12/6
And off we go! I am writing this on my
I pad while riding a bullet train across Japan. That's a really cool
thing to be able to say. Now going back to where I last wrote.
Saturday Michael, Tara and I drove out
of Ulsan to I don't remember the name (it's a Korean name and Korean
names are ver hard to remember give me a break! I remember that I am
in Ulsan, I live in dong-gu, how to direct a cab driver in Korean,
that down town is by the lotte hotel and skyrex, and that buses 123,
401, 104, 127 will all take me home. But not the name of the town we
went too). It took a while because of traffic and only getting to go
80 km/h but we drove all the way up the coast heading north.
We stayed at the most random hotel I
have ever been in. The room is 30C and can't be turned down, a Korean
woman sang 80s songs in very good English while a projected laser
thing (like they use at dances/raves) ran, you sat on couches under
beach umbrellas, a ham and cheese plate is the most well displayed
spam I have ever seen, and breakfast potatoes are actually the French
fries that they serve at public schools. There was also life size
figures of an astronaut and pirate standing out side the restaurant.
On Sunday we went to a Korean national
park. Emphasis on national. Which I won't be writing about. Lets just
say it was pg 13 and a rather awkward/interesting but all around
hysterical day. It was built because of a legend of a woman drown in
front of her lover and all the fish went away. And you know what
every drown woman needs? That's right a park full of man genitalia.
Now moving on from that and skipping a
few days to Wednesday. We got up went and got cash and some granola
bars from home plus and rode a bus to the train station. From there
we took the train to Busan (one city over. About an hour by car but
only twenty min on a train that goes 300+ km/h. Then rode the subway
over one stop and found the ferry terminal. Where we spent all day.
There is stuff to do in Busan and we wanted to do it but its hard
with a back pack and it being cold. Note for the future, there is no
reason at all to be at the ferry station before 5:30 pm if the ferry
leaves at 8.
Finally we did get on the ferry though.
It reminded me of the ferry I took while in Greece in the band trip
but not quite as high class. We, of course, got the cheapest tickets
we could and were in a room that had floor mats for 12 people.
Luckily there was only 7 of us in the room. I really like ferries. So
now after a night of defiantly not the best sleep ever (freaking
Korean lady waking up at 5:30! There is no reason to get up at 5:30
on a ferry that doesn't get in until 8. And there is DEFIANTLY no
reason to brightly start talking to the room full of sleeping people.
No idea what she said but I was not happy to hear it.) (but we did
meet a very nice man, who is a tour guide of korea, and his very
sweet little girl. Then this morning while we were lining up to get
off the ferry she and her totally gorgeous mother came up and gave us
two packages of cookies we got a picture with the little girl. It was
very sweet and totally made up for the 5:30 wake up.) we are in
Japan.
I was expecting Japan to be a little
bit more strict (just because they are kind of known for that) but I
feel like we got stopped kind of a lot. There was an official guy who
read over our immigration forms to make sure we had them filled in
right, then the man that stamped out passports didn't like that we
have no definite address in Tokyo, then the baggage searching people
looked through my bag (was totally confused by the yoga may which is
in my back pack), then we walked out of customs and immediately got
stopped by a police officer who was there to check our pass ports
again. The police guy gave us directions though so that was nice.
So now we are in Japan, with zero yen
(haven't found a global ATM yet), and on a bullet train bound for
Tokyo. I am over the moon. In the few hours we have been here there
has been an even greater lack of English and we stand out a whole lot
more. But this train is awesome and people have over all been nice.
Not overly helpful but nice. Now we get to cram as much into the next
week as we can then back on the ferry we go.
We will get to Tokyo in a couple more
hours then first stop ATM, second stop food, third stop grocery store
to load up on granola bars, fourth stop find a hostel. I just really
hope that Japanese food is better that Korean food. I don't know if I
can live on rice and granola bars.
12/7
We have done A TON today. It was the
"lets see all of Tokyo in a day" day... And it was so much
fun.
To start we are staying in a hostel in
Asakusa. It is functional. Nothing fancy but it has beds and a safe
place to drop our stuff and an almost comfortable bed. (To be honest,
last night I could have slept on a rock so I am not totally sire
about the bed.) We were totally lost foreigners last night, having to
ask for help almost every step of the train and subway. This weird
thing of I don't speak or read Japanese and they seem to like it
here. But we did find the hostel where we finally got to drop our
back packs and find some real food.
We ended up at an Indian restaurant
because that was for sure vegetarian and warm. It was amazing.
Everything was hot and filling. And wandered around getting a bit
lost in the very cool streets that we found.
Now I am too lazy to go get the guide
map so some of the fancy names but here is what I can come up with
off the top of my head. We started by going to the shopping ont he
street that is in Asakusa and walked all the way down to the temple
that is at the end of it. The temple is the oldest one in Tokyo and
was very beautiful. There was a prayer service going on when we where
there with monks chanting and one beating a drum then the head man
doing the incense. It was very cool and something I didn't know I
would get to experience. Then we wandered around the garden and the
shrines that where around the temple.
Next we wandered our way to Tokyo Tower
(which is very close to the temple. We couldn't have wandered there
is it wasn't because Tokyo, funnily enough, it Huge.) Tokyo tower
looks a little bit like the Eiffel Tower (no quite right but I swear
the key chains are made from the same mold). It has two observatories
one at 150m and one at 250m. From the tower you could see a 360 view
of Tokyo. Man it is a beautiful place. With a view out to the sea one
way and to mount Fiji (not really because it is always kind of cloudy
but apparently on a very, very clear day you can see it). Then
buildings as far as you can see. It stretches on and on and on. It is
dotted with trees and parks and there is a mix of old and brand new
that is spectacular. It is so mind twisting to be walk by a sky
scraper one minuet and through a temple build ages ago the next.
After lunch (ummmm we chose a veggie
Demi plate and it was rice with like gravy on top. Tasty and served
in a nifty little cast iron pan.) at Tokyo tower we took the JR rail
to Shibuya which is the shopping area (according to our guide map!)
and boy was it busy! Lots of stores and lots of people! And there we
spent several hours wandering random streets window shopping and
people watching. I could blow a lot of money here but seeing as I
don't have money to blow or any space at all window shopping it is.
There was quite an amazing (and totally ridiculously expensive) hat
store.
It was dusk when we went back to the JR
rail and took it to Shinjuku, which I think is the business district,
to see the sky scrapers and wander around the businessy side of
things. Sky scrapers have a strange beauty about then. True the fill
up the sky line and can clutter the view but they are still amazing
and can be beautiful. So we enjoyed that and did even more wandering
before heading back to Asakusa and the hostel. We stopped for dinner
in the train station and had seaweed onigri (rice balls filled with
what tasted like seaweed salad.) then while searching for a man who
was selling oranges yesterday we found a grocery store and got
oranges and bananas and what we hoped was peanut butter (it wasn't.
It is like peanut flavored carmel sauce. Which is fine but more sugar
and I just wanted protein. Oh well it was something. But I am a
little sad because I love peanut butter!)
Now I am sitting on the floor in the
Internet room of the hostel chatting with Tara and a random Italian
guy (dude this guy is awesome. he grew up in Luxembourg took a gap
year in Africa, is going to college in wales, is here on a year off
to learn more Japanese, and dreams of opening a tiny bed and
breakfast in Tanzania. Super fun to chat with.) who is here on year
off. Apparently there was a earthquake in Japan today that neither
Tara or I felt. Which is really funny because apparently it was a
rather bad one. But on a more important note, the pope got twitter!!!
Say what?!? Now we are listening to a Brazilian song because the
other two guys in here are speaking Brazilian. I think I like
hostels. Tomorrow we are going to the imperial palace and then
heading to Kyoto. I think this is going smashingly well!
Hahahaha, I laughed when you said they spoke "Brazilian" :) They speak Portuguese, which is a lot like Spanish and Italian. Haha it's like saying we speak American! ;) So now if your ever run into anyone from Brazil again you can know what language to translate into!
ReplyDeleteAaron
Ohhhh wow! You are having the adventure of a lifetime! Hmmm... a national park full of penises. Not quite sure what to make of that. Nor how I would explain it to children... What was it like sleeping on a ferry? Did you get motion sick?
ReplyDeleteI'm loving seeing the photos and reading the stories. I'm so very proud of you.
Much love,
Auntie M