Thursday, June 5, 2008

June 5th: Tsukiji Fish Market







The Tsukiji Fish Market is the most famous fish market in the world. We had to go see it. Visitors are only allowed to enter between 5am - 615am! Thankfully our hotel was only a few walking blocks away. It was so hard to get up that early but we knew it was going to be worth it. As you can see by the pictures, it was amazing (for those who enjoy fish). Good news: no fishy smells. It was enormous, we did not have enough time to walk through everything. You also had to be very careful & cautious of where you walked. Did not want to walk over a giant tuna or get run over by a moving cart. It was amazing, everyone should go!

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

June 4th: Mount Fuji & Hakone

I've wanted to see Mount Fuji all my life. Utagawa Hiroshige (Japanese Ukiyo-e artist) 36 Views of Mount Fuji color woodblock prints have always been my favorite artworks. The Great Wave off Kanagawa is the most recognized.Funny story: During my 1st year at college I took a drawing class. The professor assigned us a large project for our final. We were to take our favorite famous artwork and alter it to become our own. Of course I chose The Great Wave off Kanagawa. I decided to begin the drawing the night before my 8am class. We had a gigantic blizzard and my hallmates dragged me out of the study hall away from my drawing to go sledding. This carried on until 2am! Everyone dried off and went to bed. I went back to the study lounge. I finished the drawing at 7:30am, just in time to turn it in. Sheesh! At the end of the year our resident advisor gave out awards. You'd never guess but my award was 'biggest procrastinator.' I gave the drawing to my brother. I put the great wave in a martini glass. It was pretty cool.
We were picked up by coach at 8:10am for the Mt. Fuji and Hakone Day Tour. We were taken to a bus station and boarded our bus at 9am. There were about 30 of us onboard and our tour guide was Hiro. Fraser kept saying she was his Hero ha ha.
The drive to the Mt. Fiji Visitors Center was 1-hr & 40-min. It was very small. We watched a short video (Fra
ser & I had the pleasure of seeing the ass crack of a larger American man who decided wearing a belt was not necessary). There was a cafe, shop, and information about the mountain, the hikes, history, etc.
Hiro rushed us because she wanted to make sure we actually saw the top (at the moment it was covered in clouds
). It was a 50-min drive to the top. We kept looking out the window and could only see white. We got to the top and as the bus was parking all the clouds disappeared! Within an instant Mt. Fuji appeared. It was beautiful. Hiro had mentioned the weather can change rapidly and we may be able to see the top if we we're lucky, or not see it at all. We figured she was joking or did not know what she was talking about. Obviously when we got to the top and it cleared, and 20 minutes later it disappeared again we felt stupid for doubting her. Regardless, we were so lucky to have seen it! Fraser and I want to return in a few years and climb Mt. Fuji. You can only climb during summer months and must reserve a spot well ahead of time. At the 5th station (the furthest up the bus was allowed to go) there was a cute village of shops & restaurants, horses to ride, and a path to a waterfall. Unfortunately the waterfall was snow melting= a puddle! Perhaps it gets bigger later when more snow has melted.

We walked back to the bus (avoiding stepping in horse-shit) and drove about 30 minutes to a resort for lunch. The resort was beside a small amusement park which had a few roller-coasters. Apparently the hotel hosts a lot of weddings, conferences, and family vacations. Fraser & I both enjoyed a Japanese lunch (salmon, rice, miso soup, vanilla ice-cream, green tea, and other tiny dishes).

Back on the bus again and off to Hakone. Our first stop was Lake Ashi to catch a ferry to a cable car ride to the top of another mountain. We had time to walk around the gift shop in-front of the ferry before it boarded. Apparently I did not have enough ice-cream yet, because I got an ice-cream sandwich. Fraser did not want one (until he took a bite of mine) and realized it was the best ice-cream sandwich ever! We enjoyed a short ride over the beautiful lake with gorgeous surroundings. It reminded me of Kauai. We had 25 minutes to walk around in a small village with tons of shops before boarding the cable car. It could hold 110 people so it was fairly large. Thankfully I found a 'western' toilet & we walked around the insane arcade.
We boarded the cable car and took a slow ride all the way to the top. We had great views of the surrounding mountains and Mt. Fuji (covered in clouds). We got off the cable car and were covered in clouds/mist. We had 30-45 minutes to walk around. There was a beautiful temple (covered in mist) so 6 of us got brave and hiked through the mist. I'm still surprised we found our way there and back! We hurried back and caught the last car down to the bottom & back on the bus.
Next stop: 1 hour bus ride to the bullet train! Only a 25 minute ride back into central Tokyo. The bullet train was sooooo fast and the inside cabin was very nice.


Tuesday, June 3, 2008

June 3rd: Sumo, Beer, Photography & Tower

It was raining pretty hard today so we borrowed umbrellas from the hotel. We walked to the Tokyo Sumo Museum first. It was very small but we learned about Sumo wrestling from its beginnings. At the end we watched a competition on the tv. We would have rather seen a sumo match in person but the Ryogoku Kokugikan (sumo stadium) was not open in June. As we were leaving we passed 2 Sumo Wrestlers who had to walk through the rain in wooden flip flops (high heel) with special socks. They were huge (flip flops and the men)!
We walked around the corner to the Edo-Tokyo Museum. It provides a glimpse into both past and present Tokyo. The inside was full of exhibits and a ton of school children on a field trip! Unfortunately we rushed through because they were extremely hyper, loud, annoying, obnoxious, misbehaved, and most likely have ADD.

On our last night in Hong Kong (at airport hotel) I saw a purse that I really wanted in the mall. Unfortunately the store was closed and our flight was early the next day. I researched Agatha Paris online to find stores elsewhere. There were a few in Tokyo. We walked through a mall to grab lunch and found a huge department store. There was a Agatha Paris booth but they only had jewelry. Do'h. The calzone we had was worth the stop!
Next stop: Sapporo Beer Museum. Unfortunately the museum was hot and everything was in Japanese. We rushed through and enjoyed the photographs. We've been to breweries before (Guinness Brewery in Dublin, Ireland) so we understood the beer making process. We were on fire and only wanted cold beer, who cares how you make it! ha ha. The tasting platter (4 beers) was only $3.50. What a deal.

As you know, I love photography. I was very excited to visit the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography. We bought tickets for 2 exhibitions of Daido Moriyama's work. Ⅰ. RETROSPECTIVE 1965-2005’ and ‘Ⅱ. HAWAII’. The photographs in the Hawaii exhibition were impressive but not as outstanding as his earlier works. I have a bad habit of being bias since I should be a famous photographer. Totally my fault though. I need to submit work to get attention. Duh! Daido used the same gritty film that I did for my senior porfolio in college.
We took the train/metro to Roppongi Hills. This was a new posh area that opened in 2003. 'Built by building tycoon Minoru Mori, the mega-complex incorporates office space, apartments, shops, restaurants, cafés, movie theatres, a museum, a hotel, a major TV studio, an outdoor amphitheatre, and a few parks. The centrepiece is the 54-story eponymous Mori Tower. Mori's stated vision was to build an integrated development where high-rise inner-urban communities allow people to live, work, play, and shop in close proximity to eliminate commuting time. He argued this would increase leisure time, quality of life, and benefit Japan's national competitiveness. Seventeen years in the making, the complex opened to the public on April 23, 2003.' We had a great time window shopping. The restaurants looked mmm mmm good but we were not dressed appropriately.
On our walk towards Tokyo Tower we found a restaurant called Monsoon Cafe. The atmosphere & decorations were great. Felt like we were eating in a jungle. We had chicken satay as an appetizer. Fraser had Chiang Mai-Style Coconut Curry Noodles & I had Shrimp & Deep Fried Tofu in Chili Sauce. I was a little scared about deep fried tofu but it was great. My Fresh Mango Mojito was yummy and I tried a Umaimono-wa-Umai (Miyazaki) Shochu. It tasted similar to vodka mixed with sake (not very good).

A short walk to the Tokyo Tower. It resimbles the Eiffel Tower and is covered in bright lights. Apparently (we did not see it ourselves) a Statue of Liberty replica is also in Odaiba, Japan. The 1st stop was 150 meters (not high enough) so we paid extra to go up to the observation tower (250 meters). There was a little fog but we still had fantastic views of amazing Tokyo. Next month they are going to start building another tower, Rising East Project. When completed it will be the tallest artificial structure in Japan at 610.58 m (2,003 ft) tall.
As if Tokyo was not perfect enough, the people are wonderful. So friendly and helpful. While we were waiting in the subway station for our train, a woman gave us her subway ticket. She said she did not need it anymore and we may find some use for it. It was an unlimited subway pass! How sweet.