Tuesday, April 7th, part 2

We had a light lunch at a chain ramen shop because it was close, then headed to our scheduled event for the night at the Robot Restaurant. We didn’t eat here, as we’d been advised that the food wasn’t great. The show, however, was pretty awesome.

To start, here’s a couple photos of the lounge where we sat before the show started. Yes, that is a lot mirrors and lights and the guitarist is wearing a sweet robot outfit.

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The show itself was pretty good – hard to go wrong with giant robots (you’ll see) and dancers. They weren’t amazing dancers, but the theme is good and the people were all pretty, and yeah, just a lot of fun.

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The lady at the top is an audience member who was randomly picked to stand atop this robot and partake in a giant against another robot. Also giant.

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This evil robot guy got eaten by a shark.

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That is a huge robot snake. It moved around the tiny little stage and almost knocked peoples heads and drinks off.

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These guys outfits were pretty cool, flashing lights and some neat hiphoppy dance moves.

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LASERS MAKE IT BETTER.

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After the show we went to a bar alley and into a tiny little place called the Albatross bar. I had a Darjeeling Liquer with milk, it was delicious. 🙂

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This is the alley with all the bars, just a ton of little bars that seat 5-10 people each.

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After the bar we went for ramen, but everyone ran out of battery life and we couldn’t navigate in the dark, in a foreign language for a backwater ramen shop without Google Maps. Sean gave up, hailed a passing cab and we all took the cab back to Shimo-kitazawa. My first time in a car driving on the left was weird! I sat in the front of the cab and marvelling when he turned left, from the left lane into the left lane.

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We found a ramen shop easily. There are so many restaurants in this city it’s unreal. You can literally eat at any point along any given walking path.

This place had a vending machine where you ordered your food, and you bring the ticket in to get it. I put in 1000 yen and ordered a 900 yen item. 3 lights were still lit on the machine, indicating the ones I could still pick with my remaining yen. One had a picture of some noodles or bean sprouts and screw that. The other two had only Japanese writing on them. I picked one, Nik said it was the right one (neither of us having any idea at all) and pressed it.

10 minutes later I had my delicious soup with an extra egg in it. We took a photo of that magical extra egg button so we’d know what it looked like in the future.

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Tuesday, April 7th

How about I title by date? Yeah, that sounds good. I’ve heard that I have a couple new readers for this trip, so hello and welcome!

Unfortunately, no photos of Nik for this post. Nik woke up super early around 5am and went by himself to a fish market that Sean and I had little interest in going to at that hour. Instead, we got up around 730 and got ready for a walk at 830. We walked for 4 hours by the time we were done and saw a fantastic mix of close neighbourhoods, parks, temples and commercial highrises.

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Cherry blossoms are in season and my new lens did a good job! 🙂

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A cool Shinto temple that houses the spirits of the Emperor Meiji and his wife.

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The actual temple. I clensed myself before entering, but Sean declined.

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We met up with Nik and started walking around Shinjuku Gyoen, which was also great.

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The gyoen (garden) has a greenhouse, which was nice and warm. Particularly good since it was pretty cold out this day!

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We did a ton more, but I’m going to leave this post here for now since it’s pretty big and we’ll get into the later afternoon and evening in a bit!

Shibuya, and other stories.

We woke up early after a semi crappy night of sleep and had a plan to go to Akihabara…eventually.

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This is the selection of tea-based drinks in the grocery store. Jealous.

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Nik and I both eating random skewers of meat from the grocery store.

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This is a delicious little package of amazingness. It’s rice and seaweed and a little bit of something else like a pickled vegetable in the middle. But the secret is that the rice is better than the rice at half the sushi restaurants in Vancouver, and this here is bought in the grocery store and corner stores around the city. Doing it right.

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We got out at Shibuya station to wander for a bit. It was super early and our choice for lunch hadn’t opened, and the place to exchange our train coupon for a train pass hadn’t opened so we walked around Shibuya for a few hours. A cool place – big streets with big stores, mixed with little streets and little stores just off the beaten path.

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The famous Shibuya scramble crossing. Everyone walks every which way when it goes green for pedestrians.

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As we walked back we saw a tower we wanted to go to the top of. A little bit of escalators and walking past hotel conceirges later and we were at this fine view. The city just keeps going in all directions.

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The train stations are pretty neat, and there are lots of them.

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This is the lineup for lunch. The sign says that the wait is a half hour from where Nik is standing, and it extends in both directions.

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A little alley of ramen shops in the Tokyo station. (not the city Tokyo, but the station Tokyo. Think “New Westminster station”, even though Columbia is also in New West :)).

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Lunch was delicious. It was a bowl of noodles and a bowl of a thicker broth. You picked up the noodles and dipped them in the broth and slurped them up, which is why the paper bibs were necessary. At the end, they take your bowl of broth and add fish stock to make it an actual soup, so you can finish it up. This was a great meal, and totally worth the ~45 minute wait for it. Sean went somewhere with no line for lunch, and ended up wandering the station looking at things while we ate. There is a ton of stuff in these stations, they are like malls (not even “mini malls”, just malls in their own regard)

We trained around the center loop for 20-30 minutes and got off in Akihibara, which is known to be a place for electronics. We went into a 5 storey arcade that had people playing arcade games with physical cards they put on a tray that the machine could read. They played the card, then tapped the screen to make choices with the card they’d played. A super cool mix of physical and virtual!

We went into Yodibashi, which is a HUGE retail department store. 7 storeys, each floor with as much space as a Toys R Us with electric stuff. We went to the camera section, because Sean was in the market for a new camera, Nik was thinking of buying a lens and so was I. I ended up getting a phenomenal deal on a Panasonic 20mm f/1.7 II. Afer
Not only was the listed price about $100 cheaper than an online retailer in Vancouver (which is cheaper than a local store 🙁 ), but they also take the tax off because I’m a foreigner so I save an additional 10% there (list price includes tax!) and then they take another 8% off if you pay by Visa. Ridiculous.

Then Sean took us to a maid cafe. It’s not a sex thing, it’s this nerd cultural thing. Look it up, I can’t explain it in writing. I wdasn’t allowed to take photos of the girls serving, but here’s some deserts from the restaurant. Everything is so cute!

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We went back to the room and rested for a bit before heading out to a place to drink sake and eat skewers of meat.

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And in bed around 11, I think.

Japan, Day…ahh, whatever.

I can’t keep track of days… this is the night we landed. Our airplane landed early by a half hour, and we got through the trains really quick (thanks to Nik’s incredible navigation – Sean and I let him lead :)) so we had lots of time to wander our neighbourhood that night.

It was a little foggy, but this place is great. We’re in an area that has tons of little restaurants and shops, lots of people walking the streets. We found out today that Tokyo in general has lots of streets that are really only for people to walk on, and this whole area is criss crossed with them. Tons of character, exactly what’d I’d want in a place to stay.

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Nik is very interested in eating the best food he possibly can, he’s done a ton of research and…then we found the place closed. Some more internet on the side of the street later, and we have a new plan – okonomiyaki at this place. The people next to us were friendly enough, but mostly we kept to ourselves.

This meal was a terrific first meal! I’d never had it before, I knew a bit about it, and it was in this great little place.

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It’s like noodles, and an egg pancake and meat (in my case shrimp, Nik had squid) and you add miso mayo and the tangy sauce and man was it awesome. The onions were the worst part of it, and I loved it all the same. 😛 (I hate onions…)

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After we wandered a bit longer, and walked into an arcade. A bunch of youths (or “youts” as my grandpa used to say) playing rhythm games of all sorts – drum games, button-pressing music games, dance games. We put some coins into this game that was really just a cleverly disguised punch force measuring device. I got the consistent highest, but Nik had the highest score on one.

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Back at home, it was 11pm local time, probably 7am PST and I’d been up for a looooong time. I fell asleep immediately, but had a problem at 2am local, 10am PST when I woke up and swore that I was never going to be able to sleep again. Wide awake. Nothing to do but fake it ’til you make it, so I did my best and managed to sleep until 6am. At that point I got up to use the washroom and everyone else in the place expressed that they were also awake. 😛 We got an early start to our first full day in Japan!

Life, in a bottle

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I’ve been living on these all day. About a dollar 50, matcha green tea, from the ubiquitous vending machines around the city. The first one was hot, from a vending machine. The rest have been cold. It’s amazing.

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Time zones

Happy to have been able to sleep until 6 am this morning! Had a brief moment at 2 am where I thought I’d never sleep again, but it worked out!

Thinking of gong on the train to Akhihabara today, a gaming and electronics center of the city.

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Traveling to Japan, etc

We started our trip at 1:30 pm, to catch a 4:20pm flight, which landed at 2:30 am (pst). A couple train rides and some walking later and we were at our place! Which does not have 3 beds…it has 1 bed and a couch and a mattress…

Went for a walk to get okinaminaki too tired to spell check) and now it’s 11 pm Japan time and I think I’ve been awake for 23 hours. Sleep…

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SLEEP!!

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Hawaii #1 – Oops

I’ve been meaning to post this for a couple years now. The only reason I remember is because occasionally I’ll find the piece of paper that I wrote it all down on and think “oh, I can’t throw that away, I still want to write about that”.

Today I’m cleaning my desk for real (as opposed to just putting my paints away :P) and decided I’m getting rid of the paper.

I present to you: Craig and Miranda’s Top Picks in Maui and The Big Island (TBI), 2013. 🙂 The name of the place is from the list, but the commentary is from my memory, so we’ll see how accurate this is.

Best Restaurant: Aloha Mixed Plate. I had an amazing kahlua pork here, that made me fall in love with the simple plate. Runner Up: Sam Choy’s. I think it had a fantastic sunset view from the south shore of TBI. Worst: Home Maid Cafe. This was one of our first breakfasts, and it was absolutely awful.

Best Place to Stay: Tracey’s Tropical Treasure. This place was so hilarious, we still talk about it today. She had labels on everything, and if you thought about wanting something long enough, you would eventually find it in the apartment. Runner Up: Dolphin View. This was a pretty rough “group home” style sort of place, but I still remember sitting on the porch listening to the wind chimes and relaxing for the first time in years. That and eating fresh papayas from the owners papaya tree. Sheraton on TBI: These guys really pissed us off, and we still talk about it today.

Best Booked Activity: Fair Wind II Snorkel Cruise. I think this was the first time Miranda happily put her face in the water to look at the ocean below, and I went SNUBAing for the first time, and it was an all around good time. Runner Up: Doors Off Helicopter Tour on TBI. In hindsight, these should be swapped. We still talk about how amazing this helicopter tour was, but I have long since forgotten the cruise. Seeing the volcano like that was phenomenal. Worst: Dinner cruise: (<3 my sweetie). We bought a dinner cruise for Miranda’s birthday, after the stargazing tour fell through. But the food wasn’t all that great, and it was a little boring, but the company was good as was the sunset. 🙂

Best Hike: Mauna Ulu. This was amazing. We hiked along a set trail for an hour, and when we got to the end we saw, about 45 minutes away, a steaming hill and thought “lets go over there”. Another couple joined us, and some time later we’d crawled over old lava trails to the top where a 500ft diameter hole in the ground awaited. Runner Up:  Kileua Crater Iki trail. This was a long hike around the basin of an old volcano, and it was stunning. Worst: Mauna Kea. The worst because I couldn’t breathe after exercising at 10,000 feet and when we got to the top it was entirely socked in. Fuck hiking volcanoes!

Best Non-Booked Activity: Volcanoes Hiking. I’ve always said that the only thing I’d go back to TBI for is to hike the volcanoes more, they were stunning. Runner Up: NW of Maui drive. This was also incredible, but I don’t think I’d do it again. Sean drove while Kerry, Miranda and myself looked. It was a harrowing drive around the northern nub of Maui, and there were moments of not being able to see the road outside the window because the cliff was so steep. Gorgeous scenery though! Worst: Stopping for night photos. Another thing we still talk about. We stopped in the middle of nowhere to take some star photos, and heard a “coughing goat” and we both laugh now about how we panicked and all but threw ourselves in the car. Miranda is pretty certain it was someone dying in a ditch, but I maintain the facade that it was a coughing goat. Terrifying.

Favourite Animal: That first turtle I saw. I’d been wanting to go to Hawaii for a few years, specifically because Sean had told me about the turtles. A few months later Miranda was planning a trip, out of nowhere. I had never done such a thing, and she hadn’t realized that I was dreaming, and BAM now we travel a lot. 🙂 The first bit of water I got into in Maui I found a turtle and followed him around for a while. Runner Up: Humu, the national fish. Worst: The turtles that hid from me. Sad face.

Favourite Cat: All of the cats of A-bay.  I think it’s the linked-to park – the hard part of acronyms. 🙂 There were a ton of cats in this park, with signs all over that they weren’t stray, that they were well taken care of and not to worry. We petted a few, because that’s how we roll. Runner Up: The sheet says none, but I still remember the cat we found under the banyan trees. Worst: None.

Best Drive: Kohala, driving north.  This is that drive I mention above. Runner Up: NW of Maui…I didn’t drive. No idea why it’s both the best and runner up drive, but apparently it was the only notable one! Worst: Puna. I don’t remember why this was the worst, but here we are.

Best Beach: “Turtle Town”, south of Kihei. We drove down that way, and Sean and I went for an epic snorkel. Before that moment I hadn’t realized that you could see such amazing fish and rocks  and coral while snorkeling, I thought it would be all so far away. Runner Up: Kealekeloua Bay. I think we just had a good time swimming and snorkeling here on TBI, don’t remember why this was amazing. Worst: A-bay. Still don’t remember, but maybe the cats were the best part of it. 😛

Best Dollar Spent: Big Blue Book. There’s some controversy over the book, but I’m still in love with it years later. His style of writing really draws me in, and lets me enjoy the trip how I want to enjoy it, and I haven’t found a travel guide for any other place that is quite as amazing. Runner Up: SNUBA. SNUBA was a surprisingly good time – about as much money as one SCUBA dive, but with 70% less hassle. Sure you can only go 15 feet under, but that’s the price you pay. I’d do it again, and have. 🙂 Worst: Dinner cruise. Runner Up Worst: Sheraton. 

 

It’s funny the things you can remember. That’s the list, 2 years later! That was fun to type out, and now I get to recycle this piece of paper that I’ve been keeping handy for 2 years! 😛

 

 

Lessons learned

I like writing down my lessons so I can refer back to them later. 😛

  • 1 pair of shorts/5 days on vacation. That’s shorts to wear, not including swimwear. It’s ok to wear “dirty” shorts in the tropics, because even if you wear new ones every day, you’re sweating buckets as soon as you leave your place to stay. I brought 2 pairs, and thankfully had laundry in the middle.
  • 1 pair of good synthetic t-shirt or tank per 5 days of vacation. Not including swimwear, again. I brought 2 t-shirts and 1 tank and I wanted just one more. Cotton is just to thick and brutal. Merino wool is surprisingly not bad, but wash it repeatedly before you go otherwise it is still scratchy, no matter what they claim.
  • We traveled to 6 places over 17 days. That’s too much! We could have done with one less location, but ideally I think 1 location/5 days maximum. Even if you hate the place, you can go somewhere else. And that’s enough time to really get to know a place, as opposed to dine’n’dashing.
  • My new sandals aren’t my old sandals. These ones started to rip apart at the foot bed after less than one year of use. My old ones lasted somewhat near 6 years of my kind of abuse. Tevas > Merrells? I don’t know, but I’m not impressed. (even less impressed that the underlayer is bright orange. Would it have killed anyone to make it somewhat brown?!)
  • Driving around a country isn’t that hard. Time consuming. Occasionally difficult, scary or slow as hell, but definitely can be done.
  • If you don’t like something, you can leave.
  • I really love learning language (just Spanish so far), but holy hell is it exhausting! My pet theory is that this is why Expats and tourists have such great conversations – being able to speak English clearly, and know that the other person will understand you without problem is so reassuring. Every tourist we spoke with was so fun and friendly.
  • You need more money than you think. >.> We accidentally took twice as much money out of the ATM (because our math was wrong, one tired day) as we thought we needed…and then we spent that too. We were terrified until we counted out where it had all gone.

And unless I think of something else in the next few minutes, I think that wraps up Costa Rica for this blog! I’m going to “best of” on Facebook and post a final link here so folks can find it, but I’m done here. Thanks for reading, Melissa! (…and my Dad :D)

Nauyaca Waterfalls

Manuel Antonio had been so bloody hot and long. We walked for 5 hours in the sun, and it was amazing, but we desperately needed refreshing. Our original thought for the afternoon had been to go to Playa Ballena, also called “Whale Tail” because at low tide and from above it looks like a whale’s tail. Johan, our guide, asked what our plans were and we told him and he said “May I ask why? You’re going to drive for an hour, pay your money and then see this beach and go. It isn’t a good beach for hanging out at.” Then he provided a number of alternatives, and the one that caught my ear was the Nauyaca Waterfalls. Because waterfalls are cool, and also because waterfalls are cold.

 

We hiked for an hour in the heat again, with the loudest blood crickets you’ve ever heard chirping constantly around us. The hike was worth it, these were stunning waterfalls!

There were 2 sets, and the photos are jumbled up so I’m going to caption each one. We started at #1, but didn’t stay long because there was no where to swim – it was just massive, 165ft with boulders at the bottom. #2 was way nicer, with a huge pool at the bottom and only 60ft tall, but oh my god was it amazing to swim in cold water. The ocean is hot, if you remember.

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Miranda under waterfall #2.
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A panorama of waterfall #2. The lady on the right is not Miranda. There were 4 people there when we got there, and nobody there when we left.
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Miranda played with taking photos that had the water close up and the falls behind.
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Just as we were leaving Miranda reminded me to take a photo of both the falls, and I jumped over rocks to get this amazing photo of both #2 in the front and #1 in the back.
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Because the photos are jumbled and I’m lazy, this is a bird we saw in a farmyard on the walk back. The walk back was much more pleasant as it was getting on towards 5pm and had significantly more slope downhill.
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A monkey Miranda spotted while we were walking back. They started to descend as we walked past and we hurried on.
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A photo I took from underneath #1. Getting to this photo spot was not a great idea – not only was the angle not great, but the rocks were super slippery and I had some troubles climbing over and around them. Don’t tell Miranda, I promised her I wouldn’t hurt myself. 😛
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A panorama of #1.
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I took a photo of Miranda shaking her fist at me. She’s yelling at me not to hurt myself. <3
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An awesome selfie under #2.

 

And with that, I think I’m out of photos to post from Costa Rica! I’ve got one “lessons” post that I’m sitting on so I can brainstorm more ideas, and I’m going to collect “The Best Of” to put onto Facebook for people who don’t like blogs, but after that I’m all done with Costa Rica! 😀