Thursday, December 30, 2010

Christmas and New Years in Japan

There hasn't been much time for a blog post over the last three weeks with the traveling and celebrating I've been doing with Carly. The chain of events started on December 22nd, when I hopped on the shinkansen after work to get to Yokohama to spend Christmas with Carly. We spent four days together there sightseeing and exploring further in Yokohama, making an excursion to Tokyo and Tokyo Disneyland, and fixing up some Christmas treats to enjoy during the grand exchange of gifts with family over skype. Then back to Kyoto we came, together, and since, have been enjoying the state of having nothing to do but relax.

Carly and me at the aka-renga in Yokohama enjoying the Christmas land.

From her own exploring, Carly has come across an American-type convenience store in Yokohama that sells pre-brewed coffee in 12- and 16-oz cups, the simple pleasure not normally found in Japan unless you're willing to buy Starbucks. Imagine Wawa or 7-11 coffee. They have 7-11s in Japan, but don't sell coffee in this way. Oh, how we enjoyed walking the streets with a 125¥ coffee in our cold hands. We had a nice lunch here, too, of sandwiches and noodles.

This is the aka-renga in Yokohama, which means "red brick." Shopping boutiques make up the entire interior of the old buildings initially built for something having to do with shipping or immigration since it's right on the water. But now it's a place for fun, like ice-skating in the winter.

Japanese Santa Claus made an appearance!

We enjoyed some mulled wine, German Christmas stollen, and viewings of the decorated trees here by the water. Then we had a photo op by the Christmas tree.



We had a cinnamon stick to stir the mulled wine.




That night I made some eggnog that was not as tasty as it looked, but it looked festive.

Carly's tree in Yokohama sent by her Uncle Lee in Arizona. Thanks, Lee! It made the holiday.

The next day being the 24th, Christmas Eve, we were determined to set out into Tokyo to see the lights, seasonal decorations, and maybe do a little shopping if we saw something irresistible.

This ad almost looks too beautiful to be for a department store. It looked rather English to us.

The Ginza (shopping district) in Tokyo at Christmastime.

1990's era Christmas album cover.

After a lunch at Subway, we were off to Tokyo Disneyland, to make Carly's (and my) dreams come true in seeing Mickey and the gang in Christmas garb. Tokyo Disney is only a 30-minute subway ride outside the city center.

Massive Christmas tree at the entrance to the park.

Carly and me waiting in line to ride the "It's a Small World" boat tour ride.

We caught the 3:40 "Let it Snow" parade in the park, which featured classic Christmas and Disney characters like Santa, Rudolph, Mickey, Goofy, giant Christmas cookies, many elves...

A Japanese Christmas elf.

...and aliens... Those Japanese sure are creative when it comes to Christmas. That being said, it was a wildly entertaining parade. There were a few foreigners dressed up in the parade to look like the real deal for characters like Snow White and Alice from Alice in Wonderland. It was always Carly's dream to be featured as a Disney character at Tokyo Disney, and Belle was always her go-to. But we saw no Belle, and decided that they just hadn't found the right foreigner to play her, indicating that the position was still waiting for Carly.



One advantage to being a foreigner at this parade was that we stood out to Santa! He waved right at Carly, as if to say, "Yes, friend, I, too, am a foreigner in this strange land."

After the parade, we rode the Mark Twain steamboat ride, and nothing was so beautiful that day as these American flags. For just a moment, as the rest of the park disappeared around the bend during the ride, it seemed as though we were actually back in the States.



The Disney Castle all lit up as we were leaving the park.

The next day was Christmas! The day was filled with our gift exchange, skyping with family, and eating treats we had fixed or those that had been left over from Car's Christmas party the week before.



Carly tearing into one of her gifts from me, a luggage set she had seen in Kyoto.

On the 26th, we rode back to Kyoto. Carly wore her kimono that she received from her mother for Christmas. She was quite beautiful.



Dreams coming true in this picture.

On the shinkansen.

Car showing off her flexibility and yoga poses.

And then, on New Years Eve day, after five days of not much doing, it snowed for the first time in Kyoto! We went out to go grocery shopping and to take pictures.



One of the most beautiful streets in my neighborhood.


On New Years day, as is tradition in Japan, Carly and I ventured out to the nearest Shinto shrine to get some good luck for the coming year. It's a real festival at shrines, with people praying to kami, getting their new year's fortune told, eating delish vendor food, and taking pictures. It was Carly's dream to visit in a kimono, so we got her all dressed that morning, and I in my suit, and we trudged through the snow to Shimogamo shrine.



A true beauty!





I was somewhat disappointed to get a fortune foretelling "small luck" for me. Carly got "big luck." An example of my competitiveness.

Once you read your fortune, you tie the piece of paper, folded, to the string with everyone else's.



This, below, is the long path that had vendors spread out all over it. You can see it was very crowded. I had fried, sugared sweet potato sticks, a banana and creme crepe, and mochi.



The sweet potato fries covered in sugar.

Waiting for the bus outside the shrine to go back home and eat New Years osechi.

Carly, like any traditionally-minded Japanese housewife, spent the entire day of the 31st making osechi, the Japanese new years foods that many Japanese households eat from the 1st to the 3rd. We had here boiled daikon, lotus root, mashed sweet potatoes with chestnuts, daikon and carrot salad, black beans, pickles, dried young sardines, fish cake, prawns, yellow tail fish (baked in miso), and octopus. What a feast!

Me getting into the osechi.

The spread.

And now today is the 2nd and the osechi feast continues! We have been lounging most mornings, reading books we got from each other for Christmas. Carly is reading, as she is right now, Bill Bryson's At Home, and I am reading Doris Kearns Goodwin's Team of Rivals, a book about Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War. We're missing all of our friends and everything holiday-like in the States, and frequently think about how we'll be spending our next Christmas and New Years in the company of old friends in a familiar country. But this one has been one of a kind and has been well worth experiencing and enjoying together.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Night Lights at Kiyomizu-dera

I ventured downtown and out into the eastern part of Kyoto last night to see the lights of Kiyomizu-dera before it was closed down at night. They only keep this independent Buddhist temple open into the late evening - maybe 9:00 or so - on two occasions per year: the fall foliage viewing and cherry blossom season in the spring. I was scheduled to see it with my fellow Rakuhoku compatriot AETs, Cindy and Mike, but both canceled due to illness, likely related to the bōnenkai (忘年会 literally "forget the year gathering") the Friday night prior, which the faculty went to for a night of drinking, fine food, and more drinking. Japanese men were falling all over themselves to pour drinks for their superiors. I even poured a few myself, all to show my honor and appreciation of them. Unfortunately, I forgot to take my camera...

For these shots at Kiyomizu-dera, I was very excited to use the long exposure setting on my camera to see what kind of images I could capture. I had no tripod, so I had to secure the camera to fixed objects like railings, trees, benches, and so on to get steady shots and no blur. The longest exposure I took that night was 15 seconds long, which meant that the camera lens was open for that amount of time, during which I could not move the camera in the slightest.

The camera was set to display "vivid red(s)" which should account for the orange glow. It's amazing what a digital camera can do.





I wish this one had been clearer. That's Kyoto Tower in the distance. You have a great view of the city from the temple.







This one reminds me of hot lava, or a fiery pit, something out of Lord of the Rings.

This one below was the 15 second exposure shot. I'm somewhat pleased with it. Thankfully no visitors walked through the shot while I was taking it.





These next two are my favorites, and they were taken from the vantage point most often experienced in Kiyomizu-dera tourist photos. Still, these feel different to me.









I spent about an hour and a half walking through the entire temple complex. It was so hard to pass by amazing scenery and forgo some potentially incredible shots. I kept putting my camera away and walking briskly to the exit only to be stopped by some image begging to be captured.

This is one of the most beautiful places I've seen in Japan for sure, a must on every tourist's sightseeing list. Just be sure to come in the spring or the fall, when the lights bring to life the leaves and flowers.