Jeah I’m back to Tokyo! I’m in town until Jan 4th and will try to see as many of my friends as possible. Will keep you posted as soon as I get my local cell no. 😉
Tag Archives: Japan - Page 2
Back in Good ol’ Germany
Well, the title says it all. I’m back. My over six months stay in Japan finally has ended and I’m actually writing this post from my parent’s place. So weird: I woke up in Tokyo, had a nice Starbuck’s breakfast and a nice train ride to the Narita airport and now? Now I’m here already and will sleep in my old kodomobeya tonight…
And here’s to all the people I know in Japan again: THANK YOU SO MUCH! I can’t even say how grateful I am for the past six months. Please don’t forget me for I’ll never forget this wonderful time! Anybody, please keep in touch!
Wrapping it up
Phew. Finally, the time has come for my very last post from Japanese soil…
To make things more interesting, I changed some small bits. Applied a new theme and removed the weather plugin (my intention was to piss off everyone in Germany with the extremely warm and sunny weather we had here all the time – until I installed this damned plugin). Hope you like the new Theme!
Anyways, because I’m packing my stuff – and this also includes my computer – I want to say THANK YOU to Japan. To the people here for their kindness. Actually, I’m amazed more and more every day that in this true metropolis, which is the most crowded place on our whole planet, still most of the people are friendly, kind, helpful and smiling. And it’s mostly not the kind of fake smile that you can easily get in the USA! I wish I could fit into words how I feel right now but I think that’s impossible. This country, this city, my great roommates, everyone here – I will never forget that and feel extremely grateful for being given the chance to experience all the stuff you could read about in my blog – and all the other stuff I did not dare to post. 🙂
Mina-san, hontouni doumo arigatou gozaimashita.
Ima kaerimasu, dakedo zenzen kaeritakunai.Tabun mata rainen, ne?
Kyoto, the old imperial city
Saturday morning: Still sleepy, but really excited, I’m standing in Shinagawa station at the Shinkansen tracks and await the “Nozomi super express” train that will bring me to Kyoto. Upon my arrival in Kyoto, I locked away my luggage at the station and made my way for the Kinkaku-ji, the golden pavilion temple. Unfortunately, it was quite a rainy day – no wait… Actually fortunately! If the sun would have shone, I’d have died of the heat. Kyoto is located in some kind of natural frying pan – it’s surrounded by mountains on at least three sides, I think. Everyone warned me that going to Kyoto in the middle of August is some kind of attempted suicide 🙂 So I was not angry at the weather gods although it was raining. The temperature was convenient and I just bought a 500-Yen-umbrella (just about three Euro, folks)
Okay. Golden pavilion. It was… WOW! Seriously, this is quite impressive for the upper two stories of it are completely covered in pure gold and its location in the middle of the Rokuon-ji, a very beautiful deer park, is just magnificent. One of the guidance people standing around told me that the local government decided that there shall be no high buildings in Kyoto many years ago so the view inside the parks and temple areas is not spoiled by modern buildings in the background (like it always is in Tokyo).
After the golden pavilion, I went to the Ryoan-ji Zen temple with its famous stone garden. A very peaceful and calm place – pond included, of course. The stone garden features mostly empty space with just fifteen bigger boulders in it. Very interesting is one thing: No matter from what angle you are looking at the garden (which means from positions that a not too tall human being can have their heads in without taking a ladder or any other auxiliary material), you can only see a maximum of fourteen 🙂 I walked around in the garden for a while and finally departed for the Nijo-jo, an old defensive castle.
In the later afternoon, I felt pretty exhausted, went back to the station to get my stuff out of the coin locker and finally checked in at my hotel to have dinner and get some rest. After breakfast in the morning, I fell asleep again… 😀 Anyways, the Sanjusangen-do Buddhist temple was just next to my hotel, so I visited that one first. It’s really amazing for it features one huge statue of the thousand-armed Kannon accompanied by one thousand smaller statues (which still are of human-equal size) of the Kannon. Yes. One thousand. And because that’s not enough, there are also 28 big statues of famous guardian spirits. The name Sanjusangen-do literally translates as “33 spaces between the pillars”, referring to the architecture of the main hall. Phew. I was quite impressed by that one…
Because I still had some time left, I finally went to To-ji, what means nothing more but just “eastern temple”. However, this temple area is – just like the Kinkaku-ji – one of the major images everyone has in mind when thinking of Kyoto because it features the famous five-storied pagoda. Of course, there’s a pond here, too 😉 Come to think of it – Sanjusangen-do has no pond! Wow… Strange… 😀 Anyways, I took some stupid pictures here, too and enjoyed the sunny day. Actually, during my walk back to the Kyoto station (the To-ji is quite close to it) it became pretty hot and humid and I started to understand why everyone warned me of coming here in August.
Finally, I entered the station again, bought some O-miyage for my roomies and snacks for the train ride back to Tokyo and got on the train eventually and was a little bit sad that this very interesting and funny weekend had come to an end now. However, I took almost 550 pictures and here’s a selection of the good ones for you!
Visa
No no, I’m not talking about credit cards here. My beloved visa status called “designated activities” or also “working holidays” would have ended on Aug. 28th but my flight back is already booked for Sep. 5th so I had a small problem here. Well, since my work is officially over since Aug. 18th, I went to the Tokyo regional immigration office (actually I’ve been there more often now than I’ve been to Takaosan…) to change my visa status from that kind-of-resident-thing to “temporary visitor”:
*sigh* now I cannot run away from the fact that I will leave this country in just two weeks. So many dear memories, so many dear people, so many things I will miss… 🙁
Fujisan
Monday afternoon, Shinjuku. Meeting with the colleagues to create the fellowship of dust. 🙂 Bus ride from Shinjuku station directly to Kawaguchiko-Go-Gome. Everyone’s energetic and ready to go hiking.
We were climbing through the night starting at the above mentioned fifth station (2300 meters AMSL) until we reached the edge of the volcano crater at around 3720 meters. This is, however, not the peak of Fujisan for it lies on the other side of the crater at a height of 3776 meters. Anyways, we arrived at the top of our hike around 3:40 am and waited in the blistering cold (around 6° Celcius combined with really strong winds and sandstorms) until the sunrise around 4:45. Harald and me took pictures, of course 😀 Did not see his pictures yet but mine are a little not-focused unfortunately. My fingers were so cold that I had problems working with the shutter button and the AF function… 😉
After sunrise, we started our descent back to Kawaguchiko-Go-Gome. The trail leading down is different from the one leading up. The ascent is quite straight and needs you to climb rocks a lot actually. Due to security (climbing down? no way!) and the sheer amount of people climbing up the mountain during main season (several thousand just for this trail every day) the descent route lies south of the ascent and is nothing but ashes, dust, gravel, sliding down all the time and really killing yor legs….
Around 10 am, we arrived at the fifth station – exhausted to the fullest and barely able to walk any further. Covered with dust and sand, having this nasty black ashes everywhere – and I mean everywhere – we waited for the bus that took us back to Shinjuku at noon. In Shinjuku, we visited one of the very few Burger King restaurants in Tokyo and finally said good-bye to each other.
Phew. Can’t really move my legs without pain at the moment… But here’s a selection of pictures 🙂
Hanabi in Kamakura
On Monday, Harald and me went to Kamakura to get a good spot on the beach for our cameras in order to get some nice pictures: Picasa-Album
Unfortunately, the battery of my cam was not really charged so it was lacking power quite quickly… But I had my small Pentax with me and this is actually capable of recording movies quite well.
I do not need to mention that we maybe had the very best spot in the whole area: right next to the ocean with no obstacles (or other people) in front of us, the launcher platforms perfectly aligned directly in front of us! 🙂
After this relatively small fireworks display (compared to Sumidagawa) we stayed at the beach for a while, ate our remaining crackers and waited for the first wave of people to clear the area. After some time we packed our stuff and made for the station. Unfortunately, the quite small train station was completely incapable of getting people into the trains fast enough and it was therefore kind of under siege by at least two thousand people. So Harald and me just decided to walk the approximate three kilometers to the next station, Kita-Kamakura. That apparently turned out to be quite a nice exercise because we had to climb up a nice hill 🙂 Good preparation for tomorrow…
Sayounara Tully’s and Siemens
On Thursday, it was my last day at Siemens. After having worked there for more than five months, it was time to say goodbye to many dear people. Most of them I will most likely never see again but I can say thank you for the great time I had here. The crew at Tully’s gave me the most unexpected but cutest farewell I could think of on Thursday afternoon – Just one more reason why I will always remember the extreme kindness I encountered in this country.
On Friday night, there was the official farewell party for Marianne, Marcus and me – the summer 2008 interns at Siemens. It happened at the Virgin Cafe in Oosaki. More details… It was great fun and I was so happy to see many of those people one last time. Of course we went to Karaoke after the official part 😉 Enough talk, here’s the pictures: click me!
Hanabi 4 life
Tja, was soll ich sagen? Yokohama letztes Wochenende war nur Spielzeug im Vergleich zum Sumidagawa-Hanabi… Ein paar facts:
- ca. 20.000 Rakten wurden abgefeuert
- geschätzte 1,2 Millionen Menschen haben es angeschaut
- es war wohl das heftigste Feuerwerk, das ich bis dato gesehen habe…
- es ist seines Zeichens das größte Hanabi in der Kanto-Region (und damit wohl so ganz Ost-Japans)
Da ich jetzt viel zu faul und müde bin (in etwas mehr als 5 Stunden klingelt schon wieder der Wecker… DAMN!), gibt’s jetzt nur einen Link auf mein Picasa-Webalbum und ein paar Youtube-Videos ^^
Tischfussball
Auch wenn ich jetzt die Chronologie total verhau – das besagte Event war nämlich am Samstag, also VOR dem Hanabi in Yokohama – bring ich den Beitrag erst jetzt, da ich heute netterweise von Kiki die Bilder bekommen habe 😉
Am Samstag wurde im hiesigen Goetheinstitut ein Tischfussballturnier veranstaltet – Organisiert und gesponsert von einigen Deutschen Firmen hier in Japan (uA natürlich Siemens), der Deutschen Botschaft und selbstverständlich dem Goetheinstitut selber. Siemens war mit zwei Teams (Steve und Zoran sowie Marcus und meine Wenigkeit) und einer Fotografin PLUS Fanclub vertreten. Leider waren wir nur mässig erfolgreich, aber man könnte schon sagen, dass wir die Weltmeister der Herzen waren – ganz wie die Großen eben 😉
Jedenfalls haben wir uns nach dem Turnier (das für uns ja recht schnell vorbei war) um unser leibliches Wohl gekümmert: Essen und Trinken gab’s vom Feinsten, lustige Leute waren reichlich da zum Quatschen und zu späterer Stunde sind wir dann irgendwo in Omotesandou in verschiedenen Bars gelandet – unter Anderem habe ich einen Hawaiianischen Burger gegessen (boah war der gut!!)