Leaving Yakushima

DATE: Dec 4th, 2008


After three days on Yakushima, it was time to go back to the main land. The very nice hotel owner, Ken, dropped me off in Mugio, so I could see the Toroki no taki waterfall before going to the harbour in Anbo by bus.

Everything went fine so far. I took the bus from Mugio to Anbo, where I put my suitcase at the tourist information center and then went to the post office to get some money at the ATM. However, when I reached the post office, I noticed that my wallet wasn’t in my purse… So I went back to the tourist information office to see if I had perhaps put it in my suitcase, which wasn’t the case. So I panicked, because I was leaving the island in a few hours and my wallet was gone. I did my best to explain it to the lady at the tourist information center who spoke no English at all, and there was a man there who was very kind and got me hot cocoa. So,  the lady of the tourist information center called the police office for me to inform them my wallet was gone, and then the bus company because I was pretty sure I left it on the bus because that’s where I last used my wallet.

Not too long after, the lady received a phone call from the bus company to say that the bus I had been on arrived in Miyanoura in the North of the island, and that they had found my wallet! The only problem was, how was I going to get there? The man who had given me hot cocoa before told me he would drive me, which was so generous and kind that I didn’t even worry about driving across the island with a stranger. The man was an ‘eco guide’ which meant he took tourists on trips across the island. So while we were driving, he was telling me things “over there are those ruins, the island over there in the distance is Tanegashima,” and such things. His English was extremely broken but we managed to have some conversation.

Once we arrived at the bus company in Miyanoura, they gave me back my wallet. I was very grateful and relieved, so I thanked them all several times. All my money, cards, anything was still in there, although I wasn’t too worried about my cash as long as I had my credit card. So, after that the man drove me back to the harbour where I still had 15 minutes left before I could get on the ferry. I was really exhausted at that, and amazed and so thankful for the kindness of the islanders. I guess you can say that Yakushima and its inhabitants hold a special place in my heart!

CATEGORY: Japan 2008 TAGS: ,


Yakushima Third Day: Shiratani Unsuikyo

DATE: Dec 3rd, 2008


Together with my brand new friend Yuiko, I went to Shiratani Unsuikyo, which is famous for its rapids and also because a part of the forest has been used as inspiration for the forest in the anime Mononoke hime (Princess Mononoke).

We first went to the Shitoko Gajumaru-en Banyan Garden, which had lots of Banyan trees. They were very impressive, though creepy at the same time because they sort of looked like they had tentacles that would strangle you. Afterwards we went to the Isso lighthouse, which turned out to be locked. However, we did have a great view of the ocean there.

Took the bus to Onoaida and because I still had some time to spend before dinner, I went to walk around a bit in Onoaida (town).

This was close to the Yakushima JR hotel. Unfortunately I couldn't get closer to the sea. The sunsets were breathtaking there :D

Gate to a shrine in Onoaida.

There were oranges (Tankan?) growing from a tree XD

I went to the conbini to get some food, and in those... 5 minutes, it turned almost completely dark outside.

My dinner that evening. This was some traditional dish in which you cooked your own food in soy milk. I believe the biggest fish is bream? The dish next to the bowl with the spoon in it, is chicken sashimi, which is raw chicken. It didn't taste too bad, and no, I did not get ill XD

We went to Anbo then, where Yuiko dropped off her rental car and took the ferry back to Kagoshima. I went back to Onoaida and made a walk in the town. Once the sun started to set, it was pitch dark within 30 minutes so I was happy I was back at the hotel already for dinner.

CATEGORY: Japan 2008 TAGS: ,


Yakushima Second Day: Yakusugi Land

DATE: Dec 2nd, 2008


On my first full day at the island I went to Yakusugi Land. I went by bus in the morning, and thanks to the explanation of the nice lady at the tourist information center, I was able to see the Kikensugi cedar of 3000 years old first. It was pretty impressive and unfortunately my camera was too ‘small’ to photograph it as a whole…

This was the road to my hotel. Mount Mocchomu at the background again.

My dinner! All traditional Yakushima cuisine. I can't remember what everything weas exactly, but there's a bit of chicken, sweet potato, different sorts of sashimi and tofu. I believe the biggest fish is a flying fish. It really did not have eyes even though it might look that way on the photo.

My room in the hotel. It was huge and traditional :D

I even had a small veranda thingie :3

So, after my hike I took the bus back to Anbo, and then went back to the hotel on Onoaida where I bought some food at the conbini. I had dinner at the hotel again, again lots of dishes that were unfamilair to me but tasted very good! I especially liked the sashimi (raw fish). Again, I went to bed quite early.

CATEGORY: Japan 2008 TAGS: ,


To Yakushima!

DATE: Dec 1st, 2008


After spending the night in Kagoshima, I travelled to the island Yakushima. Yakushima is in the south of Japan, so imagine you go island hopping from Kyushu, you end up in Yakushima first and eventually you end up in Okinawa. The island is simply beautiful, it’s also a UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site and it is really worth visiting, and definitely worth the trickiness to get there! In case you’re thinking of visiting the island, I used this website a lot, though back then it was only a website and the book hadn’t been published.

CATEGORY: Japan 2008 TAGS: ,


To Kagoshima

DATE: Nov 30th, 2008


So, after a few days with my friend in Nagoya I continued my trip and travelled to Kagoshima by shinkansen. Kagoshima is in the very south west of the “main land” of Japan. The distance from Nagoya to Kagoshima is 1000 km, which took me seven hours. I quite like the shinkansen, and on this one I could even charge my phone on the electric outlets!

In the late afternoon I arrived in Kagoshima. I had some problems finding the hotel even though stupid me had already walked past it, and I got help from this old man who spoke excellent English, he was a retired English teacher XD The youth hostel wasn’t much special but very cheap, I got a three person room as a single room, and finally I had a real bed instead of a futon :D The shower was kinda gross though. Another downside was the traditional-ness of their common room as there were only low, Japanese tables and my legs still hurt from falling in Nagoya so it was very uncomfortable.

Because Kagoshima is in the south, the weather was lovely. It was nearly December, but it felt like 20 degrees or so and I noticed some palm trees in town as well. I went to wander around Kagoshima in the late afternoon/evening, and went to the shopping district Tenmonkan. I quite liked the atmosphere of it, quite cozy. I noticed a small office that sold ferry tickets, so I went there to get a ticket to the ferry I would be taking the next day. The lady there spoke no English at all, so I ordered the ticket in Japanese. Everything went well and I felt quite accomplished :D

CATEGORY: Japan 2008 TAGS: ,


Three Days in Nagoya

DATE: Nov 29th, 2008


After Tokyo, I headed to my friend in Nagoya, who is living and studying in Japan for a year. The distance between Tokyo to Nagoya is 360 km, which took me two hours by shinkansen. It was a huge hassle with my big suitcase, but fortunately I could leave most of my stuff in Nagoya and use my friend’s smaller suitcase instead, which was so much more convenient.

I explored some of Nagoya… unfortunately the town itself isn’t that interesting. My friend and I also went to Nagoya castle, which was lovely. We also went inside, where they had objects from the olden days displayed. The view was nice too.

MOOMINOn the second night, my friends and me went to this reggae party… Unfortunately, when we were looking for a toilet, I ran after my friend, slipped and fell on my knees, which was really painful :( Apparently my crash was so loud that a man even left his… restaurant/kitchen? in order to give me a wet towel for my knees. Fortunately I didn’t really break or strain anything, but it was very painful and harder to walk, too.

The reggae party itself was a bit… funny. My friends wanted to arrive early, as soon as it started, but the artist, MOOMIN, only showed up after a few hours. It was pretty great though, and I danced along with my painful knees and ankles. Later, we went to this English pub which was full of (scary) foreigners.

CATEGORY: Japan 2008 TAGS: ,


In Tokyo

DATE: Nov 26th, 2008


Minami senju wakes up. From the doombridge at 7 am.So I started my holiday with five days in Tokyo, during which I met up with various friends, went shopping, and went to several areas to walk around. The second-hand CD stores were fabulous, sometimes with CDs for only a few hundred yen (a few euro) and I really had to tell myself not to buy too much, because it wouldn’t fit in my suitcase.

It felt great to be back, I already knew my way around from the previous time, was more confident with the language. The weather was lovely, at times I didn’t even need to wear a coat out, while my mom sent me a picture of snow in the Netherlands…

I also got the opportunity to eat more sorts of Japanese food and was less shy to enter a restaurant. INORAN.png.jpgAfter okinomiyaki, we had gyoza, sushi (of course), shabu-shabu and went to some other restaurants.

Also, I went out with my friends on a night, which was a lot of fun. Strangely, trains stop running around 12/1 o’clock in Tokyo. So I took the first train at 6 o’clock, which was totally crowded with lots of (scary) people.

On the 24th I attended the first concert of my stay in Japan, a solo concert of INORAN. The concert was absolutely great, and I guess I was really lucky that he happened to play in Tokyo while I was there :)

CATEGORY: Japan 2008 TAGS: ,


Japan 2008

DATE: Nov 21st, 2008


My second trip to Japan was kind of a “present” to myself. Mid-November I graduated, and two weeks later, I headed to Japan. This time, I would stay in the country for a full month, and would travel to the south/west of Japan. This time, I travelled by myself, but I would meet up with my Dutch friend in Tokyo, and stay with a friend of mine in Nagoya for a while.

This time, I flied with KLM from Amsterdam to Tokyo directly, which took 11 hours. I was lucky and there was no one sitting next to me on the plane, so I could stretch out and nap a little :D In the morning, I arrived in Tokyo. I took the train to central Tokyo, and somehow strange people just like to talk to me, because on the train this Chinese/German woman started to talk to me, in German. Speaking German wasn’t something I had been expecting in Tokyo…

I found my hotel pretty soon. This time I stayed in Aizuya Inn, a different one from the previous time that was a little more expensive, but was a bit bigger, cleaner and offered better facilities, such as various showers instead of two for the entire hotel. At the hotel, I also picked up my rental phone, which would prove to be very useful during my stay. Not only could I call and email my friends, but I could also easily update my Twitter account.

After I took a shower in the hotel and rested a bit, I went off again, to meet up with my friend for dinner in Shinjuku. We had okinomiyaki, which was quite good :) Afterwards, we went to meet up with another friend of us and went to a few bars. It was a lot of fun, but I was still pretty dead from the long plane flight, so I already went back to the hotel around ten. The Shinjuku area was amusing to me again, with lots of host looking like copies of each other and the usual group of transvestites at a street corner XD

CATEGORY: Japan 2008 TAGS: ,


France 2007

DATE: Jul 5th, 2007


In July 2007, I went to the Japan Expo in France, mostly for work. Because I am far from interested in anime and manga, plus my “company” was rather crap, I decided to go and do some sightseeing myself. I took the subway and went to Notre Dame and the Louvre.

CATEGORY: France 2007 TAGS: ,


Asakusa & Last Day

DATE: Aug 15th, 2006


The area we were in, Minami-senju was near Asakusa, which is famous for its temples. It was a 20 minute walk from our hotel, but because of the heat we took longer. At the temples, we got our future predicted. They have a special system for that, you insert 100 yen into a box, then take a… can with lots of small, numbered sticks, shake the can until one stick falls out, look at the number and open the drawer with the same number to get a note with your future prediction.

My note said several things, such as “the sick person won’t get better soon,” but also “travelling will be worrisome” so I was about to pee my pants because we would be flying soon… It also said that my “target deer was running very far away, no one knew it could run that far”, but in the end I would get it :D

The following day was our very last one… We weren’t sure about what to do, so we decided to go to Yokohama. In a CD store there, I purchased a very rare demo tape of Jinkaku Radio, which was super-expensive but completed my collection :D

So, the next day we flied home. First back to Russia where the people were very rude and everything was rather confusing, then back to Paris, and the day after, back to the Netherlands.

In the end, I had a great holiday. I definitely want to go back to Japan again, to see some more of the North, but also of Kyoto because I quite liked that town and there’s so much to see. I definitely do not regret spending so much money on this trip and I can’t wait until the next time…

CATEGORY: Japan 2006 TAGS: ,


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