Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Kyoto

Tuesday we took the Shinkansen (bullet train) for the 2 hour 15 minute ride to Kyoto to see some of the ancient temples and shrines. We visited three temples including Kinkakuji, the Golden Temple below.


Most impressive was Sanjūsangendō Temple. A Buddhist temple built in 1266. It contains 1,001 life size statues of the Thousand Armed Kannon which took over 100 years to carve. (There’s no photography allowed inside the temple. The photo below is one somebody scanned from a postcard and posted on the Web.)

Not So Lost


(I had posted this earlier but for some reason it disappered from the blog.)

Monday, June 30, 2008

Soba Noodles for Lunch

We had lunch at Kanda Yabusoba in the Awajicho neighborhood. They’ve been dishing up homemade, buckwheat soba noodles on this site since 1880. The original building was destroyed in the great 1923 earthquake and the current one built shortly after (and survived WWII bombings.) We sat on tatami mats on the floor, which was a little easier for Riley than myself. It was very good!

I just found that the NPR website has a story on the restaurant.

Pike Place Market is Amatuer Hour

...compared to the Tsukiji Fish Market. We went very early this morning. It is amazing! We didn't even see it all - it goes on forever. All sorts of of seafood, huge tuna being cut up with band saws, live eals, crazy motorized carts whipping around. A guy rode by on a bike with a a huge tuna head strapped on the front and another on the back. They even have whale meat! (I agree, not a good thing.)





We even had sushi for breakfast while we were there. Well, I did. Riley had cucumber roll.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Statue of Hachikō



(From Wikipedia) In 1924, Hachikō was brought to Tokyo by his owner, Hidesamurō Ueno (上野英三郎), a professor in the agriculture department at the University of Tokyo. During his owner's life, Hachikō saw him off from the front door and greeted him at the end of the day at the nearby Shibuya Station. Even after Ueno's death in May 1925, Hachikō returned every day to the station to wait for him. Hachikō's devotion to his lost master moved those around him, who nicknamed him "faithful dog". Others at the station initially thought he was waiting for something else or roaming around, but later realized he was waiting for his dead owner. This continued for 10 years, with Hachikō appearing only in the evening time, precisely when the train was due at the station.

Meiji Shrine

Today we braved the rain and visited the Meiji Shrine here in Tokyo. A traditional wedding was taking place while we were there.


Famous Crispy Doughnut

There is usually a line at the Krispy Kreme that's right outside the hotel door. As you see at the lower right of this picture the line is 45 minutes long. In the rain. We took a box of Krispy Kremes Tuesday to give to the people in the office of the woman we were studying. According to our translator whenever a coworker came in she would offer them a "famous crispy doughnut."