Day 11 – From the Dome of Destruction to the Gate of Enlightenment

Turns out we do have internet here, but only in the Internet Corner down in the lobby… which (according to the sign) has the English catch phrase “Let’s hold hands, if that all right with you”.

To help me communicate here, I have a Japanese phrasebook I bought from a second-hand bookshop for $3.30, which is pretty nice. It’s about ten years old, but I figure that the Japanese language hasn’t changed too much since then, though I did suddenly realise it’s missing words like “internet” and “mobile phone”. I also have a bit of a grasp of Japanese that I learnt from anime, and my Lonely Planet guidebook has a few phrases too. James, however, has no head for languanges whatsoever – you should hear him try to pronounce “Matsumoto” even after I’ve said it slowly for him. Instead he communicates with a sort of cross between charades and interpretive dance. Somehow between the two of us we manage to get by – I’m better at communicating information, and if that doesn’t work, James can step in. On the other hand, James is better at receiving information – he’s better at deciphering inquisitive glances from people, and can usually understand the heavily-accented English replies we occasionally get better than I can, and if that doesn’t work, then I can still step in. Still, I was amused when we were ordering dinner at the kombini last night to see James go through the whole interpretive dance routine, then I stepped up and just said “nikuman ando chiisu-chikan, onegaishimasu” (“meat bun and cheese chicken, please”… “cheese chicken” was a product name, honest) and got my food much faster. I would have helped James, honest, but I was off in the shelves, and he was already in the middle by the time I came back.

In any case, today we visited the Hiroshima Peace Museum Park, including the Peace Museum. To get there, we needed to catch a tram. Hiroshima’s primary public transport system is the trams. There is a bus network, but it doesn’t seem to be that well-used, and there only seems to be one subway line, running from the centre of the tram network to the northern suburbs of Hiroshima. There’s also a couple of JR surface lines too, but they mostly go around the edges. In any case, the trams – or street cars, as they’re called there – have been running since the 1910s, with only a brief interruption of a few months after the wide-scale devastation of the city in 1945. They’ve been buying trams from other cities as those other cities retired their own tram networks, so what they have now is quite an eclectic bunch. Apparently there’s still two surviving trams from before WWII. The tram network is colloquially called Hiroden (from Hiroshima Dentetsu Kabushiki-gaisha, or Hiroshima Electric Railway Company Limited).

We discovered last night it’s possible to buy a two-day pass that covers all tram travel in the city, plus the ferry to and from Miyajima, plus the Mount Misen cable car on Miyajima, for just two thousand yen. Since the cable car on its own costs eighteen hundred for a return trip, and the ferry would be another three hundred and fourty return, it’s already a deal even if we don’t take the trams anywhere. Trouble is, though a tram stop was just a block down from the hotel we were in, we’d have to go all the way back to the tram terminal at Hiroshima station to buy the pass. According to the Hiroden website, our own hotel could sell us both of the one-day passes (which, depending on the pass, don’t cover the cable car or the ferry), but not the two-day pass. (If you’re interested and not planning to visit Miyajima, all tram routes are 150 yen regardless of how far you’re going, except for one of the shorter routes which is only 100 yen.)

Pass bought, we hopped onto the tram that was waiting, and headed off to the Peace Park. As well as remembering the atom bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima, a large part of the park is there to campaign for complete worldwide nuclear disarmament – hence the name “Peace Park”. There were two ladies on the front entrance with a petition to sign (and a card with an English explanation on it). We signed the petition (Australia is a nuclear-weapon-free zone, after all – along with the vast majority of the Southern Hemisphere) and headed in.

While viewing the A-Bomb Dome, a bumped into a huge group of (I think) middle school students on some sort of school excursion. As a side note, Japanese schools run in three levels – elementary school (years K-5), middle school (6-9) and high school (10-12). Some of them said “hello” to us – I’ve noticed school students often do this when they see us. We wandered around a bit more looking at some of the monuments, then we ran into them again at the Children’s Monument. This is a monument dedicated to the children who died as a result of the bomb. It’s surrounded by huge display cases full of paper cranes made by children from all over the world. This group we saw were making a presentation of some more – one of the cases was open to them. They had a photo taken with them holding the strings of cranes, then they all sang a song together. One of those commemmorative or anthem-type songs – we didn’t really hang around to listen.

We headed into the Peace Museum itself. Everything else in the park is free, this costs a token fifty yen to enter. The first few rooms were all about the history of Japan leading up to the Second World War, and the events leading up to the actual dropping of the first atomic bomb, on August 6th, 1945. The next floor had a reconstruction timeline for the city, and the next was all about why all nations of the world should destroy their stockpiles of atomic weapons. These rooms were easy enough to get through, and quite interesting and informative – though the music on the three-minute introductory video at the door could be heard throughout that whole part of the building, and it got a little tiring after a while.

The next room, however, was a struggle. This is the room that’d have displays of mementos from victims. Things like a scrap of cloth, singed at the edges, and a card saying “this school uniform belonged to Miyoko, age thirteen. She was on her way to work at a demolition site and was caught in the bomb blast, 1.5 km from the hypocenter. This is all her mother could find of her.” Or a baby-carrying cloth with a card saying “Hanako was carrying her baby Yoshihiko while helping the abled-bodied people at a demolition site. She knelt behind a stone wall to put her baby down, and when she came to her senses again, everyone around her was dead.” Or some melted marbles. Or a lunchbox, the un-eaten lunch burnt to a crisp and still inside. Some blistered roof tiles, a stack of rice bowls fused together – at one place, they’d even moved and reconstructed a section of the local bank’s front steps, showing the shadow of someone sitting waiting for the doors to open, burnt into the steps.

That room was a struggle.

Downstairs had a display of art drawn by survivors, including a whole room of drawings about people wanting water. Drawings by people who went looking for a well, and found it full of people who had crawled in desperate for a drink, and died of their injuries. Those tho had felt guilty for refusing someone water, because a doctor had told them to save it for those with less severe injuries. They were also showing When the Wind Blows, the movie based on the book of the same name by Raymond Briggs, while I rather liked.

After this, we decided to dispense with our plan to visit Hiroshima Castle – reading about it on Wikipedia made us fear it’d be another Osaka Castle, and we were running out of time anyway – and head to Miyajima early, after lunch. I wanted to try okonomiyaki, since Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki is one of the local specialities (and we didn’t get a chance to try it on Osaka, where it’s also a speciality). To my joy, there was a sign for a place right on the wall immediately after we exited the park. Unfortunately, when we reached the place advertised, we discovered it was closed today. And only today.

We headed into the nearby shopping arcade to see if we could find another. We’d also intended to visit the hypocentre, apparently a block from the park, but I didn’t see it where I expected to see it, and then I forgot about it when we walked away. It was quite some shopping arcade – we eventually asked a policeman directing traffic if he knew where we could get some okonomiyaki, and he directed us to a place. It was really tasty – we got one to share, and that was quite enough. Fortunately they had an English menu, so we knew what we were ordering.

We caught a tram back to the hotel to pick up our luggage, then walked back to Hiroshima station (again) for the train to the Miyajima ferry terminal. Miyajima is actually called Itsukushima – Miyajima is just a colloquial name (meaning Shrine Island). Its most famous feature is the Isukishima shrine, and the attached “floating” torii gate. It’s regarded as a sacred island in Shingon Buddhism (yes, the same branch that has its home in Koya-san) and Isukushima shrine is right on the waterfront, raised up on stilts, so that the common pilgrims can visit the island without defiling it by actually setting foot on the island itself. Like Nara-koen, there’s deer wandering freely all over the island, though these ones are apparently a bit tamer. There’s a general ban on public feeding of deer, though, so sometimes they get a bit desperate. There’s apparently monkeys up on Mount Misen too.

We just missed the private ferry for which we had the two-day pass – but the JR ferry right next door was leaving in ten minutes, and they accepted our JR passes, so we caught that. It swings wide on the approach so that people can get a good look at the floating torii. I took some photos. Once on the dock, we headed straight to the hotel to dump our bags and have a good sit-down. As I’ve said before, we’re staying in the Miyajima Hotel Makoto, which is a ryokan. The building is seriously impressive – the lobby is palatial, and everything is both luxurious and traditional at the same time. Except the size of it – we’re on the fifth floor. Took a lift to get up here. Also, it’s air-conditioned.

Once settled in, we went to visit the shrine before it closed, and to have a wander around town. I’m seriously loving this town – the majority of my photos today were taken here. There’s paths and stairs leading all over the place, up into the hills, down into the houses. The main shopping street is shaded by sailcloth. At one point, it has the world’s largest rice scoop (rice scoops are apparently a speciality here… along with momiji manju, little leaf-shaped cakes filled with sweet bean paste).

At high tide, the Itsukushima shrine is over water. Unfortunately, we visited the shrine just a couple of hours short of low tide, so the ground underneath was dry – didn’t look quite so impressive like that, but it still looked pretty good. We had a look through it, then headed up into the hills to get the long way back to the hotel.

There’s a sort of long hill running through the middle of the town – we walked through a tunnel under it to get to our hotel, and just before sunset we climbed to the top of it to get a photo of the hotel, and the view was quite amazing. This is the sort of town I was hoping to see when I came here. It’s a shame we’re only staying here one night – we’re off to Kyoto at lunchtime tomorrow (in order to get there in time for dinner). The morning will be spent catching the cable car up Mount Misen here. And finding the cable car station.

We also had our first bath in the big indoor bath here, then put on the yukata provided afterwards – though the bath itself wasn’t as hot as I expected. We’re going back for a good soak-and-relax as soon as we’ve done posting. We also had dinner here. It was huge… and mostly seafood. I decided to draw the line at some things, but I ate most of it, and was extremely full at the end. Good thing we shared that okonomiyaki at lunch instead of a whole one each. They gave us the option of Japanese-style or Western-style breakfast – I admit I’m getting a bit tired of Japanese-style breakfasts, so I chose the Western-style. It’ll probably be things like bacon and eggs, but we’ll find that out tomorrow.

Today’s photo count: three hundred and forty-four.

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Day 11 – Hiroshima and Miyajima

We started the day at the Hiroshima Toyoko Inn and after checking out and leaving our bags at reception we walked to the train station to buy a special Hiroshima / Miyajima 2 day pass. This cost 2000¥ and covers tram rides around Hiroshima, Miyajima ferry and cable car for 2 days.

We caught the tram at the station and noticed there were several other westerners on it as well. We assumed they were also going to the Peace memorial too, so we decided to follow them. It turns out we didn’t need to worry as the tram had a pre-recorded announcement in English for the Peace park stop.

As we arrived at the park the first thing you see is the atom bomb dome. This used to be one of the main buildings used by government and industry in the city. The Hiroshima explosion was an aerial blast around 600m above the city and the dome was very close to the hypocentre of the explosion. Because it was nearly directly underneath the blast  the shockwave destroyed all the horizontal surfaces such as the roof, but left all the vertical walls still standing. Everyone inside the building was killed instantly by the intense heat from the explosion.

This still standing building has become a symbol of the explosion and the destructive force of the nuclear bomb. As we walked towards the peace museum there was a arch constructed which lines up with the dome and an eternally lit flame.

Children's' Memorial

Children's' Memorial

One of the monuments is dedicated to the children and students who died during or as a result of the explosion. School groups that visit the area usually stop here and leave a chain of origami cranes.  As we approached it we were overtaken by a school group of middle-schoolers and got to see them all in front of the statue, presenting their paper cranes. The monument was created following a 12yo girl who died many years after the explosion due to leukaemia. She believed that folding 1000 cranes would grant her a wish that she may live. After her death her classmates petitioned and fundraised to build the children’s monument.

Inside the museum we found a coin locker for our backpacks and started looking through the museum. The first room is about the history of Hiroshima, mentioning the castle, and strong industry. It then discusses its gradually increasing military role for training, command and manufacture.

Before Bomb

Before Bomb

After Bomb

After Bomb

The next room focuses on the day of the explosion; it has 2 big dioramas showing before and after views of Hiroshima, and videos playing showing the view from Hiroshima and from the US air force.

We then go upstairs and it talks about rebuilding after the explosion and a few artefacts that were affected by the blast. After rebuilding there is a display discussing nuclear weapon development, nuclear testing by different countries and Hiroshima’s efforts to promote test ban treaties and nuclear non-proliferation pacts.

The next wing is much more powerful and focuses on the personal stories of those affected by the blast, mainly families where children or parents died. One interesting thing we found out was all the high school students had been conscripted to the “volunteer corps” and were demolishing buildings to create fire breaks for the expected US bombing. This meant many of the victims of the bombing were 12-16 year old students who were on the street at the time of the blast. Many of the items on display here were things the students had with them, such as uniforms, sandals and notes. This area was very emotionally powerful and I think everyone going though was saddened and moved by it.

The next area was on the effects of the bomb, and discussed the different levels of radiation exposure, the radioactive black rain that followed the explosion and long term effects such as different cancers and cataracts.

Artefacts 1

Artefacts 1

Artefacts 2

Artefacts 2

There was an interesting exhibit of items affected by the blast, roof tiles that had bubbled, glass ink jars and coins that had melted together, statues that were blackened on one side and concrete walls that had been perforated by flying glass. Overall different items trying to show the shear heat and force that the explosion produced.

After the main exhibits we moved into the basement for 2 exhibition galleries, one was drawings by people who survived that blast and remembered certain things from the day. The collection was primarily about people wanting water, and finding dead bodies in the wells and troughs, and being told not to give water to victims as it would kill them, and then regretting not giving them any when they still died.

The second area was about the volunteer corps and what it did, as we were running short on time we only skimmed this area.

After leaving the museum we were off to try to find Joel’s must have food for Hiroshima, Okonomi-yaki. Luckily as we were leaving the peace park we saw a big sign saying “Hiroshima style Okonomi-yaki” and it was just around the corner. Unfortunately it was closed and had a sign up saying it was open every day of the month except today and yesterday.

This led us on a long walk down the shopping avenue to try to find somewhere selling it. After a fruitless search and walking half way back to the hotel we asked a policeman were we could get some. He pointed us in a vague go forward then right gesture which we followed. After a bit more searching in that area we finally found a place selling it. We decided to order the special one that had most of the toppings and would share it between the two of us. This turned out to be a very wise decision as we could each barely finish our half.

After finishing lunch we caught a train back to the hotel, picked up our luggage and lugged it over to the JR station to catch a local train to Miyjimaguchi. The train arrived quickly and apart from usual problems with photos on trains we had a nice journey.

Arriving at Miyjimaguchi we just missed the ferry our 2 day pass covered us for. It turns out JR also run a ferry service that we can catch for free with our Rail passes. This was due next so rather than use our 2 day pass we just used our JR ones to get to Miyajima sooner.

Tori Gate

Tori Gate

As the ferry approaches the island it deliberately goes wide to give a better view of the Itsukushima Tori gate. This is a massive Tori gate standing in the water with a top 27M long, 17M tall and the supports have a 10M circumference.

Deer 1

Deer

Arriving at the wharf the first thing I noticed was there were more Deer on the island. We could see them lounging around and chasing after any tourist that think may have food. Also we see tourists stopping to take pictures of any deer they think look cute or photogenic.

Name BoardWe had a brief uphill walk to our hotel and what a difference. Previously we have been staying in budget business hostels. This is our first upmarket Ryokan and the difference is amazing. While waiting at reception we had cold towels and iced tea. They had my name already on the list of guests outside the hotel. A person from reception personally showed us to our room. We have yukata robes that actually fit. The room provides tea bags not just a kettle. The bathroom has a double sink, separate toilet and shower rooms and bottles of After shave and mysterious “Hair Tonic” and “Hair Liquid – For professionals”.

Miyajima Room

Our Room

Our room has a great view over the island, we are on the 5th floor and can see over the neighbouring buildings right across the bay and can see the lit up Tori gate. Only thing lacking is there is no internet access in the rooms, so I will try to post this using the shared PC later tonight.

After dropping of our bags it was only 4:30pm so we decided to explore the area for a bit as we had arranged for dinner at 7:30pm. We walked over to the Itsukushima Shrine and wondered though it. It was low tide so we didn’t get to see the great effect of the building appearing to float on the water that you get at high tide. We then wondered up to some of the hill paths to try to get a good view of the area and the hotel. The view from along the paths was amazing, but due to the low sun most of the photos we took ended up being badly exposed, with too much light behind the subject, or too many shadows on it. I haven’t had a chance to review the photos yet, so I will just have to wait and see.

After returning from our walk we decided to try out the public bath. This was a first for either of us and we were a bit unsure what to do. Luckily there was a step by step guide in the change room, you undress there and place you clothes in the basket, you then rinse yourself using the bucket and shower, soak in the bath, get out and wash yourself again then go back in and soak for longer. Unfortunately there were no instructions on what to do with your towel.  Do you take it in with you or leave it in your basket? We left ours in the basket after seeing there was no real place to put it in the bath room. We washed and rinsed then had a nice and relaxing bath, before rushing out paranoid we were going to be late for dinner.

For dinner tonight we had a full Japanese Ryokan banquet. As we are in a sea port the majority of it was seafood of some description. It tasted amazing and had a huge variety of textures and flavours. It also had some sort of alcohol with it, not sure if it was sake or liquor, but it was the first drink I’ve had that I actually enjoyed.

We began with a number of things in front of us and had no idea what to eat / drink first so we just randomly picked things and started eating. After a few minutes the attendant came in to ask for drinks and light the burners under our fish and noodle dish. She came back again a little while later with some more dishes and to add the egg to the cooking dish.

I managed to eat pretty much everything I was given, but was so full at the end I didn’t touch my rice. Joel skipped several things (eel, dried prawns, cucumber, some unknown things) but did have some rice. Some course items were new to me, I had my first whole dried prawn (has head and shell) which was crunchy but tasty, some weird jelly that I couldn’t place the flavour of, a custard dish with pieces of fish and scallop in it. There were lots of sashimi (raw fish) dishes that were very nice.

For desert we had a very light peach custard that tasted wonderful.

After dinner we had another nice, relaxing soak in the bath to end the day.

20100831-Hiroshima [ngg_gallery=12]

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Day 10 – Himeji

Thanks to the English newspapers that are offered at breakfast – and the Yahoo Mail news, to a lesser extent – we’re somewhat keeping up-to-date with election news back home. It’s starting to disappear from the newspapers, though – we’re getting a bit old hat, I expect. It’s kind of interesting how much information we do get from the papers here – they’re still Japanese-published papers, they’re just in English. We can even get the Sydney weather report.

Today we checked our of our hotel in Osaka and caught a shinkansen towards Hiroshima, stopping in Himeji to visit the castle there. Himeji Castle is supposed to be one of the best in Japan, and it isn’t too far from the Himeji shinkansen station. Since our rail passes give us free travel on JR trains, it didn’t cost us anything to stop short. Mind you, I’m reasonably sure that even normal shinkansen tickets let you stop en route as well, so long as you finish your journey by a certain number of days, depending on the length of the journey.

Himeji Castle is basically straight up the main street from the station. Worryingly, as we drew nearer, we could see scaffolding over much of the main keep – it looked as though it was undergoing restoration. We weren’t overly concerned as Matsumoto Castle was also undergoing restoration, but we could still go in just fine. When we got to the front entrance, though, we discovered that entry to the main keep would be impossible. The whole castle was undergoing a five-year restoration project which had last been done in 1964. At this point in the timetable, we could go basically everywhere except for the main keep. I was somewhat disappointed by this, but we decided to head in to enjoy the rest of it.

Shortly inside the main gate, we discovered they offer free tours in English. We latched ourselves onto a group with two girls from America – one from Boston and one from Philadelphia – and a guide. This was probably a good idea – he showed us a bunch of areas we might otherwise not have thought to visit. The first thing he showed us was a three-hundred-metre long corridor we could enter that ran along the top of the wall of the inner bailey. Apparently it was the women’s quarters, and it was quite impressive to see. Like Matsumoto Castle, we had to take our shoes off to enter. And like every other time James had to sit down to do something, he forgot to close the valve on his Camel pack, and it leaked all over the floor. Tsk.

The tour guide showed us as much of the castle as he could. I was quite amazed by the level of defenses – to reach the main keep, invading soldiers had to breach something like nine gates, each protected by walls of arrow-slits, and passive defences like slippery slopes, and long stairs with each step different lengths and heights to make it impossible to run or march up. That said, it was apparently never put to the test – the castle was never attacked. We finished the tour, and he gave us copies of his script for the main keep and his card, so that we can find him again when we come back in five years, after the restoration is complete. We waved bye to the two American girls (though bumped into them again a few times in town), and headed back towards the station for lunch.

Lunch was at a place off a big shopping arcade about halfway back to the station. James had a katsudon set, and I had a tempura-don set. (“Set” in this case meaning it came with udon noodles and tea.) Katsudon is battered pork on rice, tempura-don is battered and deep-fried prawns and vegetables, again on rice. James forgot to close his valve again, and his Camel pack dribbled on the floor. Heading on to the station again, we spotted a shop selling taiyaki, which is sweet red-bean paste in a pastry fish-shaped casing. I’d been wanting to try it, but just like when I saw it at the Osaka Aquarium the other day, I’d had lunch not too long ago, and so wasn’t hungry. Resolving not to miss it again, I decided to buy some when we were there and eat it later. James got some too.

Arriving back at Himeji Station, we had a brief moment of worry when we realised we couldn’t recall exactly where the lockers were that we’d left our luggage. You know how you learn all sorts of things about people by being in close contact with them for a week? I’ve learnt that James has basically no sense of direction. He’s the sort who turns his maps to point in the direction he’s facing – he almost had us going south rather than north to Matsumoto Castle the other day because he had the map upside-down. In this situation, he was convinced the lockers had to be outside of the station. I was somewhat less sure of this, because we simply hadn’t gone to any of the “outside the station” bits save directly towards the castle – I thought we should simply retrace our steps back to the shinkansen platforms, as the lockers were unquestionably on the route we’d taken to get out of the station. Guess who found the lockers on the second floor, inside the station but outside the shinkansen section…

Crisis resolved, we booked onto the next leg of our trip to Hiroshima – the bit that actually went to Hiroshima. We got a type of shinkansen called a Hikari RailStar – it mainly just seems to be a half-length train (eight instead of sixteen carriages) with slightly fancier carriages (with four seats across a row rather than five) than the normal Hikari. Trouble is, we were in the car adjacent to the smoking car, and a strong smoke smell was wafting over, which got a bit tiring over the hour-long trip. We ate our taiyaki on the train (it was tasty, but is most certainly better while hot) then started dozing off until we reached Hiroshima. We checked into our hotel – it’s not far from the station, and right on a river. We’re on the thirteenth floor, so we’ve got a real nice view. We weren’t too hungry, so dinner was a few things from the hot food rack of the nearby convenience store.

We’re only here one night, though – tomorrow night we’ll be staying in a ryokan (traditional Japanese hotel) on Miyajima, an island near Hiroshima. It’s one of the Three Views of Japan, Japan’s three most famous sights. Before then we’ll be visiting the Peace Memorial Park that is dedicated to the legacy of the atom bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima, and Hiroshima Castle nearby. I’m not certain we’ll have internet tomorrow night, but we’ll see. If not, we’ll be spending Wednesday exploring Miyajima, including Mount Misen, and then we’re off to a ryokan in Kyoto, which does have internet. According to its website, anyway.

Interesting note: as of today, we’ve saved 44,640 yen on JR trains. Just four hundred and sixty yen until we equal what we spent on our JR passes.

Today’s photo count: two hundred and eighty-eight.

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Day 9 – Ancient Capital – Modern Dance

I’m writing after Joel so read his first 🙂

First thing of interest today was on the way to the train station, we passed a group of presumably locals weeding the grounds near the foot / bike path to the station. I’m unsure if it was volunteer or paid but it seemed to be mostly older people, but a few young people and even a mother with some young kids. Reminded me of a local clean-up Australia day.

[Edit: Just wanting to stick in a note here – they’re all volunteer locals. City beautification here in Japan is pretty much invariably the job of concerned citizens, not local councils as is the case in Australia. They’ll set a day – maybe once a month, I’m not sure – when they get together and clean up all the weeds and the rubbish, and generally tidy up the nature strips. There’s some places they can’t access – near the railway lines, especially – so those areas tend to get particularly overgrown. Unfortunately in modern Japan, the hip, cool youngsters with their nine-to-five jobs often don’t have the time (or the inclination) to help out, which generally just leaves the older-types and the stay-at-home mothers doing it. It’s part of the aging population problem in Japan, and it’s something the Japanese government is working to fix. –Joel]

When we arrived at Nara, on the way to the start of the historical walk suggested in Joel’s guide book we found a pharmacy and bought some multivitamins and nail clippers. We have been feeling a bit tired (I wonder why, the amount of walking we are doing) and I was a bit worried something may be missing from our diet, so I suggested the multivitamins to see if they would help.

Walking down this street was one of the hottest things we have done. There was no air movement, asphalt ground reflecting the heat, high humidity, in the initial 2 blocks we had sweat running down our backs.

First sign of Parade

First sign of Parade

As we approached where we need to turn off the road, I noticed a large group of adults and children all dressed up in interesting garb. I went back to the visitor info centre and asked the English speaking helper if there anything on. Her reply was along the lines of “its a parade for people who like to dance”, she said the parade started at the JR station at 1pm and outside the visitor centre at 3pm, both of which were wrong.

We decided to watch it and assumed it only went for 1 hour. Luckily we chose a spot to stand in the shade, and even then we were baking. The performers were dancing in the sun and every time there was a break either parents or support staff would run up with water bottles, towels and water spraying devices.

Joel discussed most of the performances, and hopefully we will upload some more pictures to gallery soon. We had everything from what looked like local primary school students being directed by teachers, through to local dance troupes (young and old) with their own directors making suggestions before the start.

The performances were fun to watch, but we were standing just before the start so mainly got to see them assemble and see the start, but missed about half of the act when they started moving on.

We finally decided to move on, have some lunch (and sit in AC for a while). We headed through an arcade to the start of the walk. There was a Kimono shop in here that had a nice display out front.

When we started the walk we found the main performance area and had a quick look around here before heading off as the guide described. The first place we visited was a nice garden that had a pond garden and a moss garden. I originally thought the entrance here was for the one next door which had big gates which I had seen another family pass through. They turned out to be separate but adjacent gardens though. By the time we finished in this first garden it was nearly 5pm and the gates of the other garden had been closed.

This will probably be the one day I beat Joel in Photos, with 538. Mainly all parade photos. Still need to remove the blurry ones.

I’ll try to add more later, but we need to get up early tomorrow to pack as we are on the road train again.

20100829 Nara [ngg_gallery=11]

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Day 9 – Nara, not entirely as planned

One thing that amuses me about the trains here is the anti-smoking (and related) advertisements all over the place. In Australia, you’d have big signs saying “big fines!” and disgusting images of assorted cancers on the packets, not to mention huge taxes. Here in Japan, what generally stops people smoking is the culture that the public is of greater importance than the individual. So cigarette vending machines are practically everywhere – almost as ubiquitous as the drink vending machines, which typically average about two or three per block – and a packet costs just 300 yen (maybe $4 at current exchange rates), but people just don’t light up near others unless they’ve somehow given consent (usually by sitting in the smokers’ area). A far cry from the way smokers in Australia light up whenever they get the chance – and usually upwind. But on to these ads. James took a photo of a few, but they all have comments like “the only person not inconvenienced by your smoke is you” and “I carry around a seven-hundred-degree flame with other people passing by”. Public shaming. Such a harsh penalty. There’s a few on other topics in a similar vein. “When trying to read a newspaper, please read between the lines. In more ways than one.” “Make up applied on a train is an image down.” Et cetera.

Today we went to Nara – once again using our JR pass. Nara was the capital of Japan from 710 to 784 AD, which means that this year it’s celebrating the 1300th anniversary of being made the capital. We hadn’t actually realised this until we got there – “1300 years” was literally plastered up everywhere. The place had quite a large number of foreigners too – possibly the greatest concentration since I came here. I was wanting to strike up (or attempt to) a conversation with one over the day, but I never could bring myself to do it.

In any case, Nara has a huge collection of ancient temples and shrines, a lot of them in the Nara-Koen deer park area to the east, and my guidebook had a suggested half-day walk to see most of them which we planned to do. We headed up the road from the station to the park, and it’s pretty clear it had been done up quite recently. It was quite nicely paved, a broad sort of promenade – the downside is that under the sun, the paved surface was baking hot. Heat was pouring off everything, and there was almost no breeze. Looked nice, though. One building even had a waterfall pouring down the side – closer inspection revealed it to be a public toilet. Hah.

Our original plan got thrown completely out of the window when about halfway down the road, we encountered a large group of women and children in matching costumes. James headed back to the information centre a block back to find out what that was all about. You know how I mentioned I wanted to visit a natsu matsuri yesterday? Turns out the Basara Matsuri was happening in Nara. Today. Well, yesterday as well, but more importantly, today.

Mind you, we didn’t discover the matsuri part of it until later – James was just told it was a parade, so we headed right back to where we started, as the parade was starting from the JR Nara station. While sitting and waiting for the parade to start, and old Japanese man next to us started up a conversation with us.It started with the weather, but quickly turned to politics. (As in, him: “It’s very hot here”. Us: “Yes. We’re from Australia, and it’s winter there.” Him: “I’ve heard it’s over forty degrees in Moscow. All the locals have to wear masks. We don’t like Russia very much.” And then it was politics from there.) He had some very strong feelings on assorted international relations. Eventually, we parted ways as the parade started.

The parade was impressive in and of itself. Basically each group in the parade would dance to a song being played from a structure on the back of a ute that would precede that group. Some of the groups had live singing or mixing, but others just had recorded music. The music was invariably quite catchy – a lot of it was Japanese pop style music, but some of it was Western and some was traditional Japanese set to a beat. The dances ranged from cheerleader-style to breakdancing to belly-dancing, to fan dances and flag dances and other traditional Japanese styles. One group was even a taiko drum group – I think I liked them the best, though it was difficult to say.

Most of the groups were impressively synchronised, though some of the younger kids in the earlier groups looked a little lost, and there was one group comprised largely of Westerners who looked a bit like they were trying to make it up as they were going along. After watching for about two hours, we decided to pop into a place along the road for lunch. We had a cheese ome-rice (chicken fried rice wrapped in an omelette) and a beef doria (some sort of cheesy-beefy-saucy layer baked on top of rice), half-and-half each, and juice to drink. Well I call mine a juice, but it was banana “juice”, which is more of a puree. And it was a banana juice float. All the while the parade was still going on outside.

Looking at the schedule, we realised the parade would go on for a few hours more, and it was getting on four by this point, so we thought we should at least try to take in some of the sights. We particularly wanted to see Todaiji Temple, the largest wooden building in the world (as I mentioned yesterday) and that closed at 5:30, so we decided to head there. On the way, though, we discovered the matsuri itself at the top of the road we’d been heading up. We took a stroll through the area. It had a stage where all the groups from the parade would dance again, and it had all the usual matsuri stands arranged around the edges – shaved ice stands, takoyaki stands, places selling fried chicken, dough balls, and even one place doing hand-cut sweet potato chips, frying them one at a time. There was even a goldfish-scooping stall. According to the schedule, this was going to run until about twenty to nine, so we steeled ourself and continued on our way.

The whole area, incidentally, was inhabited by deer. Sitting, walking, sleeping in the gutters and by the rivers, chasing people for food – especially those foolish enough to actually give them some. Smelled of deer, too. And deer droppings everywhere. Apparently in Shintoism, they’re the messengers of the gods.

Walking down some traditional Japanese residential streets, we encountered one place with a garden open for viewing, with free entry for foreigners. We headed in to have a look, but while it was really pretty and serene, large sections of the moss was brown and dry, which was a bit of a disappointment. James said later he’d intended to visit the one next door, and mistook which gate was which – what we could see of that one looked quite nice too. We headed out again and went straight to Todaiji.

The building was seriously impressive. We could see it looming over the trees from quite some distance away. Entry to the building was five hundred yen, but I think it was well worth that. Apparently it’s only two-thirds the size of the original, which was burnt down in a fire about two centuries ago, but the one that’s there now is still humongous. It contains apparently the largest indoor bronze statue in the world. It’s called the Daibutsu (which just means “big Buddha” and is not at all specific to this one) and that was quite impressive to look at too, though difficult to photograph, being indoors and all. One side also had a place where people could pay for a new roof tile, and sign it for posterity, and one of the recent signatures was by a woman who lives in Sydney. I thought of asking the three or so Western women in the room at the time if it was them, but I decided not to.

The back of the hall also had a pillar with a hole through it the size of the Buddha statue’s nostril – apparently being able to crawl through it will grant you enlightenment or something. One of the Western women managed it, to a general round of applause. (On a similar note, one thing I forgot to mention yesterday is than Oku-no-In at Koyasan had a booth where you reach inside and attempt to lift a rock onto a shelf. The rock is supposed to get heavier depending on your weight of sin. I managed to lift the rock to the shelf with no trouble – unlike those in the line ahead of us – so I’m idly curious as to what that implies…) Another area on the far side had people selling charms, fortunes, and prayers. And, according to the sign, “authentic Japanese souvenirs” – umbrellas. Do people want umbrellas for souvenirs?

We headed back out after photographing heaps (there was even a sign up saying “it’s ok to take photographs”) and headed back to the festival. We stood there for a while watching more dances. They were even more impressive than the ones on the parade, firstly because they had more width to work with, and secondly because they didn’t have to think about edging forward as they danced. Granted the parade wasn’t moving too fast, and each group moved mostly in bursts – they’d start at one point, dance and move up slowly for a while, then move up in one go to the next starting point. The taiko drum group played again, and I tried to take a video, but the sound of the drums is completely inaudible – the camera’s microphone is just too small to even hear it. Looks quite impressive, though, with them dancing in sync.

James had some sweet potato chips and takoyaki, and I stole one of each, and also had some shaved ice with mango flavouring and another one that was blue which I didn’t put too much effort in translating the name of. It’s blue – you can’t go too far wrong with blue. Unless it’s that blue pepsi they tried to make once which tasted exactly the same as the original stuff. After a hot day wandering around, shaved ice really hit the spot. As I said before, it was going to run until twenty to nine, so at seven we pulled ourselves away and headed back to the hotel. We would have liked to visit more of the temples and shrines in Nara, but the parade and festival were fun enough.

We’re checking out of Osaka tomorrow. We’re off to Hiroshima, via Himeji Castle. From here on we’re only staying at most two nights in each location – one night each in two hotels (one a ryokan) in Hiroshima, two nights in a ryokan in Kyoto, and two nights back in Tokyo, though in a hotel closer to the city center.

Today’s photo count: three hundred and eighty-six. Most of them of the parade and festival. Hah.

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