon first impression, Okinawa is definitely a less prosperous part of Japan. Naha City is rather grubby and run-down in comparison to anything we experienced prior. The residential architecture is different - flat roofs instead of peaked tiles and the cityscape is very hodge-podge. There is a scarcity of industry and quality farmland. The remoteness from Japan proper really shows.
Saturday, March 20, 2010
Peace Memorial to Kamikaze Pilots
Near Chiran, there is an excellent museum dedicated 
to the 1036 Kamikaze pilots who died during WWII. The Chiran air base was the launching point of 439 of these pilots. The Kamikaze campaign based in Chiran, began on March 26, 1945 near the end of the war when the Americans landed on the southern end of the Okinawa archipelago (the Americans encountered carrier-based Kamikaze for the first time at Leyte Gulf in October 1944). Kamikaze means "divine wind" and refers to the typhoons which scuttled two attempted invasions of Japan by the Mongols in the 1200's. 60 % of the Kamikaze were college-aged or younger. Many of them were teenagers who had become Air Force pilots at 14. The museum includes a photo of every pilot and the letters that they wrote their loved ones on the night prior to their death. Very sad.
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to the 1036 Kamikaze pilots who died during WWII. The Chiran air base was the launching point of 439 of these pilots. The Kamikaze campaign based in Chiran, began on March 26, 1945 near the end of the war when the Americans landed on the southern end of the Okinawa archipelago (the Americans encountered carrier-based Kamikaze for the first time at Leyte Gulf in October 1944). Kamikaze means "divine wind" and refers to the typhoons which scuttled two attempted invasions of Japan by the Mongols in the 1200's. 60 % of the Kamikaze were college-aged or younger. Many of them were teenagers who had become Air Force pilots at 14. The museum includes a photo of every pilot and the letters that they wrote their loved ones on the night prior to their death. Very sad.
Chiran - Samurai gardens
Chiran is a former castle town or Tojo which were built throughout Satsuma (a feudal area that included most of the island of Kyushu including Kagoshima prefecture), during the Edo Period (1600-1868). The Tojos were fortified towns which typically consisted of the lord's manor house at the center surrounded by a Fumoto area, the homes of his faithful samurai. In Chiran, this village plan is faithfully and tastefully maintained. There are a collection of samurai homes and gardens built along a central walkway.
Each garden is quite distinct. Some with koi ponds and others with dry waterfalls and raked sand floors. The conifers are grown quite delibarately to give them their distinct shapes and cloudlike needle clusters. They use bamboo frames to train the branches of the trees upward resulting in all of the needles pointing skyward.
Day travels in Kagoshima
Yesterday, we travelled around the Kagoshima prefecture making several stops during the course of the day. Once out of the city, we were quickly in a rural setting of densely forested foothills. We travelled first to the village of Fukiagehama, the ancestral home of the family of Sachi Moriyama (Ajon's mom). We visited the family gravesite on an incredibly peaceful, sunny morning. We lit incense sticks and placed them at the burial marker to pay homage. Sachi's three sisters are on the trip so it was a special moment for them. Special for us as well to be included in such an intimate family experience.
We stopped for a soba noodle soupbowl lunch at a roadside produce stand in the farming community of Kimpo. From there we continued onto Chiran.
We stopped for a soba noodle soupbowl lunch at a roadside produce stand in the farming community of Kimpo. From there we continued onto Chiran.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Sengan-en Garden
Sakurajima Volcano
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
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