Day 14 – Kyoto and the trip to Tokyo

Kyoto: Home of Astro Boy

Kyoto: Home of Astro Boy

After another nice Japanese breakfast, where Joel didn’t even eat his fish, we packed up our luggage and caught the bus to Kyoto station. We stored our bags and excess gear in a locker, and booked our Shinkansen ticket on the 3:29pm to Tokyo before catching the bus to Kiyomizu Temple.

DSC08638DSC08665The temple has great views over the city and you can easily see the Kyoto tower from the veranda. It has some nice fountains, but personally I didn’t find it as impressive as some of the other temples we have visited. Of interest was the long line to take a drink from a fountain that is supposed to have therapeutic properties.

Tori Gate tunnel

Tori Gate tunnel

Tori Gates on Grave

Tori Gates on Grave

From Kiyomizu we went by bus back to Kyoto station and then used our JR passes to catch a train to Inari to visit the Fushimi Inari Shrine. This shrine is renowned for its Tori gates, literally thousands of them. They make tunnels that go up the mountain to a shrine at the top; there are massive ones at the entrance and small ones placed on tombs in the graveyard.

When we arrived discovered the main temple was undergoing restoration, but since we came to see the Tori gates this didn’t matter so much. We also arrived towards the end of some type of blessing ceremony, with shrine maidens playing different instruments and dancing with bells. Unfortunately this performance had a special no photography sign and a guard enforcing it, as another tourist discovered.

DSC08683The Tori gates were as numerous as expected, we started walking up the path and we were just surrounded by the gates. We walked about half way up the mountain, but the total walk was around 4km and we had to head back due to time constraints.

Kyoto Station James Pasta

James Pasta

Kyoto Station Joel Pasta

Joel Pasta

Back at Kyoto station we had some spaghetti for lunch. I had mine with bacon and mustard leaves, while Joel had egg with carbonara. We had given ourselves too much leeway with the time, so rested for around 40 min in the nice cool AC waiting room.

The Shinkansen trip was nice, although a bit sad as this will be our last trip on them. To get to Narita on Sunday we will take the N’EX which although similar to Shinkansen is a different system. Also the windows were a bit dirty on the outside so photos were a bit smudged.

After arriving at Tokyo we took the local line 1 stop to Yurakucho to transfer to the private Tokyo Subway line to get to Jimbocho, where our accommodation at the Sakura Hotel is located.

Our twin room at the Sakura is a bunk bed. I choose the top bunk which I quickly regretted. I am used to lower bunks being very low and hitting my head, but here the bottom bunk is quite spacious. The top bunk will require extra effort to get into, is higher thus warmer, and does not have as easy to access power. On the upside I get to use the desk as I can’t sit and type on the bed like Joel can. The room itself is quite small (this is budget accommodation) and the amenities are shared in a central area of the rooms on this floor.

There is WiFi internet in the café on the ground floor, but it doesn’t reach to us up here on 5th. There is also supposed to be a VDSL modem to allow internet access in the room, but we could not get it to work. I tried 3 different modems, but it could also be the long phone line or the phone itself. This just means to post blog updates we will need to go down to the café, also no Skype for us.

For dinner we went to a Sushi restaurant and had a set 9 item menu. 8 pieces of sushi and a bowl of Miso soup, the pieces were quite interesting and had a nice variety of flavours. We had some egg, salmon, squid and octopus that we could identify and some other unknown types of fish.

20100903-Kyoto-Tokyo[ngg_gallery=15]

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Day 13 – A Quarter of the Way in a Half of a Day; Or, a semi-whirlwind tour of part of Kyoto

It’s becoming increasingly clear to me that we’ve managed to come at exactly the wrong time of year. The weather is hot and it’s humid and it’s generally unpleasant. We’re constantly going in and out of air conditioning, so we have no chance of getting used to the heat. we’re typically dripping with sweat wherever we go. Interestingly, though, we’ve so far yet to get sunburnt, despite never reapplying sunscreen. If we’d come just two weeks from now, we’d get to see all of the hillsides bathed in autumn colours. A month from now and the chrysanthemums would be blooming. Four months ago and we’d see the cherry blossoms – five months and we’d see the plum blossoms. In the middle of summer, though, nothing’s blooming. The trees are green, and the rice is growing, and all of this is spectacular enough, but there’s nothing exciting going on, nature-wise. Granted, crowds are down, and natsu matsuri only happen in summer, both of which are extreme pluses, but the weather just gets to us. It’s great to get out of the cold of Sydney, but thirty-five is a little too far out.

Today, we explored bits of Kyoto. Specifically, bits in the north-eastern quarter. Discovered at 6am that the paper panel in the ceiling of our bedroom, behind the light, is a skylight. We started with breakfast in the hotel – Japanese style. Apparently the Japanese believe that to be healthy, you need to eat thirty different things a day, even if it’s only a little bit of each. This is why the meals here are like a thousand small bowls of a little bit each. I found some of them off-putting – even nauseating for a couple, like the cold brick of tofu – but managed to get most of it down. I’m becoming increasingly convinced that we’re the only two guests in the hotel at the moment. The only other people I’ve seen here are the two who work here, and there’s never any change in the number of slippers (or shoes) in the entryway. It’s quite a nice hotel, though.

Breakfast and planning done, we headed out into the city. Kyoto is literally loaded with temples and shrines – they’re literally everywhere. Having spent over a thousand years as the capital of Japan, pretty much every sect and branch of Buddhism and Shintoism have felt the need to set up shop here. We’ve decided to visit just a few of them – if we tried to visit them all, we’d require another two weeks here. Or more. Today we decided on Nijo Castle in central Kyoto, Tenryuu-ji Temple in Arashiyama to the west, and Kinkaku-ji Temple and Kitano Tenman-gu Shrine in the north-west.

Where Tokyo had JR trains, Osaka had the subway and Hiroshima had the Hiroden network, Kyoto has buses. Sure, like all the other cities, there are a few JR lines running here and there, and it does have its own subway network – it’s even still got a tram line or two still running, even if most of the trams have been sold to Hiroshima – but the buses here go literally everywhere. While researching how we’d get to places last night, we basically discovered we can either spend our day changing from private train line to private train line to private tram line, or we could use the buses. The bus map is literally a solid gridwork of buses going basically everywhere, with the exception of the bits of Kyoto south of the JR Shinkansen station.

Pricing is extremely simple too. Within a zone covering most of Kyoto, all bus fares cost 220 yen, regardless of how far you go. For the remaining very small minority of stops, it costs more depending on how far you go. Even better, we could buy a day pass for 500 yen that’d give us free travel on all buses inside the zone, and reduced tickets on buses outside the zone. The bus map even had a box on the back explaining how to use it. The one confusing aspect is this: Kyoto has two bus companies, one called “Kyoto City Bus” with green-and-white livery, which we could use the day pass for, and the other called “Kyoto Bus” with red-and-white livery, which we could not. They even share some of the same route numbers.

Unfortunately, like with the two-day pass in Hiroshima, we only discovered the existence of the pass after we were already at the hotel, and we could only buy it at Kyoto station, which we’d left behind soon after we arrived. In this case, we were even two stops away on the subway. We headed to the nearest major bus stop to see if we could buy it there, but wound up catching a bus back to Kyoto station. Wish we’d known about it when we were at Kyoto station the first time – it was a bit of a waste of 220 yen. Possibly we could have bought it in the nearest subway station, but we’re not sure. We were rushing to catch the bus that was at the stop, when the door closed while we were a few metres away. Now, on Sydney buses you can knock on the door and the driver will sometimes open it – that doesn’t work here, as here you board the bus from the back door and leave from the front. Suddenly a little old lady ran up and hit a little button next to the back door – which caused the driver to stop the bus and open the door again. We thought she was also rushing to catch the bus, but then she smiled at us and went on her merry way. We bowed and thanked her profusely, and got on the bus, having learnt something new about the kindness of random strangers, and how to catch buses in Kyoto.

In any case, we got to Kyoto Station. With our ticket bought and route map in hand, we headed off to catch a bus for Nijo Castle. (Mind you, the route map itself is pretty impressive. It’s even got directions on the back for which buses to catch in order to get from one major location to another.) While we were there, we even snapped photos of Kyoto Tower and the Kyoto Station building itself – we’d missed both of those yesterday, since we went straight from the Shikansen platform to the subway.

James is covering specifics, I think, so I’ll try to be general. I think I’ve been specific enough so far, anyway – I’m seven paragraphs in, and I’m still only as far as about 10:30am. By this point in the day it’s already unpleasantly muggy and somewhat threatening rain, though fortunately it’s not excessively hot. The buses are pleasantly air-conditioned, though. We headed off on the bus to Nijo Castle. I still prefer the train to the bus, as train stations passing are much more obvious than bus stops, but this wasn’t too bad. All the bus stops here are named – most of them after the two crossing streets nearest the bus stop, but a few after the closest major landmark. So the bus stops to the castle go Horikawa Sanjo, Horikawa Oike, then Nijojo-mae (“Nijo Castle Bus Stop”). The next stop is announced audibly on the bus, and displayed on the screen, though it’s only displayed in Japanese. Fortunately, though we got the English bus route map, major stations also have the Japanese name displayed (also, I could recognise at least one character in the names of most of the places we were going).

But anyway, I’ve talked about the buses enough. The castle was impressive, though it had no main keep like Matsumoto or Himeji – it had burnt down after being struck by lightning in 1750, and was never rebuilt. We did get to larger single-storey Ninomaru Palace, though – it’s something I was interested in visiting, to see the Nightingale Floors. The floors there are deliberately set up so that when you walk on them, the nails rub against them, causing a tuned squeaking noise. THat way if a ninja tries to sneak up on you, you can not only hear that they’re there, but even where they are. It was kinda fun to walk around squeaking wherever I went. The door screens were quite impressive too. I found the rest of the castle pretty interesting, though admittedly not overwhelmingly so.

We headed off to Arashiyama, on the west of Kyoto. This was literally the outskirts of Kyoto – not two hundred metres away, the houses stopped and the mountains started. It was our only stop outside The Zone for our tickets, but the driver just waved us off the bus without taking any money. The scenery here was spectacular. The bus stopped right on a river bank, with the famous Togetsu-kyo bridge visible. There were people fishing in the river, and a little dam not too far upstream with a little canal to divert water for a little hydroelectric generator. I just wanted to stand and take photos all day, but we had places to be. First, we had lunch: udon (soba noodles in soup). James had oyako udon (chicken and egg) and I had niku udon (beef). I was pondering oyako don (chicken and egg on rice), but I’ve already had katsudon, and James was having oyako udon, so I decided on the beef. It was tasty.

Then we headed to Tenryuu-ji temple, mostly because it was on the way to the Arashiyama Bamboo Forest, which was the main reason I’d wanted to come out here today. It was quite nice and serene. It’s apparently one of the main temples of the Rinzai school of Zen – the garden there dates from the fourteenth century. The temple’s name, Tenryuu, means “heaven dragon” – in case you were wondering. We decided to also see the temple itself – it costs five hundred yen to enter just the garden, and six hundred to enter both the temple and the garden. Both are visible from each other, since one surrounds the other, but entering the temple lets you have a much closer look at the buildings. We had to take our shoes off for the temple – and as I put mine down, a huge cloud of dust blew out, reminding me why we take our shoes off to go inside – and put on some too-small slippers. It was pretty nice, and once done inside we got to put our shoes back on and have a closer look at the garden.

We left through the northern exit, into the bamboo forest. It was just as lovely there as I’d hoped, though the rapidly darkening clouds and overhanging bamboo made it quite hard to take nice photos. I decided to just put the camera away and enjoy it. It was a little shorter than I’d hoped, so we wandered back to the bus stop to move on to our next location. We had a bit of a wander heading back, though, and I seriously loved all the little streets we walked down. There was bamboo growing everywhere, and little canals, and quiet little corners and bends and curves and hills. I could easily spend more time there.

We headed off to our next location, Kinkaku-ji temple. We’d need two buses to get there – one which terminated right on the edge of The Zone, and one which’d take us right to the temple. The termination was at a driver rest-stop area, and the driver on the first bus seemed impatent to get us off the bus, but not without taking money from us. We hopped onto the next bus without trouble, and got to Kinkaku-ji.

The real name of the temple is Rokuon-ji. It gets its colloquial name from the golden building that stands at its centre – Kinkaku means “Golden Pavilion”. The building is entirely covered in gold leaf – according to the guidebook, it’d glow even in clouds. It was cloudy when we were there, and it really was glowing. I was quite impressed with the effect. On the downside, it started to drizzle while we were there, and turned into a full-on shower as we were almost leaving, only to suddenly clear up right as we left, turning the already unpleasently humid day into an absolute swamp.

I mostly wanted to visit Kinkaku-ji (incidentally, completely unrelated to Ginkaku-ji, “Silver Pavilion”, in Kyoto’s east) because I’d seen it in an episode of anime. The characters in that episode also visited a nearby Shinto shrine, Kitano Tenman-gu, only a couple of blocks’ walk away, so we decided we would head there. Unfortunately, it was 5:30 by the time we arrived, so the main shrine was closing up. We did wander around the grounds a bit, though. We rubbed the nose of the cow statues, which is apparently supposed to make you smarter… couldn’t help but notice it was rubbed quite smooth already.

One interesting thing I learnt was that whenever there’s two lion-dog statues flanking a gate or tori or similar, one of them always has its mouth open, while the other always has its mouth closed. This is because one is going “ah” and the other is going “um”. I have no idea why this should be the case, but I had a chance to check it out at the places we visited today, and it was seriously always true.

With the sun setting and the time heading towards six, we decided to head home – via Kyoto station so we could buy another day pass for tomorrow. I got a lovely photo of Kyoto Tower at sunset, though it was a bit rushed as we were heading for the bus back to the hotel. In any case, we’re only planning on three bus rides tomorrow, but since three rides cost 660 yen, and the pass costs 500, we’re already saving money. Dinner was largely the same as last night’s, with a few variations. Still the same unpalatable soup, though. James liked it.

Tomorrow we’re going to visit Kiyomizu-dera Temple, which is supposed to have spectacular views of Kyoto, and Fushimi Inari Shrine, the head shrine of all Japan’s thirty thousand Inari shrines, with long paths of red tori gates. Both are on Kyoto’s south-eastern side. Then we’re heading off back to Tokyo on the shinkansen in the afternoon. This still leaves two quarters of Kyoto completely unvisited, and the other two only barely visited – plenty more to do next time, then?

Today’s photo count: three hundred and five.

It’s becoming increasingly clear to me that we’ve managed to come at exactly the wrong time of year. It’s hot and it’s

humid and it’s generally unpleasent. We’re constantly going in and out of air conditioning, so we have no chance of getting

used to it. we’re typically dripping with sweat wherever we go. Interestingly, though, we’ve so far yet to get sunburnt,

despite never reapplying sunscreen. If we’d come just two weeks from now, we’d get to see all of the hillsides bathed in

autumn colours. A month from now and the chrysanthemums would be blooming. Four months ago and we’d see the cherry blossoms

– five months and we’d see the plum blossoms. In the middle of summer, though, nothing’s blooming. The trees are green, and

the rice is growing, and all of this is spectacular enough, but there’s nothing exciting going on, nature-wise. Granted,

crowds are down, and natsu matsuri only happen in summer, both of which are extreme plusses, but the weather just gets to

us. It’s great to get out of the cold of Sydney, but thirty-five is a little too far out.

Today, we explored bits of Kyoto. Specifically, bits in the north-eastern quarter. Discovered at 6am that the paper panel

in the ceiling of our bedroom, behind the light, is a skylight. We started with breakfast in the hotel – Japanese style.

Apparently the Japanese believe that to be healthy, you need to eat thirty different things a day, even if it’s only a

little bit of each. This is why the meals here are like a thousand small bowls of a little bit each. I found some of them

off-putting – even nauseating for a couple, like the cold brick of tofu – but managed to get most of it down. I’m becoming

increasingly convinced that we’re the only two guests in the hotel at the moment. The only other people I’ve seen here are

the two who work here, and there’s never any change in the number of slippers (or shoes) in the entryway. It’s quite a nice

hotel, though.

Breakfast and planning done, we headed out into the city. Kyoto is literally loaded with temples and shrines – they’re

literally everywhere. Having spent over a thousand years as the capital of Japan, pretty much every sect and branch of

Buddhism and Shintoism have felt the need to set up shop here. We’ve decided to visit just a few of them – if we tried to

visit them all, we’d require another two weeks here. Or more. Today we decided on Nijo Castle in central Kyoto, Tenryuu-ji

Temple in Arashiyama to the west, and Kinkaku-ji Temple and Kitano Tenman-gu Shrine in the north-west.

Where Tokyo had JR trains, Osaka had the subway and Hiroshima had the Hiroden network, Kyoto has buses. Sure, like all the

other cities, there are a few JR lines running here and there, and it does have its own subway network – it’s even still

got a tram line or two still running, even if most of the trams have been sold to Hiroshima – but the buses here go

literally everywhere. While researching how we’d get to places last night, we basically discovered we can either spend our

day changing from private train line to private train line to private tram line, or we could use the buses. The bus map is

literally a solid gridwork of buses going basically everywhere, with the exception of the bits of Kyoto south of the JR

Shinkansen station.

Pricing is extremely simple too. Within a zone covering most of Kyoto, all bus fares cost 220 yen, regardless of how far

you go. For the remaining very small minority of stops, it costs more depending on how far you go. Even better, we could

buy a day pass for 500 yen that’d give us free travel on all buses inside the zone, and reduced tickets on buses outside

the zone. The bus map even had a box on the back explaining how to use it. The one confusing aspect is this: Kyoto has two

bus companies, one called “Kyoto City Bus” with green-and-white livery, which we could use the day pass for, and the other

called “Kyoto Bus” with red-and-white livery, which we could not. They even share some of the same route numbers.

Unfortunately, like with the two-day pass in Hiroshima, we only discovered the existence of the pass after we were already

at the hotel, and we could only buy it at Kyoto station, which we’d left behind soon after we arrived. In this case, we

were even two stops away on the subway. We headed to the nearest major bus stop to see if we could buy it there, but wound

up catching a bus back to Kyoto station. Wish we’d known about it when we were there – it was a bit of a waste of 220 yen.

Possibly we could have bought it in the nearest subway station, but we’re not sure. In any case, with our ticket bought and

route map in hand, we headed off to catch a bus for Nijo Castle. (Mind you, the route map itself is pretty impressive. It’s

even got directions on the back for which buses to catch in order to get from one major location to another.) While we were

there, we even snapped photos of Kyoto Tower and the Kyoto Station building itself – we’d missed both of those yesterday,

since we went straight from the Shikansen platform to the subway.

James is covering specifics, I think, so I’ll try to be general. I think I’ve been specific enough so far, anyway – I’m six

paragraphs in, and I’m still only as far as about 10:30am. By this point in the day it’s already unpleasently muggy and

somewhat threatening rain, though fortunately it’s not excessively hot. The buses are pleasently air-conditioned, though.

We headed off on the bus to Nijo Castle. I still prefer the train to the bus, as train stations passing are much more

obvious than bus stops, but this wasn’t too bad. All the bus stops here are named – most of them after the two crossing

streets nearest the bus stop, but a few after the closest major landmark. So the bus stops to the castle go Horikawa Sanjo,

Horikawa Oike, then Nijojo-mae (“Nijo Castle Bus Stop”). The next stop is announced audibly on the bus, and displayed on

the screen, though it’s only displayed in Japanese. Fortunately, though we got the English bus route map, major stations

also have the Japanese name displayed (also, I could recognise at least one character in the names of most of the places we

were going).

But anyway, I’ve talked about the buses enough. The castle was impressive, though it had no main keep like Matsumoto or

Himeji – it had burnt down after being struck by lightning in 1750, and was never rebuilt. We did get to larger single-

storey Ninomaru Palace, though – it’s something I was interested in visiting, to see the Nightingale Floors. The floors

there are deliberately set up so that when you walk on them, the nails rub against them, causing a tuned squeaking noise.

THat way if a ninja tries to sneak up on you, you can not only hear that they’re there, but even where they are. It was

kinda fun to walk around squeaking wherever I went. The door screens were quite impressive too. I found the rest of the

castle pretty interesting, though admittedly not overwhelmingly so.

We headed off to Arashiyama, on the west of Kyoto. This was literally the outskirts of Kyoto – not two hundred metres away,

the houses stopped and the mountains started. It was our only stop outside The Zone for our tickets, but the driver just

waved us off the bus without taking any money. The scenery here was spectacular. The bus stopped right on a river bank,

with the famous Togetsu-kyo bridge visible. There were people fishing in the river, and a little dam not too far upstream

with a little canal to divert water for a little hydroelectric generator. I just wanted to stand and take photos all day,

but we had places to be. First, we had lunch: udon (soba noodles in soup). James had oyako udon (chicken and egg) and I had

niku udon (beef). I was pondering oyako don (chicken and egg on rice), but I’ve already had katsudon, and James was having

oyako udon, so I decided on the beef. It was tasty.

Then we headed to Tenryuu-ji temple, mostly because it was on the way to the Arashiyama Bamboo Forest, which was the main

reason I’d wanted to come out here today. It was quite nice and serene. It’s apparently one of the main temples of the

Rinzai school of Zen – the garden there dates from the fourteenth century. The temple’s name, Tenryuu, means “heaven

dragon” – in case you were wondering. We decided to also see the temple itself – it costs five hundred yen to enter just

the garden, and six hundred to enter both the temple and the garden. Both are visible from each other, since one surrounds

the other, but entering the temple lets you have a much closer look at the buildings. We had to take our shoes off for the

temple – and as I put mine down, a huge cloud of dust blew out, reminding me why we take our shoes off to go inside – and

put on some too-small slippers. It was pretty nice, and once done inside we got to put our shoes back on and have a closer

look at the garden.

We left through the northern exit, into the bamboo forest. It was just as lovely there as I’d hoped, though the rapidly

darkening clouds and overhanging bamboo made it quite hard to take nice photos. I decided to just put the camera away and

enjoy it. It was a little shorter than I’d hoped, so we wandered back to the bus stop to move on to our next location. We

had a bit of a wander heading back, though, and I seriously loved all the little streets we walked down. There was bamboo

growing everywhere, and little canals, and quiet little corners and bends and curves and hills. I could easily spend more

time there.

We headed off to our next location, Kinkaku-ji temple. We’d need two buses to get there – one which terminated right on the

edge of The Zone, and one which’d take us right to the temple. The termination was at a driver rest-stop area, and the

driver on the first bus seemed impatent to get us off the bus, but not without taking money from us. We hopped onto the

next bus without trouble, and got to Kinkaku-ji.

The real name of the temple is Rokuon-ji. It gets its colloquial name from the golden building that stands at its centre –

Kinkaku means “Golden Pavilion”. The building is entirely covered in gold leaf – according to the guidebook, it’d glow even

in clouds. It was cloudy when we were there, and it really was glowing. I was quite impressed with the effect. On the

downside, it started to drizzle while we were there, and turned into a full-on shower as we were almost leaving, only to

suddenly clear up right as we left, turning the already unpleasently humid day into an absolute swamp.

I mostly wanted to visit Kinkaku-ji (incidentally, completely unrelated to Ginkaku-ji, “Silver Pavilion”, in Kyoto’s east)

because I’d seen it in an episode of anime. The characters in that episode also visited a nearby Shinto shrine, Kitano

Tenman-gu, only a couple of blocks’ walk away, so we decided we would head there. Unfortunately, it was 5:30 by the time we

arrived, so the main shrine was closing up. We did wander around the grounds a bit, though. We rubbed the nose of the cow

statues, which is apparently supposed to make you smarter… couldn’t help but notice it was rubbed quite smooth already.

One interesting thing I learnt was that whenever there’s two lion-dog statues flanking a gate or tori or similar, one of

them always has its mouth open, while the other always has its mouth closed. This is because one is going “ah” and the

other is going “um”. I have no idea why this should be the case, but I had a chance to check it out at the places we

visited today, and it was seriously always true.

With the sun setting and the time heading towards six, we decided to head home – via Kyoto station so we could buy another

day pass for tomorrow. We’re only planning on three bus rides tomorrow, but since three rides cost 660 yen, and the pass

costs 500, we’re already saving money. Dinner was largely the same as last night’s, with a few variations. Still the same

unpalatable soup, though. James liked it.

Tomorrow we’re going to visit Kiyomizu-dera Temple, which is supposed to have spectacular views of Kyoto, and Fushimi Inari

Shrine, the head shrine of all Japan’s thirty thousand Inari shrines, with long paths of red tori gates. Both are on

Kyoto’s south-eastern side. Then we’re heading off back to Tokyo on the shinkansen in the afternoon. This still leaves two

quarters of Kyoto completely unvisited, and the other two only barely visited – plenty more to do next time, then?

Today’s photo count: three hundred and five.

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Day 13 – Central Kyoto

Today we were able to spend the whole day in one city for a change, no trains at all today just buses.

We started the day with a traditional Japanese breakfast. This included cold tofu with topping, some miso soup and an egg with some Salmon and of course a bowl of rice. I thought it was quite nice, but I think we are rapidly approaching Joel’s seafood tolerance levels.

After breakfast we began our bus adventure. After walking several blocks we arrived where we thought the interchange was on the map, but it was along the street of a major shopping road. We had planned to purchase a 500¥ all day bus pass at the bus interchange, that gives unlimited bus travel within the ‘zone’, but after wondering around for a while were unable to find where to purchase one. In the end we had to move a block and catch a bus to Kyoto station, where we were finally able to purchase the ticket.

DSC08452After a short ride we got off at Kyoto castle. This castle was a more natural arrangement  were you take off your shoes off and wander inside and see rooms closer to their original design. There were some beautiful screen paintings inside, some were undergoing refurbishments and some had obviously already been repaired. As per usual no photography or sketching was allowed.

Kyoto Castle PondDSC08475Unfortunately the main building, which was actually moved in 1890 from the imperial palace at Katsura after the previous one burnt down, was closed to the public. It is only open to the public on certain celebration days. The surrounding garden and ponds were open and were well maintained in the inner keep. The trees were all sculpted and had nice thick moss growing in circles underneath them, with grass between the trees. In the pond we saw our first heron (?) of the day, although it was so still we originally thought it was a statue.

After exploring the castle for a while we caught another bus to Arashiyama to see the Tenryuu-ji temple and the Bamboo forest behind it. On the bus after starting with a fairly empty bus it rapidly filled with elderly citizens. At one stage we commented we were easily the youngest people on the bus, with it appearing the average age was 70 – 80. Although a few got off along the way, most got off the stop before us (which we probably should have got off as well) at Arashiyama Tenryuuji-mae.

DragonFlyGetting off at the terminus we tried to cut through a coach parking lot that had only one exit, so ended up having to return to entrance. Joel then saw the Tōgetsu-kyō Bridge that he had previously seen in an Anime and grabbed some pics. I walked onto the bridge and noticed a dragonfly had landed on the handrail so I got some good pictures of it.

Wandering down the main street we grabbed some lunch at a Soba noodle restaurant. I had egg and chicken (Oyako Udon) and Joel had Beef (Niku Udon) soba noodles.

Group in Yukatas

Group in Yukatas

We walked up the street to Tenryuu-ji temple, on the way I saw a group all dressed up in Yukatas, and asked them to pose for a picture. At the temple we paid 600¥ to get admission to both the temple and the garden (garden is 500¥ on its own). This temple didn’t have any warnings about taking photos so we were able to grab some, although it didn’t have many elaborate screens like the castle did. The path through the temple gave a higher view of the garden pond and also followed a stream between buildings.

The one downside is we had to take off our shows and wear slippers. This itself not so much a problem, although Joel finds it funny that he can take off his slip-on shoes really quickly while I always need to sit down to untie and then later retie my laces. The problem is the slippers provided are always too small for our feet, and we seem to be stepping on the back edge, while at the same time they are falling off. I worry way too much about tripping over them when going up stairs, or accidently kicking one into the bushes surrounding the path. It is much easier to just walk in socks, but then they get dirty and you stand out as everyone else is wearing the slippers.

Tenryuu-gi ScreensTenryuu-gi PondAt the end of the path is a nice temple with some screens and statues that I created a panorama of. After leaving the temple we wondered through the garden. There is a beautiful pond at the start and lovely garden beds with ancient trees and moss growing everywhere. We actually saw some gardeners apparently hand trimming the moss in one of the gardens.

At the North end of the garden we exited into the Bamboo forest. This was a road passing through towering grey bamboo stalks; it is very peaceful and quite interesting in appearance. The only problem was that it was much shorter than expected; we followed the road out, went around one bend and were at the end.

DSC08542Leaving out the side we walked down the road a fair way to reach our next bus stop to take us to Kinkakuji Temple. This temple is known for its brilliant golden temple that sits on a lake, it is supposed to practically glow in any weather. We put this to the test as it was very overcast when we arrived at entrance and it started raining when we reached the first viewing area. The temple did still seem amazingly bright, even though the sky was covered in dark clouds, and rain was splashing the lake. The golden building is the main draw card but the grounds were quite nice, even if we did leap frog between dry areas.

DSC08587When we left the temple the rain had cleared, but left us with even higher humidity to walk through on our way to Kitano Tenman-gu Shrine. By the time we arrived all the stores and temples were closed, but we could wander the grounds to take some pictures and rub the noses of the cow statues. I also found an interesting sight that someone had tied a Winnie the Pooh bib to one of the cows.

When we finished, rather than head directly back to Ryokan we dropped by the station to purchase an All-Day bus ticket for tomorrow. We even found a vending machine selling them, so did not need to go to the ticket office this time.

For dinner tonight we had another Japanese banquet, very similar to the one on the first night with just a few minor changes. We had some seaweed type dish in a bowl, which looked like the hair ball you pull from the shower drain, but it looked quite nice. The main was again sashimi of seafood and tempura prawns, although the meat in the sashimi looked a bit different. The soup was the same mushroom and mysterious roll as yesterday, which Joel still refuses to try because he dislikes its smell. The seafood and mushroom custard was also identical with its same odd taste and texture.

Overall we had a good day, we saw 4 different major attractions and managed to avoid getting very wet when it rained. Tomorrow we leave early to store our luggage at Kyoto station before catching the bus to South-East Kyoto for some more shrines and temples.

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Day 12 – Miyajima Tracks

Just a brief post as I missed today’s blog

Our Room

Our room at the Ryokan

Garden seen from our Room

Garden seen from our Room

View of our room from Garden

View of our room from Garden

Please check the Album for photos, and here is the GPS track for today.

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Day 12 – Turning Back

Happy first day of Spring to those back home. I haven’t been able to determine exactly when Autumn starts here – I’ve seen dates ranging from mid-August to sometime in September to the Autumnal Equinox specifically.

I was originally planning to open this post with “Our schedule on this trip is really jam-packed – which is ironic, considering it’s impossible to get jam here for love or money. Not that we’ve tried love. Or, for that matter, money.” Then they served us jam at the Western-style breakfast we were served this morning. It’s almost interesting how many products we can get that are the same over here, even ignoring those products that originated from here, like Toyota, or Sony, or Pokemon. MacDonalds is common, of course. Starbucks and KFC less so. It’s rare to see a drink vending machine without a coke or pepsi product, though they still manage to have things we don’t get in Australia, like grape fanta, or a bottle of coke with a gold label reading “sugar ZERO FREE caffeine” which most likely combines the worst features of both coke zero and caffeine-free coke. I also bought a packet of little mini oreos, and we even saw a packet of Tim Tams in the hundred-yen store in Machida – not sure why we didn’t buy it. Then there’s products that are very nearly familiar brand names… like Rexena-brand deoderant.

Anyway, I’ve called this post “Turning Back” for two reasons. Firstly, we’ve gone from Hiroshima, a city almost completely lacking in material history remaining older than 1945 to Kyoto, a city that was the capital of Japan for over a thousand years, from 794 to 1868. Secondly, for the first time this trip, we’ve turned around, and are now heading back towards Tokyo, and towards Narita where we’ll be catching our plane back home.

But that comes later. First, we woke up this morning for our Western-style breakfast. There were a surprising amount of Westerners staying in the same hotel as us – for that matter, I think Miyajima has the greatest concentration of Westerners I’ve seen since arriving in Japan. The guests in the rooms on both sides were Westerners, and certainly some more down the hall. The thing is, sitting down to eat a Western-style breakfast in a room full of Westerners made me feel a little… insular. I asked for the Western-style breakfast because I was tiring a bit of the Japanese style breakfast, but it made me feel a little like a “hey, I’m a tourist but I want all the comforts of home” sort of person. It was tasty, though – bacon and eggs (like I suspected it would be) on the little mini nabe burner we’d seen last night, three bread rolls, jam and margarine, orange juice, a sliced-up half-orange and a small bowl of yoghurt. James took photos – expect to see them soon.

We only had about three and a half hours to enjoy Miyajima before we had to get on a train to get to Kyoto in time for check-in. After breakfast, we hastily packed, checked out, and left our luggage with the front desk so we could climb Mount Misen. At 535 metres above sea level, it’s the tallest point on Miyajima, and you get a seriously panoramic view of Hiroshima and the Seto inland sea from the top. There’s a cable-car running to a smaller peak at 430 metres. Well, I say “cable car” but it’s actually two – a circulating-type cable car going most of the way up, then a back-and-forth gondola going the rest of the way. Thing is, the bottom cable car is quite a way from the actual town, and today was really hot and humid. We decided to take the scenic route there (the map called it a “nature walk”, but “nature road” might have been a better name) – it really was scenic, but we were absolutely dripping with sweat by the end.

We caught the cable cars with our two-day Hiroden passes, and were quite impressed by the view, both from the cars and from the station at the top (it’s called Shishiiwa, Lion Rock). We also saw some monkeys at the top, hanging around the side of the path, and sitting in the shade. A couple of deer here and there as well. We decided to walk to the shrine on the mountain, but decided it’d be too hot to walk all the way to the top. We were getting pretty damp by the time we reached the shrine (it’s seven minutes downhill from the cable-car station, then thirteen minutes back up). At that point, we realised we were most of the way to the summit anyway (only ten minutes climbing to go) so we climbed it. There’s an observation post at the top, and the view from there was seriously spectacular. We took photos to assemble into a panorama, at which point we realised it was twelve o’clock already, giving us just an hour to get back to the cable-car station, ride down the mountain, walk back to our hotel, pick up our luggage, get on the ferry back to the mainland, and get into the train station.

We managed it with a few minutes to spare. It took us about half an hour to get back down to Miyajima town – amusingly, the number of tourists (mostly Westerners) had increased, but the number of monkeys visible had decreased. I love walking through the town – it’s got roads and pathways and little side alleyways going everywhere. I really wish I could spend more time there – maybe next time. And when it’s cooler. The hotel gave us a lift to the ferry terminal in the courtesy car, and we managed to hop straight onto a ferry. From the mainland ferry terminal, it wasn’t too far to the train station, and our JR passes let us enter without any fussing with tickets.

Once back at Hiroshima station, we booked our shinkansen tickets to Kyoto – though we’d have to change at Shin-Osaka. We were in the “Silent Car” (presumably because that’s all the seats that were left) – train announcements are muted, and talking is asked to be kept to a minimum. Tell that to the two Americans a few rows back with the huge bag of Maccas, who talked quite loudly. In fact, much of the carriage were foreigners, though the rest were silent. We also grabbed some little things for lunch – it was going to be three hours to Kyoto, but we expected dinner to be early and large. James got a sushi-and-inarizushi and I grabbed a pair of sandwiches. Not sure what was on them – some sort of battered meat. We both also got a sweet pastry thing from a Japanese bakery, something like a straightened-out donut. Sort of.

Three hours later, we were in Kyoto. We needed to take a private subway line to the hotel, but that went off without a hitch – the procedure was pretty much identical to that in Osaka. Then we had a bit of a walk to our hotel. It was still just as hot and muggy as it had been in Hiroshima, and we were walking down a narrow but busy street. As in, walking down this carefully-painted line while cars went rushing past not a metre away. We reached our ryokan safely, though. It’s quite nice here – it’s not palatial like the one in Miyajima, but it’s quite homey. There’s a little Japanese garden in a central courtyard. And air conditioning. Actually, our room may be slightly larger here – there’s a separate area for futons (and I really should be adding in-line photos to demonstrate this. Maybe later). Shared bathrooms, though. Can’t seem to find the big bath promised on the website – just a normal-size one-person bath – but maybe we’re misunderstanding the website. We do, however, have wireless, which is the first time so far this trip.

Dinner was just as extensive as it was at Miyajima, though of course we were served different foods. Tempura, for example. Slightly different sashimi. A bowl of some sort of soup, which for some reason I found the smell incredibly off-putting. I’m not really sure why. Some things were the same, such as a cup of what appeared to be bits of seafood baked in custard.

Anyway, James and I are trying to make plans for the next day-and-a-half in Kyoto. There’s temples spread literally all over the place. There’s also Nijo Castle, which may possibly be undergoing rennovations, same as Himeji was – we’ll see. At the moment, we’re planning on an early night. I feel like I need one.

Today’s photo count: two hundred and seventy-six. Falling way behind on uploading some, though.

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