Friday, February 15, 2008

seriously mia [2008.02.15]

It's been a while, I guess.  I've been sort of running all over the place, so you will have to forgive my slacking in the writing department.  Here's the rundown.

Christina came right after Christmas, and we traveled from Tokyo down to Kyoto and then on to Hiroshima on the shinkansen (bullet train).  Tokyo was hectic, of course, but I finally made it to the Dragonfly Cafe, something that my friend Nathan got us all set on doing when we were in Tokyo for orientation and got there right as it closed.  It was really classy with amazing food.  I tried to go there with my Pops later but it was closed, making me 1 for 3, but that's jumping ahead.

Kyoto was our New Year's stop, and we stayed in two different ryokan (traditional Japanese inns).  The first ryokan was a smaller affair run by an old couple, and it had a really warm welcoming feeling, even if the temperature was not so warm inside.  The second one was more impersonal, but we got to experience the crazy kaiseki ryori dinner (fancy Japanese haute cuisine) that the smaller place just wasn't equipped to handle.  The room maids just kept bringing out all these myriad little dishes that literally covered the whole table.  It was nuts.

If you're curious, New Year's was spent watching K1 Fighting on TV, partially due to our first ryokan's midnight curfew.  It was nice though, taking a relaxing soak in the really really hot bath and then just kind of chilling.

Overall Kyoto was pretty awesome, especially Fushimi Inari Taisha, which was swarmed with people New Year's Day who were making the first shrine visit of the year.  It was great to go back to Hiroshima too, even though none of the restaurants that I wanted to go to ended up working out.  There was a random tapas place though, of all things.  I miss my friends in Madrid, haha.

Now Dad is here in Oshima after I met him in Tokyo and we went up to Sapporo in Hokkaido for their Snow Festival.  What started with a few college students who were then joined by soldiers from the Self Defense Forces has become a festival attended by more than 2 million people from all over the world.  They had huge snow sculptures created by large organizations, including several units of the SDF, as well as a whole variety of smaller ones created by teams in competition.

So lots of crazy traveling and good times were had by all.  Tomorrow we're going to the Nagasaki Lantern Festival, which basically amounts to a big Chinese New Year celebration.  No pictures of any of that stuff is really online yet, but there's some sort of recent random Christmas ones and some from a visit to Kumamoto in the usual place (flickr).

I'll try go get back to being on point in the near future.  Oh, and I turned in my papers a few weeks ago, so I will officially be coming home in August.  I like my job, and I love the people, but I miss everyone back home too much to stay another year.

heavily delayed future love,

-greg.

ps: can something from the future really be late?

1 comment:

Slotzy said...

Hey Greg - as noted on a past comment - I was a JET on Oshima 10 years ago - and would be very interested to touch base with you to see if any of my old friends are still there - at schools, Board of Ed, shipyard (I tutored there quite a bit). Ping me at slotzy44@hotmail.com and would love to find out who if anybody still on the island....