Monday, April 20, 2009

Kamakura Sunday


We went to the small city of Kamakura, the birthplace of Zen Buddhism, yesterday (Sunday) to watch yabusame , archery on horseback, which we saw one year ago in Sumida Koen in Tokyo. Lucinda's P.E. teacher, Mr. Tan, recommended the event and we decided to make a day of it. Kamakura is just 1 hour away on a very speedy train from Shinagawa Station.

But the archery, which was great fun last year, wasn't so pleasant in Kamakura. The course and viewing terrain at Tsurugaoka-Hachimangu Shrine were completely flat; it was very crowded; and after arriving early enough to land a spot near a target - but still packed into a crowd - we had to wait for 2 hours before the contest began. And this was pretty much all we could see:




The better part of the trip was our first stop, to see the Daibutsu, the Great Buddha of Kamakura, a massive bronze sculpture that was built 750 years ago, around 1250 AD. It's usually very crowded there, too, so we left our house early and reached the Daibutsu by 10:30 a.m. The kids were fascinated by its largeness and enjoyed going inside to see how it was fitted together.


As part of a weekend festival there, including the yabusame, there were nodate (outdoor tea ceremonies) at the same temple. We watched a teenaged boy and girl make matcha (green tea) using powdered tea and a bamboo tea whisk, before several women in kimono served tea to onlookers.


Sunday, April 19, 2009

Pattycake

Lucinda's latest craze is hand-clapping songs. She taught me a Japanese one recently, and I kept making mistakes! She's the expert.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Everyday Japan

Blaine also wrote a fine story, Japan Debates Digging Itself Out, about massive public works programs in Tokyo. It's amazing to live in a city where you literally cannot find a pothole and constantly see crews repaving sidewalks, repainting crosswalks, and replacing sidewalk fences that would probably last another decade.

Along those lines, a few weeks ago, I watched a man carry a ladder to each streetlight near our house. He climbed the ladder and, using a hand-held paint roller and small paint brush, repainted each 4-foot-long mint-green lamp. (A neighbor's rain-spout is slightly blocking my view.)


You would never see that in NYC.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Hanami


It's hanami - flower viewing - season in Japan, when people flock to parks and cemeteries and wherever to see sakura, or cherry blossoms. I'm definitely getting into it, and here's my photo-fest to prove it.

We went to Ueno Park a week ago; it's been a chilly spring, so the cherries have emerged more slowly than the Japanese weather service predicted (these predictions and pronouncements are taken quite seriously). But there was still a good crowd. You constantly see people photographing the blossoms. But how can they tell one year's trees apart from the next?


We set out a tarp, which is common in Japan, to eat the picnic lunch we bought in the Ueno train station.


Lucinda had fried calamari.


I had an obento (lunch) box with ginger beef, rice, and sauteed leeks, and a bottle of green tea.



People take naps under the flowers...


... meet friends and sit around box-tables set up for this purpose...


and have hanami parties with fellow suit-wearing salarymen.


Lucinda's entire school had a hanami lunch in Arisugawa Park on Friday.


And the children and I saw a lovely tree at a temple that's 1 block from our house.

Blaine's latest...

... stories are almost all about North Korea. It's fascinating to see how this tiny, rather pathetic, terribly brutal country can kick up such an international fuss.

This was Blaine's A1 story about the N Korean missile program: North Korean Missile Test a Growing Possibility

And three news pieces:
N. Korean Threats Grow as Launch Draws Near
N. Korea Threatens To Down U.S. Spy Aircraft
N. Korea to Put American Journalists on Trial

Happy birthday


Happy Birthday, Blaine!

Blaine turned 57 today, and his main birthday activity was waiting for North Korea to launch a long-range missile. The Japanese government announced that it had been launched and then - oops! - admitted it had made a mistake. Fortunately, North Korea didn't ruin the whole day because it says the launch will take place between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. - practically bankers' hours.

Lucinda, Arno and I made a chocolate cake, Blaine helped make chocolate frosting, and the children decorated it with silver sprinkles, leftover Hanukah candles and a big 5-7.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Springtime in a new park


Lucinda and Arno had their spring vacation a few weeks ago, and we were looking for new things to do. One new find was Showa Kinen, a vast park in Tachikawa in western Tokyo, that had gorgeous flowering trees, with blossoms just emerging, and very cool play equipment for children.

You can take a train from Shinjuku Station to Nishi-Tachikawa; my friend Laurie drove us and her children for about an hour on the highway, past Chofu, where the American School in Japan's big campus is.

This is the modern entryway. Tickets are cheap: only 400 yen ($4) for adults and 80 yen ($0.80) for children age 6+. That's only $5 for the three of us!


Central Tokyo, where we live, is mostly roads and buildings packed together, with fairly small parks and playgrounds. So it was a treat to see wide-open spaces with lawns you can run around on -- very rare in Tokyo! The children found a hill and decided to roll down it.


You can rent bikes there and there's a "train" that goes on the paved path around a lake, but we walked from place to place. Many adults, including several elderly people, were on the lookout for spring flowers. This weekend is the official high point of the Tokyo sakura (cherry blossom) season, and we saw plenty of flowers and color.





Then we started to come to the children's attractions: a big playground with bridges and passageways that Arno and his friend Max turned into a pirate ship, and a fun seesaw.


We marched through a non-narcotic poppy field...


...to the "rainbow hammocks," which Arno and Max called "Spiderman's webs." The children hurled themselves onto it and climbed and jumped for a half hour.


After a picnic lunch, we found a prime attraction: the "Bouncing Dome" giant trampoline that looked more like a moonscape. It's very sturdy, rubberized white canvas that's quite bouncy and everyone removes their shoes, so it's quite clean. At the top of each peak, there's a particularly bouncy patch.


At a smaller moonscape, I took this photo of our hair-flying group.


Next up: Dragons to climb on...


...and the "dragon's lair" rock maze (which did not prevent Laurie from checking her Blackberry).


And finally, quite tasty soft ice cream - I had the sakura (cherry blossom) flavor, while the children had choco-vanilla swirl.


Showa Kinen went on and on and on - and we didn't even experience the waterslides and summertime activities. We'll have to go back on a weekday this summer.