I'm having a hard time coming up with the hours needed to post all my
pictures from our fabulous trip to Japan. I'm going to attempt to do
pictures one vacation day at a time.
Day 1: Wednesday, July 25th
- We arrived in Haneda Airport before 5am.
- Transferred
trains a few times trying to get our Japan rail pass ASAP. We didn't
find the right ticket station and were keeping my Dad's cousins late so
gave up and got on the train to meet them in Totsuka.
- After
waiting at the wrong place for too long we finally found our meet up
place and found my dad's cousin Sachiko. Her husband Kanemi picked us
all up in his car and drove us to their home where Sachiko had a HUGE
breakfast already prepared for us. Sachiko can speak some English -
enough to communicate. Kanemi has done a lot of business in English and
lived in the Philippines for several years so his English is quite
good.
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| Egg & ham, nimono with veggies & fish cakes, tofu with small fish & sauce, various homemade pickles from her garden, miso soup, and juice just for the Americans. Blake even ate natto (fermented soybeans) on his rice. I politely declined - I've tried that stuff and know I don't like it already. |
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| This turtle kept my little brother company when he stayed with Sachiko & Kanemi about 10 years ago. |
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| Sachiko had a tiny backyard (the size of an apartment patio) but it was filled with vegetables and ornamental plants. |
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| Kanemi & Sachiko Sasaki's house: small footprint, steep stairs, tight garage & next to no space between neighboring houses, yet very well kept and beautiful potted plants wherever possible. |
Sights around town: different body styles on vehicles, a lot more scooters, and tiled rooftops.
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| We aren't sure what the "Silicon Valley Express" was, but it was funny to see our home town on a store sign in Japan. |
- Afterward, we first went to visit my dad's uncle Hideo (90 yrs old)
and his wife Teruko (85 yrs old) who live in Zushi. Their daughter
Atsuko and her son (in his early 20's) were also there. Kanemi
translated for us the whole time. Again they gave us a lot to eat and I
must have drank about 15 cups of mugicha (a cold barley drink) because
of the heat. We showed them pictures. Teruko brought out pictures from
when I was a baby and showed us what we all looked like back then. She,
of course, was much younger with thick, dark hair and I was a
chubby-cheeked baby. She told me she used to carry me on her back
around the gardens. Teruko kept telling me that I was so beautiful now
and that she was so old. In my mind, I hope I look as good and happy as
she and her husband are at 85 and 90 years old!
- Family
history bit: Hideo is the uncle that worked in the Japanese garden at
Hachimangu in Kamakura and brought my dad in to work with him. (My dad
still constructs Japanese gardens for homes here in California.) Hideo
started working there after he retired about age 65 and worked there for
about 20 years.
- When it was time to leave they all came
outside and waved to us until they couldn't see the car anymore. My mom
always does that still. She must have picked it up in Japan.
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| We prepared a photo album on the iPad to show relatives pictures of my immediate family. Left to right: Kanemi, Hideo, (Cousin), Atsuko, Janet, Sachiko and Teruko. |
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| Left to right: Blake, Hideo, (Cousin), Atsuko, Janet, Teruko, and Sachiko. |
- We then went to visit Kamakura's famous Daibutsu - a giant bronze Buddha
that has survived hundreds of years (cast in 1252 a.d.). For a small
fee tourists can also go inside. Inside it is interesting to see the
individual pieces fit together and secured. On the way back to the car
we had purple sweet potato flavored soft serve ice-cream, which the area is famous for.
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| Sachiko taught us how to wash before entering holy ground: each hand, then cup water into your mouth using your hand and spit the water onto the ground = clean hands and clean mouth |
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| This photo shows the inside of the body looking up through the neck to the head/hair. |
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| Sweet potato ice-cream was really yummy! |
- By this time we were feeling the effects of having little sleep.
We had left from the Salt Lake City airpirt at 9:45 PM on Monday, had a
layover to catch the red-eye out of LAX, and flew all day/night
(crossing the date international line) for total flight time of 16+
hours to arrive at 4:55 am in Tokyo. By the afternoon Sachiko &
Kanemi kindly offered to take us to the hotel to have a nap before going
to to the firework show that night.
- Our hotel was small but we
were excited to have a Japanese style room with tatami floors, sliding
doors, and futons to sleep on. The blinds on the windows and the paper
on the doors made the light just right for a much needed afternoon nap!
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| Our room. The doors are slid open here. |
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| Towels, toothbrushes with mini toothpaste, pajama robes & ties |
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| In true Japanese form, our bed was waiting in the closet, along with blankets & pillows. |
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| I've always heard about how these tables in the winter keep your legs warm underneath. We clearly didn't need it in the hot & humid summer weather, but I wanted to take a pic of the mechanics of the table. |
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| Close up of the floor: tatami mats are laid close to each other throughout the whole room. |
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| The paper panels act like curtains and are connected to each door. Each door can slide along the floor to any position on the track. |
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| Room decor was subtle but effective in such a small space. |
- Sometime around 6pm Sachiko & Kanemi came back to walk us to
the beach for the firework ("hanabi" or fire flower) show. We walked
through the streets with the entire town down to the beach. Several
people, especially young adults, were in a traditional yukata (similar
to a kimono but light weight for summer time). The sidewalks were lined
with street vendors selling food, bottled beverages, and light-up toys
for the kids.
- The crowded beach was orderly and the crowds
were patient as the sun set and the sky darkened enough for the
fireworks. There were food vendors along the main strip. I wanted to
taste every one, but Sachiko had brought a picnic dinner already (sushi
rolls, inari sushi, yakitori, and grilled beef tongue). There was a
speaker system throughout the beach along the little bay with an
announcer explaining the upcoming portion of the firework program. One
portion had fireworks with music. Another portion was individually
sponsored bursts. Before each of these dedicated bursts the announcer
would explain the sponsor of the single firework and the message that
went along. I didn't understand most of the messages, but I did catch a
couple: "Thank you, Mom & Dad." or "[insert name], I love you.
Let's get married!". The crowd would respond to each message with an
"ooh/ah", a laugh, or various chit-chat. The most spectacular portions
were the ones where there were fireworks in the sky and on the water.
Most of the fireworks were launched from two barges in the bay. Every
so often a smaller, faster boat would cut along the middle of the bay
lighting charges and throwing the charges out behind it to float on the
water and burst. The combination of the sky bursts, water bursts, and
the reflections on the water resulted in the best firework show I've
ever seen.
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| On our walk to the beach. |
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| Sachiko & Kanemi brought food for all of us and even mats to sit on. By the end of the night, all that sand behind us was filled with fellow spectators. |
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| Traditional festival attire is still alive in this modern age. I love it. |
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| We also had a spectacular sunset to start off the night. As a side note, Sachiko and Kanemi seem to smile a lot. |




- After the show was over the masses on the beach had to fit
through walking tunnels that crossed under the road between the beach
and the town. It was a human traffic jam literally. We stood
practically still, shoulder to shoulder, shuffling our feet just a
little to move. Blake and I were amazed at how patiently, quietly, and
orderly the masses "evacuated" from the end of the firework show. (If
we were in the US, I'm certain there would be pushing and complaining
and people pick-pocketing and drunk people being loud and making a
scene.)
- We walked back to through town with the rest of the town, shops closed but streets still lit up,
and made it back to the hotel to say goodbye to Sachiko and Kanemi who
would take the train home instead of driving because of the masses. We
could see (and hear) the crowds at the station from our hotel room
balcony. That station was just as crowded as the beach. For a long
while.
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| Red & white festival lanterns were hung on the street gates around town. |
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| The train station stayed this full for a long time even though trains picked up car-fulls of passengers. Also, you can see the bike racks below for people to ride their bikes from their homes to the station. The bike rack was probably three times the length of what's shown in the photo and had two levels. |
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