Monday 27 December 2010

3 weeks since my last post. Being a student (I've had to write two papers, one after the other) has gotten in the way of experiencing Japan.. Especially now that I've moved to a dorm less than 10 minutes walk from campus and taking the train isn't a necessity. But it's winter break now and Jenn and Hannah (also from Kent Uni and doing an exchange year, but in Kansai Gaidai) are in Tokyo for a few weeks!! So I get to play tourist again :)

On Thursday we met up in Akihabara and wandered around. It's so tall. Two thirds of the buildings are either electronics shops or arcades. すごい! To get to this brightly coloured area you take the exit out of Akihabara Station to 'Electric City' and it does live up to it's nickname. Two thirds of the buildings are for stores selling electronics (in every sense of the word), or anime and manga merchandise, games arcades, old games and maid cafes! Down the side streets are small shops selling computer parts and half of the goods they're selling are in boxes and baskets stacked outside the shop, because the shops themselves are so small. They are so space efficient here in Japan. You can find restaurants that are only slightly wider than the length of my arm span. Shops are also stacked one on to another without the result being a small shopping centre but more like a departmented office block, perhaps. My favourite place to eat is beneath the home of the people that run it.  Upstairs there is only a curtain that separates the restaurant from the family kitchen.

Anyways, back to the excursion. After stopping in a Tully's Cafe by the station for somewhere to warm up - the day had started off very warm but windy, and it gets much colder in the evenings, we walked to where they're staying. I'm not sure how long the walk took because I enjoyed their company so, but you can check on a map: we walked from Akihabara Station to near Kikukawa Station. Along the way we walked past a restaurant that had a large hairy pig hung outside, behind a cage (I'm not sure whether it was real but in the dark it looked like a giant rat), and a shop that sold sumowrestler-sized clothing! Oh :)

The next day, Friday, Christmas eve, we met outside Toyokawa Inari. A mixed Shinto and Buddhist shrine with many statues of foxes wearing red bibs and, because foxes are believed to be good for business and Akasaka is an office building hub so there were many red banners showing who or which businesses have sponsored the shrine. [Photos to be added.] Afterwards we made our way towards Hie Jinja, stopping outside a koban to eat lunch under the trees (that were tagged with ID labels) on the way. I'd bought a curry pan and ate that, Jenn brought home made onigiri and trail mix (this was simply peanuts and raisins, but it's really any mix of dried fruit and nuts and it makes a great snack to help you last the day) and I don't remember what Hannah had.. By this time it'd gotten quite cold, so much so that Hannah needed to put her gloves on while I was determined to hold out since it was still only the afternoon.

Hie Jinja is where I went with some people in the first few weeks of arriving here and saw a show on a night of the full moon; I think I'd told you about that. It looked different to the first visit. Not only because there were no rows of seats for an audience and no stage for a performance, plus it was late evening when I went the first time, but I'm sure there wasn't as much gravel and more bamboo. In the centre of the enclosure a portal had been erected. Like the torii, it signified that we were entering a special place (except we came in through the side entrance and not the main). We saw one man turn around and bow to the main building as he passed through the portal on his way out and he turned again to bow after stepping outside the gate. We couldn't see into the main building because a thin curtain black curtain had been put up but you could see there was something going on. There were a few people, including a young woman in a kimono, sitting around something, and there was drumming.

We left by the main gate and stepped out into the sunshine! Because Akasaka is mostly tall, shiny buildings, we were in the shade most of the time, and so I had to stretch my arms out and bask while I could and whenever there was a gap between the blocks. From here we walked to Tokyo Tower. On the way we saw two shrines, a shop selling samurai armour (take that as you will), plenty of coffee shops, government buildings, a red-brick building.. Nothing particularly interesting.

still to come:
- Tokyo Tower
- illuminations at Roppongi
- dinner at Tendon Tenya
- celebrating Christmas by going out for all-night karaoke
- photos (*headdesk*)

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