Saturday, September 23, 2006

From Nikko to Tokyo

nikko bridge
With a full day of sumo under our, um, mawashi, it was time to head out to Nikko, famous for its temples and Tokugawa Shogunate mausoleums. The Nikko sites are justly regarded, as the saying goes, Nikko o minakereba "kekkō" to iu na - translated a number of ways, but I like "When you've seen Nikko, it's enough."

kubota
To toast our departure, and of course to celebrate the day's outing, N. led us to a nearby restaurant, for the boys, a bit of chanko nabe - the stew that forms the backbone of the sumo diet. For R., mostly onigiri, and plenty of Kubota.

fortunes
Well, it's clear that R.'s sense and appreciation for Japanese things is just going to take some time to develop, because she still had nothing but sumo on her mind. "Will my fortune predict more sumo?"

rikishi?
"Nope, no rikishi in here."

hello ladies?
"Excuse me ladies, have you seen any sumo wrestlers?"

rather watch sumo
"Really, I'd much rather be watching sumo. Do you think we could get tickets for today's matches if we left right now?"

tochiotome
Let it not be said that I don't know when I am defeated. We dashed... yes, dashed back to the train station, picked up some sake and strawberry pudding (Tochigi prefecture is famous for strawberries) and shot back to Tokyo.

persuasive
"I can be very, very persuasive."

sumo!
Success! Fortunately, we were able to stash our luggage at the train station, and found that stadium seats were still available. Remarkably, these seats while much cheaper, actually gave us a better vantage. R., armed with popcorn, soda, and the daily match-sheet. Can't imagine a happier camper.

Ginza
Fortunately, R. decided that she DID want to see some of Tokyo, and was also aware that while we managed to get sumo tickets for Friday, the last two days of the tournament were long since sold out. First stop, Ginza. Didn't realise that on the weekends, the streets are cordoned off from traffic. Happens precisely - one moment there are cars, but also armies of people with chairs and tables lining the street, and the next thing you know, people are sitting out, reading newspapers in the middle of the street.

new Toyota
Toyota maintains a exhibition hall right in the middle of Ginza. I can imagine that R. is wondering, "How will I put the cat carriers in there?"

perfection
Harajuku's Takeshita Dori... yeah, a bit crowded.

coz-play-ku
Cosplay, hanging out, just outside of the Meiji Shrine - probably couldn't conceive of a more striking contrast, yet in so many ways, an encapsulation. Costume play. And what if you are a cosplay kid looking for a social networking outlet? Oh, yes, they have that too... Cosspace.

ranking
RanKing, RanQueen, a store that maintains and stocks a ranking of "trendy" items. Actually, it was kind of fun. I didn't know a) there were that many implements for removing ear and nose hair, and b) that they were considered trendy products.

busy
Uniqlo mega-store. Men's clothing for men without shoulders or hips. Perfect for non-sumo Japanese.

sake
Channeling Uncle Monty, "as a boy, I used to weep at sake shops."

kako-san
That evening, we met up with my father's old friend M.-san I hadn't seen him for several years, not since I was living in Korea. The man knows his way around the food and drink, but I did not realise that his wife K.-san owned a restaurant. Knowing that R. was a strict vegetarian, they had planned a special meal just for her. It was fabulous, incredible food, and of course, M.-san's favorite sake, Dewazakura.

palace
Sunday, our last day in Japan. We didn't have to leave for the airport until the afternoon, so we decided to walk around the Palace (R. having vetoed a visit to the Tsukiji fish market).

Doutor
Sightseeing completed, we walked back to Ginza (where our hotel was), and stopped to have lunch and the excellent coffee at Cafe Doutor - perfect perch for people-watching. Well, for R., anyways... here, I've been dispatched across the street to Mitsukoshi to buy some chocolate truffles R. has been gobbling up. I'd say R.'s first trip to Japan has been an all-out success, no?

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

A Sumo Otaku is born

sumo otaku
N. was practically besides himself when he learned that I was crazy about sake and R. was nuts about sumo. "You guys must be old-school Japanese." Maybe, but even I can't understand R.'s fascination with sumo. Doesn't mean it can't be indulged though - watching sports with the wife. So, N. set about arranging box seats for the three of us so we could get right into it.

ryogoku
N. gave us our tickets last night, and with those, we had all day access to the tournament. While the main matches don't start until about 3:30PM, juniors and lower-ranks fight from the morning onwards. And R. wanted to be there for the whole thing. Which explains why we were standing outside Ryogoku in Tokyo at 9 in the morning.

sumo sandwich
"Can we take them home? Please, please, please, oh, puhleeeeeeaaaase?" Fortunately, the action was slow enough that R. consented to us going out for a bit, back to my favorite bits of Asakusa and Akihabara before coming back right after lunch. Of course, R. was the one who noted, while standing on the subway platform, the pleasantly sweet smell of roses and talcum powder."That's the smell of a sumo wrestler. They're nearby, I tell you." Turns out, she wasn't wrong - it was the scent of Omi oil, the hair wax used by sumo and geisha alike.

sumo crazy
"I'm so happy, so happy, so happy!!

ozeki
While R. geeked out on the sumo, N. and I. helped ourselves to all the snacks and beer we could find, plus sake by Ozeki, one of the sport's main sponsors. Not my usual drink but I have to say, it wasn't bad. Ozeki means "champion" and until 1909, it was the highest rank in sumo wrestling. Some irony then that ozeki is now only the second highest rank in sumo (although the term yokozuna predates 1909 by several 100 years, it did not refer to a separate or higher rank before this time).

makuuchi
Makuuchi ring entrance ceremony.

Asashoryu
Yokozuna Asashoryu's ring entrance ceremony.

wow
Very impressive strength and flexibility.

ama
Ama, in silver, showing fighting spirit against Hakuho. It was this bout which converted R. into an Ama fan.

bow
Bow ceremony, performed at the end of each day's matches.

nap
It's been a tough day - N.'s first time to watch sumo live, in fact.

stalking
Outside, R. caught a whiff of the Omi hair oil again, and discovered that it was none other than Ama. Not sure if this counts as stalking or not. Yes, I think.

All about Hakone

fuji
Other than sumo, R.'s utmost objective on this trip was to see Mt. Fuji, and from Hakone in particular. Fuji's a bit of a recluse, frequently if not usually hidden by clouds, especially as the day drags on. We were very lucky though to have very clear skies, though R. was a bit disappointed that there wasn't any snow on the mountain yet.

shinkansen
Having come up from Nara, now waiting for the Shinkansen from Kyoto to Odawara. From there, we took a bus around the lake to Moto-Hakone.

tofu
It wasn't particularly late by the time we got to our hotel, maybe 7:30 or so, but Moto-Hakone's a small town, with only a couple of restaurants, which close early. The hotel rang their preferred choice to let them know we were coming. Now, I didn't have high expectations for vegetarian food (my dinner was very good though, fresh eel - very fresh... pulled live from the aquarium and carried wriggling across the dining room, much to R.'s dismay, on display here.) Fortunately for me, the 7-11 in town was both still open and had 3 delightful bottles of jizake.

hakone
So why Hakone? One of R.'s favorite Japanese woodblock prints is from Hiroshige's Tokaido no Gojyusan Tsugi - The 55 Stations of the Tokaido. The 11th station is a view from Hakone, and the trail of the Old Tokaido Highway passed right through the town.

trooping
Well, we walked a good length of the Hakone section and did not find the vantage point depicted in the print, so R. set to making interpretive demonstrations of troop movement on the O.T. Highly amusing, and she didn't fall.

pirates
Pirate ships on Lake Ashinoko? No, this would be our transport across the lake to Owakudani.

stink
Owakudani - Great Boiling Valley. Volcanic activity below, jets of sulphured water on the surface. Plenty stinky.

eggs
A local specialty is hard-boiled eggs, which turn black in the waters. Eating one is supposed to give you an additional 7 years of life, two gives you 14, and three gives you heartburn. Well, no, I made that last one up, but they say you shouldn't eat more than 2 anyways. Another local specialty failed to capture R.'s affection - wasabi-flavoured soft serve ice-cream. I thought it wasn't too bad.

cable
From Owakudani, we took the Hakone Ropeway (cable car) and then the toy train (miniature gauge rail) back to Odawara, and from there, on to Tokyo.

balls
N. and A. met us at our hotel in Asakusa, and we went out for dinner at a nearby izakaya, where we recapped our adventures so far, and N. and A. finally got to meet R. Here, N. is saying, "Whaddya mean, chickens have testicles?!?!?"


Tuesday, September 19, 2006

From Fushimi to Nara

taruzake
From Kyoto, we took some time to explore the temple complex of Fushimi-Inari before heading down to Nara. This is the sake central highway - Fushimi being one of the two major sake producing centres, historically and today, and Nara considered its cultural home.

pilgrim
It was evident that we were onto a good thing as this pilgrim was the first person we saw when we got off the train.

brekkie
A perfectly proportioned breakfast.

saba
Saba (mackerel) curry, in a can. A completely inappropriate breakfast. Especially the turbaned guy, with the disproportionately large mackerel.

fushimi-inari-taisha
Entering Fushimi-Inari Taisha. The paths leading up to the shrine are lined with literally thousands of these vermillion Torii or gates. Inari is the Shinto god of industry, agriculture, fertility, and most importantly (from the sake brewer's perspective), of rice. A perfect pilgrimage destination.

man walking dog
Man walking dog.

cyclo-vendo
Having paid our respects to Inari, we hopped a train to Nara, checked into our hotel (conveniently located across the street from a sake shop), and walked back to the train station to rent some bicycles. Having been caught out in the rain at least twice already, we employed my favoured rain averting technique - carrying an umbrella. A little vending machine coffee and off we go.

kasuga
Turned out to be a beautiful day, great temperature for cycling and sightseeing. Nara is absolutely covered in temples and shrines. This is Kasuga-Taisha, famous for its lanterns and a style of architecture.

table garden
Horticultural delights around every corner.

deer
The sacred deer of Nara roam everywhere. "You do plan to give me food, don't you?"

daibutsuden
Outside the Daibutsuden (Great Buddha Hall) at Todai-ji in Nara. One of the largest wooden structures in the world, this is smaller than the original structure that was destroyed by fire. One of the supporting posts in the hall has a small hole cut through it, sized to be the same as the nostril of the Buddha statue sitting inside. Legend has it that if one is able to pass one's body through the whole, then one is assured of enlightenment in the next life. I managed this back in '97, so I'm all set. Good thing too, couldn't even get my shoulders in this time.

stuck
Will she, won't she? Me and 50 schoolkids want to know.

enlightened!
The human booger makes it through. "Enlightenment, here I come!"

wrong way
Enlightenment, perhaps, but it doesn't come equipped with a sense of direction. This is moments after saving R. from an impromptu ride all the way back to Kyoto.

ryozanpaku


So, back to the hotel and out for some dinner. I had read that around the corner there was an izakaya with, not only a lengthy sake list, in English, but also a vegetarian menu. Score 1 to Ryozanpaku! Delicious, friendly, and not too expensive. On the way back to the hotel, we stopped in at the tiny, but well equipped sake shop across the street. Seeing our more than moderate interest, the owner pulled out a couple of opened bottles from the refrigerator and gave us samples. Oishii! I picked out a couple of bottles of jizake, local sake, and as we were leaving with our purchases, was handed another bag - containing the two bottles we had just tried, and another small bottle of "romantic" sake! Gifts! Good to come back to Nara!