24 September 2010

In Tokyo again - soon off to the farm

It's been more than a week without an update, sorry about that!

The last days has been quite hectic: I went from Kyoto to Osaka, where I spent around six days, then I went to Tokyo again, where I am now.

The days in Kyoto included more sightseeing of temples, and also the Miho Museum: a gorgeous museum about an hour by bus outside Kyoto, located in the mountains.
The museum was designed by I. M. Pei: he was supposedly given free hands, as well as an unlimited budget, to construct the museum buildings, and it shows - the building is placed beautifully in the mountains, with the entrance connected to the museum itself by a tunnel and bridge. The walk from the entrance to the museum itself - around five minutes on foot - looks, as the Lonely Planet guidebook describes it - as "... something like a visit to the secret hideout of an archvillain in a James Bond film ...".
I'll let the pictures talk:
Entrance to the Miho museum


The Miho museum

Other side of the tunnel, from the entrance

The Miho museum
A great view from inside the museum

The collection in the museum is perhaps less interesting, compared to the building itself. The permanent exhibit is followed by explanations on how "the search for beautiful things is the search for god", and other such religious connections. The reason for this is, that the founder of the museum also startet the Shinji Shumeikai (Shumei) movement. I found that this detracted somewhat from the otherwise nice exhibits. But, the museum is still very much worth a visit, should you ever come to Kyoto!

Also, in Koyoto, I went for yet another walk, no guidebook in hand, just figuring that if I walked long enough, I would eventually stumble into a temple. Luck was with me, as I stumbled into the Fushimi Inari Taisha temple, another absolutely fantastic sight. This temple features hundreds upon hundreds of red torii-gates, all located on footpaths up on a small hill in the outskirts of Kyoto. Amazing sight.
A few of the many hundres of torii-gates

Apparently, the temple is, at least partly, dedicated to some fox-god/godess - hence the many fox-shaped... things

Oh the wonders of faith

"Kawaii neko!"

A view of Osaka, with me in the way

A gate to another temple I stumbled upon.
Kyoto Station - an odd colossus

A day or two later, after more walking about in Kyoto, I took the train to Osaka. Just a little over half an hour by train, but a very different city. Where Kyoto has many beautiful sights, Osaka is the epitome of urban Japan: a noisy, colorful, flashy and crowded city, with the same endless feeling as Tokyo. But Osaka is different than Tokyo: from small changes, for example that people stand to the right on the escalators, to the less obvious differences, like the behaviour of people. I find people in Osaka to be slightly more rude than what I experienced people to be in Tokyo or Kyoto. Rude by Japanese standards - but rude nonetheless. There are things like riding the bike on the sidewalk - something that happens in Kyoto, and to a lesser extent in Tokyo as well - but in Osaka it happens, even when there's absolutely no room for it. I would have thought, that the massiveness of the crowds would have made people more aware on how best to behave in the public space, to ensure that everyone can go where they want to, in the most efficient way, even if it means getting off the bike, making way for people, and forming lines. It works very well in Tokyo, but less so in Osaka.
From Osaka - "Everyday High price!!"

Another picture from Osaka

Osaka again...

Hordes of salarymen

I went to the zoo in Osaka as well - no shouting at the animals!
Even the zoo was crowded
From a park near the zoo (I think it was called Tennoji Park) - more spotlessness

Angry templecat is angry

A view of Osaka Castle

Osaka Castle again - impressive view

A view from Osaka Castle


A panorama of Osaka from Osaka castle.
Shared under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA-license, should anyone want it. Here's a slightly larger version - original is 10340x1750px.


The flag is rarely used. "Welcome please"

I went to the Panasonic museum as well - it gave a good insight into the company culture in Japan. There was a great personal cult about the founder of the company.

Osaka seems, all in all, as a bit more brutish city. There's garbage on the streets, more homeless people, more neon and more noise. Still, it's good to have visited that city, and good to experience what Japan can be like this too.

The days I've had here has included more ordinary sightseeing - museum, castles and the odd temple. Most of it enriching experiences.

When I was staying in Osaka, I went for a day-trip to Kobe. Just about half an hour by train, and I step out in an entirely different city. While I can only judge from the first impressions from barely a day there, it seemed like a nice city. More focus on food, less focus on flashy signs and Pachinko-parlors. Kobe is mashed in between the coastline and the mountains - the view from the Shin-Kobe Ropeway is fantastic. A long walk down from the mountains, and barely twenty minutes on foot through the city, and I stand by the seaside. Kobe seems like a city worth another visit someday.

A view over Kobe, on the way up the Shin-Kobe ropeway

Kobe and I

More endless city

A densely populated area. Osaka must be somewhere in the background.

And mountains to the other side

More mountains

And Kobe again

I believe that the outerlying islands are artificial - reclaimed land

The grasshoppers were huge

Kobe, mountains, ropeway and I
A sign I spotted on the Osaka station, before I got on the bus to Tokyo.  "Inhaled. Burned. Thrown away. If it were anything but a cigarette, it would surely be crying."

Oh, the trip from Osaka to Kobe was also an impressive sight in itself: about half an hour by express train, and all the while, there was no apparent change in scenery - it was all a built-up urban areas, rarely less than three-story buildings, and all of it in the for Japan characteristic seemingly unplanned expansion  of the city. The cities blend together. I don't know where Osaka ended and where Kobe started, it was all one mass. I'm continually impressed by such sights.

After Osaka, I went to Tokyo, to visit Mihoko, her boyfriend Masatoshi, Mihokos sister Mahoko and her husband Shisei. It was the first time I met Mahoko and Shisei: incredibly nice people. We went to an onsen near Mount Tsukuba, and to a restaurant serving Okinawan food later on. It was my first visit to an Onsen - great experience, very relaxing. The food at the restaurant was great - one can do wonders with tofu and seaweed - the company was nice: all in all, a great day.

After Onsen - from the left: Masatoshi, Mahoko, Shisei and I

From the left: Shisei, Mahoko, me, Mihoko, Masatoshi

At the Okinawan restaurant

On the way back to central Tokyo - Mihoko and Masatoshi

Now I have another day in Tokyo, before I go by ferry to Tokushima in Shikoku (just over 18 hours on the boat), and from there to Kochi - and then off to the farm on the 27th.

I'm pretty sure by now, that after I've stayed at the farm, I'll go directly to Kyoto, to find a place to stay and find a job. I'm looking forward to unpacking the backpack!

And just a word about comments: I've changed the setting, so that anonymous comments are now allowed. Previously, the setting was to allow comments, if one had an account (a Google-account or similar) - or an OpenID account - I had hoped, that a site like Facebook was an OpenId provider, so that people could use that login to place comments here. That is apparently not the case. Please enlighten me if you know different!

Comments are still moderated, though, so they won't appear instantly, should you leave one.

I'll most likely be without internet on the farm, so updates may be delayed.

11 September 2010

A day in Kyoto

Let me describe an extraordinary Wednesday in Kyoto...

I got up at around seven o'clock, ready for another day of temple-watching and extraordinary polite people. After eating breakfast at a small café near the train-station, I saw Wolfgang off at around ten o'clock.

There are many temples around Kyoto, but one temple that had been spoken well off, was a temple to the northwest of the city, called Tenryū-ji. I figured that it would perhaps take a few hours to walk there - the train and bus-services are excellent here, but the weather was good (30+ degrees and scorching sun), and I was in no particular hurry, walking there seemed like a good idea. So, after studying the Lonely Planet guide, I set off from the train-station. The train-station itself is not directly in the center of town: "downtown" Kyoto is a bit further north. Walking through Kyoto was a nice experience in itself: the change from the busy station, with the many taxis and bewildered tourists to the even busier downtown was slow, but noticeable. The change was not only reflected in the people, but also in the shops and restaurants. There seems to be relatively few mom-and-pop noodle shops near the station, instead there are more izakaya's -  restaurants with a focus on serving snacks for beer -  but as I came closer to downtown, more even these restaurants were replaced by bigger restaurant chains such as Mos Burger and Mcdonalds. More ordinary shops also began to appear, with them the endless amounts of retail stores. The amount of tourists seemed lower in downtown as well, the majority of people being either sharply dressed youngsters or small groups of salarymen, always dressed the same way: a white shirt and black trousers. Downtown Kyoto is not so interesting if you're searching for temples. So, I hastily trod on, toward the hilly outskirts of the city, towards the temples.

Outskirts of Kyoto
As I moved on, the city changed again. The retail stores thinned out, the small noodle-shops began to appear, and ordinary one-story houses began to be a common sight. The people changed again: now the most common sight was the elderly and the housewives. The temple came closer, and I managed to spot a pair of geishas on my way there.

I've posted this one already, I know.
I finally arrived at the temple, after having walked a bit over four hours. It was, as most of the larger temples here, a grand sight, a truly wondrous creation. It seems as if every little detail has been thought of and taken care of: one can only guess how many times the paths are swiped every day to keep the leaves away, and how many times every tree and bush on the temple-grounds are nipped to keep them in the exact shape and form that is intended.
Small part of Tenryu-ji
Pond with carps

Well-groomed path in the forest
More carps, with reflection

Spotless path

After having seen the temple, I went to a nearby bamboo-grove. Another stunning sight: the slow breeze through the leaves, the kimono-clad women out for a Wednesday walk: an unforgettable sight.
Kimonos and bamboos
Tired and happy

Following this, I was quite full for the day. I walked back towards the nearest train-station, and took a tram-line back to central Kyoto, followed by another hour-long walk through the more-and-more densely populated urban Kyoto, back to the hotel.

On the way back to central Kyoto
End of the day: two very tired feet, many unforgettable sights richer. It's great here.