All posts by Craig

April 11th, after Himeji

We left Himeji late afternoon, but had a surprisingly large amount of things still to happen. Everything at this point, was completely unplanned, which made it even more exciting that it worked out so well.

First we found food. While in the castle we’d seen a carnival in some park grounds nearby, so we headed there for some street food. We bought skewered pork and chicken, an okonomiyaki-on-a-stick (mine also had an egg – a clean-up disaster waiting to happen. Except that I’d been carrying a wet nap from the airplane all week!) and some deep fried and battered chicken skin. The only photo I got was this, because after this my hands were to dirty to touch the camera!

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This next photo is one I forgot in the last post. This is the view of Himeji castle from the Himeji train station. Pretty badass looking!

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We decided to head on the train to Hiroshima. We’d never discussed going there, but we were only an hour away by train and our JR rail passes gave us free transport that way, so why not!

We got to Hiroshima…and cabbed to Costco. Sean apparently has a thing for visiting Costcos in foreign countries, so we followed up our carnival dinner with a Costco hot dog. 🙂

Then we cabbed to Peace Park. This is a beautiful park, lost of grass and neat concrete structures. But it’s darkat this point, so it’s a little eerie too. Not to mention that you can see this guy, looming on the horizon as you slowly walk closer to it.

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It’s a beast of a building. The entire city has been rebuilt and built up and is nice and modern, and then there’s still ugly, wrecked thing in the middle of it, and then you think about how it came to be wrecked, really think about it hard, and the horror of it all dawns in your mind. It’s a beautiful building, and I hope they never decide to take it down.

We got lost through the city for a bit afterwards, but ended up at Hiroshima Castle park. I saw some guys walk out of this gatehouse…so we walked into it.

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And we kept walking through the park.

Now in Vancouver, or North America, when a tourist attraction is shut down, there are gates and signs and stuff. Not here, it’s a straight shot all the way through the park.

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Until you finally get to the castle, which was closed. Naturally. It’s 10pm and we’re in the middle of a closed Japanese park. It was pretty fun getting here, and then leaving to catch our train home. When we got to the station we had 20 minutes until the last train to Osaka left, but it was a little fearful for a bit that we might not make it.

Then the hard decision of whether to sleep on the train home or not. 😛 I decided not to, and read my book the whole way home.

A pretty great day. 🙂

April 11, Himeji Castle

This place was on my definite list of places I wanted to go see, and we picked a good day for it. It got hot, but we managed to get inside for a chunk of the day.

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It only recently finished being renovated in March 2015, and it was a 6 year renovation!

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It was a pretty long line to get inside, so we took the opportunity to take a lot of photos of the outside.

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Green tea KitKat. It’s a thing.

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Tons of people had brought tarps and it looked like picnics and were hanging out. Because if you had a giant castle in your town, wouldn’t you go hang out near it on weekends?

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The line ups continued inside, but there was more room to wander around in places.

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Castle selfie!!

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April 10, travel to Osaka

Here’s a super fast train that travels from Tokyo to Osaka!

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I ran the length of it to get a photo of what I thought was the front. Ended up being the back….

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Nik bought 3 different kinds of convenience store sake for the journey. They were differing levels of not my favorite.

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Osaka mall

Waiting for this okonomiyaki restaurant to open, here’s a photo of a small part of the open air mall in this area. It’s early on a Monday, so very few people around.

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Nik is reading this blog while in line. 🙂

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Slightly drunk

Tonight we got off at a train station, with the intention of finding the oldest shrine in Japan. We were hungry, so we stopped in a sushi restaurant in the country. Asahi big bottles were 600 yen, at which point we decided to drink a few of them. Now, slightly drunkenly finding our way back to Osaka.

Yay!

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Communication

When you rely on pointing as a primary communication method, sometimes there are misunderstandings. We didn’t want 3 giant beers…but bottoms up! 😀

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April 12, mid day

On a lengthy train to the countryside and we started talking with a Japanese gentleman who spoke excellent English and wanted to show us how to get to our destination. So he got on this lengthy train ride with us. While here, we started speaking with two little old ladies across from us who had no English, but one of which had been to the interior of B.C. 20 years ago. Nik pulled out his phone to show her a recent photo of his trip to a glacier she had seen back then.

The gentleman changed his day to visit a shrine out this way, and the ladies were on a train tour of sakura trees in the area.

It was a good time to talk with some random people.

(I have a ton of photos and stories from yesterday, but played a game instead of doing photos last night. :))

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