Kinsao
Oct 2, 2009, 22:25
Well I finally made it to Japan! :cool: thanks to the generosity of my husband. :-)
I was there for 9 days, a very brief time compared with a lot of people on here!
Anyway I thought I'd share my photos with you! :blush: ...
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=144023&id=704183988&l=f8ee40d019
I only went to Tokyo, so I didn't get to see anything of the countryside, which I guess must be pretty different from Tokyo... I'd really like to go back one day and see more of Japan, not just Tokyo. I'd like to see the mountains and the seaside...
I did visit the seaside one day, though... me and an old uni friend (who is Japanese and lives not too far from Tokyo) went to visit Kamakura and then caught the old tram to Enoshima, which is where the seaside pictures were taken. It looks kinda grey on the photos but it was a really warm day. While I was there the temperatures were perfect, in the low 30s, but apparently it is usually a lot hotter in August!
One thing I found about Tokyo was that everything is really clean compared with England. I wasn't afraid of catching swine flu! :p It seems like things are designed so you don't have to touch them, or only lightly (e.g. bathroom design, lift buttons etc.). Also nobody bumps into you or jostles you on the street! That was really amazing to me as an English person! especially Tokyo is pretty crowded.
Another thing that surprised me was how everyone waits for the green man before crossing the road! You just don't get that here! (unless it's really busy) and people certainly don't line up all nicely to wait for the man, like they do in Tokyo.
We went to the Summer Sonic Festival (at Chiba, just outside Tokyo) and I was amazed how civilised it was! I was thinking mud and fields, but most of it was undercover, and even in the food areas there was no litter. At all. There were even recycling bins and litter monitors to tell you which bin to put your rubbish in! :souka: I bet that's not a big deal when you've been living there a few years, but to me it's amazing!
I was also quite surprised to see people eating chilled cucumbers on sticks as a snack at the festival!
Talking of snacks :blush: while on the beach (where plenty of people were swimming, playing ball and sunbathing) I noticed that there are almost no overweight Japanese people, maybe like 1 in a hundred or something... I had thought perhaps that is a cultural stereotype of Japanese people as 'little' but it's absolutely true. :cool: While I was there I found at first the meals look small but when you have eaten them you feel full... maybe Japanese people don't get overweight so much because you have to eat more slowly, and feel full quicker? I was feeling really full on meals that would have looked tiny back home! (of course, they aren't really small, just the bowls are small but you eat from several different bowls so...) and I think even if you're really adept with chopsticks you honestly cannot gobble while using them. :D
Anyway we really loved the Japanese food, felt much more healthy on it, sadly it's hard to get good Japanese food at nice prices back home, even trying to make it yourself.
The size thing was a problem for me when buying shoes; I'm a european size 38 / uk size 5 / american size 7.5 but even the LL size in Japan was too small for me !! It seemed like a uk size 4. :eek2: that would be kinda awkward if I was living there (my Japanese friend takes uk size 5.5 and she has problems getting shoes... :souka: ) But luckily the clothes sizes were ok... I can just about squeeze my fat white *** into a size M, which is about the largest they stock. :D
I really like the politeness... ok maybe it is artificial and just put on, but it's really nice to go into a shop and be treated with a bit of respect, back home you just get the impression that the customer is a nuisance but in Japan they were really helpful. It just makes life a lot more pleasant!
The shrines were nice too, even if you are not religious at all it's a kind of quiet calm place where you can just go sit and gather your thoughts. There isn't really anywhere like that here, and I miss it a little.
We were lucky enough to be staying in Shibuya, which is a great place to be and very handy for the metro and everywhere else you might want to see. I looked around the shops in Harajuku but surprisingly I didn't go to the square where the cosplayers hang out, lol.
I really enjoyed maccha latte and maccha ice cream! I wish we had them back home! :gohan:
As for bands, well I saw B'z at the festival, and I was really chuffed as I know they are huge in Japan and I have big respect for Tak Matsumoto. :cool:
Well I'm sure there's plenty of interesting things I should have said but forgot! :sorry:
I was there for 9 days, a very brief time compared with a lot of people on here!
Anyway I thought I'd share my photos with you! :blush: ...
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=144023&id=704183988&l=f8ee40d019
I only went to Tokyo, so I didn't get to see anything of the countryside, which I guess must be pretty different from Tokyo... I'd really like to go back one day and see more of Japan, not just Tokyo. I'd like to see the mountains and the seaside...
I did visit the seaside one day, though... me and an old uni friend (who is Japanese and lives not too far from Tokyo) went to visit Kamakura and then caught the old tram to Enoshima, which is where the seaside pictures were taken. It looks kinda grey on the photos but it was a really warm day. While I was there the temperatures were perfect, in the low 30s, but apparently it is usually a lot hotter in August!
One thing I found about Tokyo was that everything is really clean compared with England. I wasn't afraid of catching swine flu! :p It seems like things are designed so you don't have to touch them, or only lightly (e.g. bathroom design, lift buttons etc.). Also nobody bumps into you or jostles you on the street! That was really amazing to me as an English person! especially Tokyo is pretty crowded.
Another thing that surprised me was how everyone waits for the green man before crossing the road! You just don't get that here! (unless it's really busy) and people certainly don't line up all nicely to wait for the man, like they do in Tokyo.
We went to the Summer Sonic Festival (at Chiba, just outside Tokyo) and I was amazed how civilised it was! I was thinking mud and fields, but most of it was undercover, and even in the food areas there was no litter. At all. There were even recycling bins and litter monitors to tell you which bin to put your rubbish in! :souka: I bet that's not a big deal when you've been living there a few years, but to me it's amazing!
I was also quite surprised to see people eating chilled cucumbers on sticks as a snack at the festival!
Talking of snacks :blush: while on the beach (where plenty of people were swimming, playing ball and sunbathing) I noticed that there are almost no overweight Japanese people, maybe like 1 in a hundred or something... I had thought perhaps that is a cultural stereotype of Japanese people as 'little' but it's absolutely true. :cool: While I was there I found at first the meals look small but when you have eaten them you feel full... maybe Japanese people don't get overweight so much because you have to eat more slowly, and feel full quicker? I was feeling really full on meals that would have looked tiny back home! (of course, they aren't really small, just the bowls are small but you eat from several different bowls so...) and I think even if you're really adept with chopsticks you honestly cannot gobble while using them. :D
Anyway we really loved the Japanese food, felt much more healthy on it, sadly it's hard to get good Japanese food at nice prices back home, even trying to make it yourself.
The size thing was a problem for me when buying shoes; I'm a european size 38 / uk size 5 / american size 7.5 but even the LL size in Japan was too small for me !! It seemed like a uk size 4. :eek2: that would be kinda awkward if I was living there (my Japanese friend takes uk size 5.5 and she has problems getting shoes... :souka: ) But luckily the clothes sizes were ok... I can just about squeeze my fat white *** into a size M, which is about the largest they stock. :D
I really like the politeness... ok maybe it is artificial and just put on, but it's really nice to go into a shop and be treated with a bit of respect, back home you just get the impression that the customer is a nuisance but in Japan they were really helpful. It just makes life a lot more pleasant!
The shrines were nice too, even if you are not religious at all it's a kind of quiet calm place where you can just go sit and gather your thoughts. There isn't really anywhere like that here, and I miss it a little.
We were lucky enough to be staying in Shibuya, which is a great place to be and very handy for the metro and everywhere else you might want to see. I looked around the shops in Harajuku but surprisingly I didn't go to the square where the cosplayers hang out, lol.
I really enjoyed maccha latte and maccha ice cream! I wish we had them back home! :gohan:
As for bands, well I saw B'z at the festival, and I was really chuffed as I know they are huge in Japan and I have big respect for Tak Matsumoto. :cool:
Well I'm sure there's plenty of interesting things I should have said but forgot! :sorry: