Monday, 16 April 2012

Day 14: The long day home

We were packed and primed last night, clothes all laid out for the 5:30am alarm. As we had a large and steep hill to climb with a fair few steps, I left plenty of time for me to carry both bags to the station. So much time, in fact, that we caught the train before the one we were aiming for. This set us in good stead and we caught earlier connections all the way into Tokyo.

Here, however, we realised we were on a reserved carriage of a train and went out on to the platform to try to find a non-reserve one. At this point we found that the airport express was all reserved seats, and although they were mostly empty, Emily didn't want to risk getting caught on the train. We watched it pull out of the station to find the following train of the same type was over a half hour later.

I therefore got on the next train going in the right direction and we sat on two commuter trains for almost two hours before arriving at the station. It didn't overly matter in the end as we were in plenty of time for our flight.

I have photos today of Rolf at the departure gate and watching a film on the in flight entertainment system.


I would have enjoyed the flight more if the short lady in the seat in front of me hadn't reclined her chair fully. This meant that in order to see the seat back TV screen I had to slump way down in my seat and stick both legs out into the isle to avoid colour distortion on the LCD. In the process I nearly tripped up several cabin crew, a number to adults passing and the group of young children who were running up and down the isles, over and over again. The latter I might not have minded so much as they were getting a little annoying after the 5th or 6th time past.

On landing we made our way out to passport control and I queued up in the e-passport gate, only to find that the technology was so bad that the normal queue had completely emptied by the time I got a few paces forward, therefore I went to give my passport to a person. So much for automated facial recognition technology...

That, my friends, is where I'll leave you for now. Hopefully you'll be able to join Rolf's global adventures at some point in the not to distant future!

Until then, goodbye.


:)

Sunday, 15 April 2012

Day 13: Hakone


Breakfast today was a bit of an adventure by itself. We trundled upstairs in our slippers (which really don't stay on going up stairs whilst wearing socks!) to find a place set with smoked fish (butterflied and whole), various tofu things, fermented beansprouts, miso soup, a vegetable soup thing and rice. Needless to say, Emily ate mostly rice with a bit of vegetable for breakfast.

We were banking on the weather clearing a little, as the reports suggested it might, for today's outing, sadly that didn't really happen. We saw bits of blue sky briefly in passing but it was mostly overcast. That spoilt the chances of us getting the classic view from Hakone, out over mount Fuji. The cloud wasn't much higher than the peaks of the local mountains (1400m ish) and the combination of switchback railway, fernicular railway and cable car took us up high enough to realise this.

The first peak is an geothermally active site too, there are "famous eggs" that come from here, having been cooked in the hot spring water high on the mountain top. These are then sent down to the road via a little cable car big enough for a box full of cooked eggs. At the top here I also tried a wasabi flavoured ice cream. One of the more odd culinary experiences of the trip...

It was in the cable car here that we found giant apples and Rolf is pictured next to them. They are almost bigger than he is!


Further down in the cable car and we reached Lake Ashi. From here were got on one of the warship themed sight seeing boats to the other end of the lake. We stopped for lunch, me eating a japanese deef fried beef burger type thing (it looked like a fish cake from the model outside, once I saw the english description I decided to have it anyway) and Emily once again ate katsu curry.



From here is was a short walk to a reconstructed outpost, as was on the same spot during the Edo period. After visiting this and a small museum, we walked through a cedar tree lined path to the other ferry port at this end of the lake for the journey back to our hotel.

On the way back we tried to visit the Hakone Open Air Museum but we were a few minutes too late to get the last entry time. We had a look in the shop, bought a few bits and bobs and returned to the train station to get the next train down the hill.

We've an early start in the morning but will post the final entry on return to the UK.

Home tomorrow!

Saturday, 14 April 2012

Day 12: Trains, trains and er.. trains.


Most of today was spent sat on train between Hiroshima and Hakone nation park, where you find us now. I'm afraid there is nothing much else to report. We arrived at the Ryokan we are staying about 3:30pm, having left the hotel in Hiroshima 6 hours earlier.

Rolf is pictured next to one of the Shinkansen (bullet) trains we caught today from Osaka in this direction.

(Photo to follow, no internet connection in the room)

Dinner this evening was a set menu from the residence. The starters including octupus tenticles and a small fish were left to one side. Whereas they were referred to on the menu as an appetizer, they were quite the opposite in my book. At least, unlike the Koreans, the Japanese like their seafood dead! The deep fried conga eel tasted quite like haddock from a chippy, which pleased me a little, seeing as they are the ugliest things I think I've seen in an aquarium.

Luckily there was enough other foods so that Emily could eat a full meal too.

Tomorrow will be a fuller day of doing things. I'm not sure you really want to hear about the book I'm reading or the Professor Layton game I finished while travelling.

Enough for now.

Friday, 13 April 2012

Day 11: Miyajima

We woke today to the soft sound of passing trains from our 10th floor room overlooking the station. After breakfast we set out towards Mijajimaguchi on the train, from where we would catch a ferry over to the island.

Once ashore we walked out of the terminal face to face with my mortal enemy, the Japanese deer. I went to say hello, but it grabbed a corner of the map I was holding and started chewing on it. Looking less than impressed I backed away slowly, lest it have more of my map of the island. The photo below wasn't taken of my map, but another group of tourists who had suffered the same fate.



At this point it started raining. Slightly unfortunately for us, I'd not looked at the local forecast for over 24 hours and was going on the last look, suggesting sunshine all day. Sadly for me, my personal raincloud was hovering. It had clearly seen me pack suncream this morning in my day bag.

We proceed to walk around the 5 story pagoda and then the water temple, even though we were still an hour or so from high tide. As we are on neaps at the moment, the tide may not have flooded the temple area even if we had waited for it. The temple stands behind the most famous sight of the island, the floating gate. It is here that Rolf is pictured today.


We then made our way through the rain to the Aquarium. Here we saw lots of fish (can you tell I'm tired and want to stop writing yet?), I patted a penguin and we both took lots of photos of very cute short clawed otters. On exiting this was walked back through the rain and located the 'Hall of Treasures'. 30 seconds later we'd seen aforementioned treasures and were back heading for the ferry home. This took us through the tat bizarre streets, each shop was selling exactly the same as the one next door, for the same price. It was rather odd, they had the same stock, just laid out in a different way.

In the middle of this was a big spoon.



From there we were back to the ferry and train to the hotel. We ate out in the station tonight, having "the famous Japanese pancake". So famous in fact, that neither Emily or I had heard of it.

Now we sit drinking beer in the hotel room looking at the lights shining in the windows.

Tomorrow will mostly be spent sat on a train.

I'm not sure I'll have internet connectivity until I get home. IF not, I'll post everything on arrival home on Monday. For now, tata.

Thursday, 12 April 2012

Day 10: Hiroshima

Emily suggested I call today's post "A day of contrasts", but I felt I'd leave it as it is.

We were woken early by the trampling and clattering of a large number of people sliding wooden doors as they got up. There was a Buddhist prayer session at 6:30am that we were invited to attend and were both awake long before this due to the aforementioned noise. We chose to use the time to try to grab a little more sleep before our 7:30am breakfast time. Sadly after 15 minutes we were woken by a monk trying to bring us breakfast early. Thankfully he was a little apologetic and came back for the 7:30 time we'd said the night before. By this point we were up and dressed in the gowns provided, with our bedding folded to one side.

Breakfast consisted of an array of bean curd related things, pickles and rice. Rather nice, with less uncertainty as to the origin of the foods on offer as there was for dinner last night.

Once finished we packed and left for the bus stop, or at least we tried to but Emily made a detour via the ladies, causing us to miss the bus we needed to get to the intended train. Slightly concerned that this might put out all of our connections we waited for the next bus to take us to the top of the funicular railway down the mountain. Thankfully the next train down the hill managed to get us to the same connecting train at the bottom as we were originally meant to catch, panic averted.

After several changes we eventually arrived in Hiroshima and checked into the hotel. It was from here that I made the slightly frustrated post on Facebook regarding the quite frankly ridiculous charge to use the internet in the hotel. How it can possibly justify this as an extra on top of what we must be paying (for what is a rather nice room all things said).

We then left the hotel and headed for the Shukkeien Park. These formal gardens have a surround a small lake and through the entrance we were greeted by a lovely colourful set of trees in full bloom. We walked around the lake and passed at least three pairs of newly weds having their photos taken at various points and in and around the cherry blossom.

From here we made our way to the castle. It is similar in construction to those we had seen previously from the outside, steep angular walls surrounded by a moat. Inside it has a wooden castle, similar to that in Matsumoto. This, however, is a replica of the one that stood there prior to 1945.

It was a short walk from the castle to the A-Bomb dome, a gutted but preserved building on one edge of the Aioi bridge, the target site for the dropped bomb. It survived destruction due to it's position very close to the site of the aerial detonation of the weapon. The force from the explosion was downwards and the concrete clad iron structure withheld this blast, where most wooden buildings were crushed and burnt. I have to say, I found this building far more eerie than the kilometres of cemetery we walked through only last night.

We then walked over Aioi bridge and took the photo of Rolf looking back here.


This is the northern entrance to the Peace Park which leads down to the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum. In here a number of exhibits walk you through the events leading up to the fateful moment (8:15am August 6th 1945) in which 70,000 people were killed instantly, and would lead to the deaths of a further similar amount over the following months and years. The museum is moving and contains very graphic examples of the random destruction of this kind of warfare.

As the sun set, we walked back towards the hotel, once against passing the dome, this time taking photos of it silhouetted against the colours in the sky. A brief stop for food later and we hopped on a tram back to the hotel.

Tomorrow we head to Miyajima.

Wednesday, 11 April 2012

Day 8: Koyasan


After much packing the night before, we started today early but ready to go. After a fight through the breakfast buffet queues we were checking out and sending our luggage on to Hiroshima ahead of our over night stop in Mount Koya. The luggage service is about as much as a couple of train station lockers and given that we had 10 trains to catch between Kyoto and Hiroshima, via Koyasan we thought it best.

Koyasan is the spiritual home of the Shingon school of Buddhism in Japan. Founded in the 8th century AD, it is home to a large number of monastries and temples, many of which have opened their doors to visitors and provide a simple room and food.

Wrapped up against the cooler air and gentle rain, we set off out to explore the sights of the area and wondered into Goran, the most prominant temple complex and site of the original monastry. After a short while a ceremony started involving a large number of colourfully dressed monks and an elderly monk brought in on a sedan chair. There were also what appeared to be a large number of trainee monks outside too.

Following the elderly noks arrival a cup of green tea wasvery ceremoniously made on the steps of the temple opposite, witnessed by around a hundred onlookers. This tea was then taken into the depths of the other temple, presumably for the venerated old man deep within.

All of this seemed quite exciting but we have no idea who the man was, or what was going on. It seemed to mean something to everyone else. We toured the headquarters of the school after lunch. Rolf is pictured in the rock gardens of these buildings.



On leaving here we checked into our residence. The room is quite simple at first sight, but was much larger than I was expecting. This was based on the similar experiance I had in Korea, where the room was just large enough for my bag and a single matress on the floor.

After this we made our way to the cemetory at the other end of town. This is where the founder of the school is said to be in eternal meditation. The desire to be buried near him is so strong that the cemetory extends almost 2km in one direction, and 1.3km in another back towards town from his mausoleum. We passed several areas set aside for the fallen in wars (on both sides) including the invasion of Korea in the mid fifteen hundreds. On the way out we passed several plots owned by large companies (Nissan for example) who allow their employees ashes to be interned there.

This evening we returned to our residence just in time to be served our meal. I was expecting something very simple, having been told it would be a vegetarian meal, but was surprised at the variety and volume of food.

Next up, Hiroshima.

Until then, goodnight.

Tuesday, 10 April 2012

Day 7: Oh Deer!

Well... I'm going to say this first. Today, I was bitten on the bum by a deer. There we go. Now I can start from the beginning.

We started the day a little later than was planned but we knew that the trains to Uji and Nara were local and frequent anyway. When I said villages yesterday... I meant more small industrial towns really, Kyoto has a kinda of urban sprawl which seems to extend most of the way south to these places. Nara was, at one point, the capital of the country for a short number of years, and has always been closely linked to the Kyoto seat of power.

The main attractions in the town are the pagodas and the temple, reportedly the largest wooden structure on the planet, holding a giant brass Buddha. These are a reasonable walk from the train station and as you reach the larger of the two pagodas (5 stories rather than 3) you first meet the wild deer that roam the parks around this end of town. When I say wild... they are very used to humans as they live in a tourist attraction, but there are signs up saying to be careful as they do bite, kick, charge and butt.

On the way through an area of park we passed a man selling "deer cookies". These appear to be disc shaped rice cakes, or something similar. Unbeknownst to me, the deer in the area know very well what it means when someone new approaches this stand, and as I turned round, 4 had appeared right in front of me expectantly. I had to first get the paper wrapping from the discs of food and to stop being barged by the hungry deer, I decided to start walking away from them. It was at this point I felt a sharp nip on my behind. It seems as if one of the deer took umbridge to the length of time I was taking to open the food parcel and decided to hurry me along!

After handing out the discs and beating a hasty retreat the bite / slobber mark on my posterior was photographed for... posterity.

Rolf is pictured today near to the feeding spot, with a deer who considered that Rolf might be food himself not long after I took the photo.


After this we went onwards to the temple. Mostly with Emily crying with laughter at my misfortune. The building is huge and incredibly impressive. Inside is a large bronze Buddha flanked by two large golden Buddhavistas. In the rear right of the building, there is a narrow channel carved into the base of one of the supporting pillars. It is said that passing through this will reserve a place in heaven for you. Obviously I saw the small hole and thought "I can fit through that". Apparently I can, just, maybe not gracefully and certainly not under my own steam in a reasonable amount of time... With my feet dangling out of one end, my arms pointed straight out of the other and my ribcage squashed on all side by a large pillar, I wasn't moving very fast and it took a man whose wife was next in the queue to pull me through! It seems that I am officially the largest person able to reserve their place in heaven by this manner.

From there we went back to the train station and headed for Uji. This is home to a temple featured on the 10 Yen coin. The temple was very impressive but I feel that I was flagging somewhat and also suffering from temple fatigue. Having seen many over the past few days, they are mostly rolling into one in my memory.

This evening we ate a rather nice meal at the French restaurant here in the hotel. We were looking for something simple, but it turns out that the hotel doesn't do room service.

I'm up in the mountains tomorrow so might not post until the day after.

Tata for now :)

Monday, 9 April 2012

Day 6: Calligraphy in Saihoji

Last night was the first night I'd slept right through until gone 7am since arrival here in Japan and I'm feeling quite happy about that.

After breakfast we hopped on a subway down to Kyoto station then an overland train to Arashiyama. Here we went to the Tenryu temple and walked around the inside of the buildings looking out over the gardens. By the time we'd finished this we realised we'd have to head over to Saihoji before getting to wonder the gardens of Tenryu. Luckily we knew that they would be both on the way back and still open later in the day.

To get into Saihoji you have to book in advance, by written correspondence apparently, and the tour company had done this for us. Unfortunately we had not brought the reservation card with us, but the monk at the gate managed to find their copy of the card with my name on it, with my passport to hand confirming I was me, we were let in. I do now recall being shown the card for the visit on arrival at Narita, but it was a bit of a blur at the time and everything was left in the 2nd folder of information we had been given.

Once inside we were seated on the floor in the temple with a small table and a calligraphy brush and ink to the side. We were to trace the kanji characters of a buddhist sutra (prayer) out onto the paper provided. I started out trying to be as neat as possible but soon realised that it was going to take me all day. I managed to keep mostly neat, once I'd worked out the directionality of my brush strokes to get the right shapes for the characters. I was planning to get a photo of Rolf painting some characters, but photography wasn't allowed in the temple itself. Therefore he is in the blossom of a tree just outside.



The temple is also known as moss temple, for the moss gardens surrounding it. After a brief lunch of noddles we hopped on a bus and returned to the gardens of Tenryu temple. It started raining briefly (for the first time since we've been in the country) while we were in the gardens, but that didn't last for long. To date we've needed sun ream more than rain coats, although that is forecast to change on Wednesday.

This evening we heading back into town and went in search of somewhere to eat from the rough guide book. After failing to locate the place we were after, we stopped in a small cafe like eatery tucked in a large arcade of shops. The food was simple but quite filling, exactly what I was after. We then walked through to the large gate in the Gion area of the city before heading back to the street we'd visited a couple of days before, where the geisha can sometimes be found and onwards, back to the hotel.

Tomorrow we head out of town again to two nearby villages. I'll let you know how that goes!


Sunday, 8 April 2012

Day 5: UNESCO sites in Kyoto

Today started rather a lot earlier than I would have hoped, with Emily coughing fit forcing her to go look for water, turning on the room lights as she did so. A brief fight with the air condition controls (in mostly in Japanese on the instructions) later I managed to get back to sleep.

When we did get up we headed up to the Kinkaku-ji Temple by bus. We bought a day bus pass from the concierge of the hotel but sadly the first bus I got us on was from the wrong company and we had to pay the full fare to get off. After that I used the guide we got with the day pass, rather than the bus route map on my city map.

The temple is known as the golden temple for fairly obvious reasons. After we'd fought through the crowds of people trying to take their own photos in front of the temple we strolled around the gardens and out to the next temple of the morning. Ryoan-ji Temple is famed for its rock and gravel Zen garden. The garden itself was a little underwhelming, mostly because of the pushing crowds trying to get a peek at the rather small area of gravel with its moss and rock islands. The third temple of the day was Ninna-ji. This has a huge ceremonial gate outside and houses the former royal palace. It is in the grounds of this, with the pagoda backdrop where we find Rolf today.


From here we got the bus back into town and went directly to the Nijo-jo, the main castle in the city. This is a  large square double moated affair with huge surrounding walls. It is a rather imposing structure but still not what most people in the UK would refer to as a castle. Inside were the former home of the shogun, and a set of formal gardens.

From here we set off on foot to the nearby imperial gardens and from there to dinner at a restaurant recommended by Audley. Cunningly we ended up sat on the same table as two other couples also travelling with Audley. It seems that they like to stress how good the fillet steak at this place is. And it really is.

Saturday, 7 April 2012

Day 4: A bullet to Kyoto

Today began as the alarm went off to get us up for the 9am train, I'm not going to deny being awake for several hours due to my sleeping pattern not quite aligning with the time zone, but I'll you don't need to know this.

Breakfast was an array of buffet options including sushi and a display of tofu. I plumped for a little Japanese breakfast, sausage and bacon and a croissant. Perfectly suitable in my opinion.

We made our way to the train for the first leg of the journey to Nagoya, a 2hr 30min train ride through hills and valleys to a fairly bland city seemingly in the middle of nowhere. From there we boarded a shinkansen (bullet train) to Kyoto. The distance was about the same as the first part of the leg but it took us only 45 minutes to do the second half. Rolf is pictured in front of a train similar to the one we rode.


On arrival in Kyoto we made our way to the hotel to dump bags and then outwards to the temples that were due to be visited this afternoon. A hop on the subway later and we were out into the edge of Kyoto and walking along a randomly chosen path (me thinking let's go this way) following a water channel, into the edge of the first temple. It happened to be shut from the 1st to the 11th of April so we left via the (*massive*) ceremonial gate, heading for the first open temple.

This was indeed open and a walk around it, the sculpted gardens and the exterior later we were on our way to the "philosopher's path". This path is a 2km ish long path leading between two temples, alongside a canal planted with cherry trees along the whole length. The first few hundred meters of trees were not yet in bloom but upon rounding the next corner we saw the views that the tourist guide books harp on about. Every few seconds we had to get out of the way of yet another Japanese tourist taking photos of themselves with the, or just of the cherry blossom. Many people were carrying camera equipment that would make even me look very amateur...

At the end of the path was the Silver temple; known as such as it was intended to be painted in silver, until those building it ran out of money. It has a very large ceremonial garden though, including several raked sand/gravel gardens. They are very impressive to look at, but seem to be ready to be mashed to bits by a heavy rain shower.

Towards the end of the day we walked down to the area known for the geisha and stopped here for dinner. A couple of beers and jugs of hot sake later we wobbled out, back through the tourist trap area and out to get a subway back to the hotel.

Friday, 6 April 2012

Day 3: Matsumoto Castle

Today started with our first of many packing sessions, followed by another slightly odd breakfast (today salad, burgers, croissants and something yellow that might have been scrambled egg). Our train left just past 9am and we managed to fight our way through the crowds at the station to find the right platform and hop aboard. Changing at Shinjuku we boarded our first express train heading for Matsumoto.

On arrival we picked up some bread products from a bakery and headed to the hotel. The bakery is what could only be described as French inspired, and served everything from curry doughnuts to the hotdog tortilla I had as part of my lunch.

We then made our way up to the main tourist attraction of Matsumoto, the castle. Set in two rings of moats and rising 5 visible stories high, it is a quite impressive wood and stone structure. We took photos from around the edge of the castle first, then went inside. At one point we were delayed a little, along with around 7 or 8 others trying to take this photo, while two girls took repeated photos of themselves in the middle of the bridge in the foreground. After about 5 minutes of us all stood patiently waiting for them to pass, one of the others decided to go and point out that a group of people were waiting for them to get out of the way...

The castle has very steeply wooden inside stairs and gave a decent view out over the quite dull looking urban surrounds up until the mountains that ring city.

Rolf is pictured in the grounds of the castle...



This evening we went out for a meal in which I had my first sashimi of the trip and Emily tried sushi for the first time ever. Ok, so she only had a plate of cucumber rolls but you have to start somewhere... It seems that her sushi tasting may have also finished there, with her not getting on with either the wasabi in the rolls, or the seaweed that wraps it. She did eat at least 5 of the rolls (she hastens to add). Thankfully the rest of her meal consisted of more tempura vegetables.

Thursday, 5 April 2012

Day 2: Kamakura Temples

Today started quite early as I think I have over shot with my sleeping adjustments after a quite interesting breakfast of salad, sausages, miso soup and croissants we walked over to the train station for our trip out to Kamakura.

The town is "home of the Samurai" and also home to a large number of Buddhist temples. At the first of these I was accosted by an elderly man. At first he seemed to be begging but on listening to him it turned out that he had been learning English for the last 4 years and only wanted to receive a letter from someone in English.

We toured several temples during the day, as they were spread out we had a moderate amount of walking to do, including quite a lot of up and downhill to cover.

For lunch we stopped off at a small place selling sausage-inna-bun (that's a Pratchett reference for those who don't know). Emily had a "Pizza sausage", which had a vein of cheese running down the middle and was strongly tomato flavoured. Apparently very nice.

After taking the hiking trail down into Hase we stopped at the Big Buddha. This is where Rolf is pictured today.

From there we hopped on a small local train and then back on the mainline train to Tokyo where we went and had a look at the Imperial palace as the sun set. We then made our way to the restaurant we'd booked last night and ate a rather nice meal. I've had neither sushi, nor sashimi while here yet but I plan to change that when we find somewhere suitable. I had some pan fried scallops and half a plate of vegetable tempura and Emily a pork soup and tofu thing and the rest of the tempura.

After that it was a nice stroll back to the hotel where I promptly fell asleep while trying to look at the photos I'd taken.

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Day 1: Cherry Blossom



We arrived this morning not long before 10am local time, or about 2am BST having not really slept. I watched films most of the night although the in-flight entertainment system did have a habit of freezing every 10 minutes, resulting in much rewinding to get back to where I'd left off.

The breakfast this morning was served a couple of hours after a pizza based thing, which would have been a late night snack for anyone still on UK time. I've included a photo of it, just so I can show the hash Beige that I was given.


On arrival we were met by a man who walked us through changing our Japan rail voucher gave us a fistful of more information and put us on a bus into the city.

On arrival at out hotel we were looking forward to a nice shower before heading out for the rest of the day, only to find that we couldn't check in until 3pm, so we left our main bags with them and went off to explore the city.

Our first stop was the gardens behind our hotel, followed by the national gardens at Shinjuku Gyoen on the other side of town. The cherry blossom isn't fully in bloom at the moment but it is getting that way for many varieties. Photos can be found here.

From there we headed down to Roppongi to the "Tokyo City View" where we watched the sun set over the mountains to the West from the 52nd floor of the skyscraper. From there we headed over to a restaurant that Audley had recommended for us to try, sadly they were full but we have booked a table for tomorrow.

From there it was back to the hotel via actually finding some food that Emily would eat. Most places have signs outside only in Japanese, even though they might have English menus they tend not to advertise the fact.

On arrival at the hotel I managed to nod off before my photos had finished copying off my camera! It had been quite a long day.

I'll get Rolf photos from tomorrow ;-)

Day 0: Underway

Rolf is travelling luggage class today on the outbound flight... I'll make sure he's in my hand luggage from now on! Today's photo is of Finland as far as I can tell from our in flight system.

I was worried that the massive load of Japanese school children on the plane with us would be kicking up merry hell, but they appear to be rather quiet. Mostly sleeping. Possibly quite sensible given that we arrive in 9 hours and it will be 9am in Tokyo.


Monday, 2 April 2012

Day -1: Packing...

Welcome back to Rolf's intrepid adventures. It has been almost a year since his return from the round the world trip and I feel it is time to take him long once more!

Due to the tsunami last year I did not get to visit Japan (other than the inside of Narita airport) and as such, on being told of the ending of my contract a few weeks ago, I immediately hatched a plan to return. Hopefully this will coincide with the peak cherry blossom season in most of Japan too!

Packing is now mostly done. Trip planning is... well, Audley have done most of that for me so I've not thought about it. I know we are going to be under our own steam on trains around the country but I'm sure we can manage!

Hopefully I might be able to write some more coherent posts in the days to come. This is all a bit new to me once again.