It was raining in the morning and the forecast was wet all day so we decided to pamper ourselves a little bit and get massages. Both Jeff and I have been having a hard time adjusting to Japanese beds. They are very firm and not good for anything other than sleeping on your back, which neither Jeff or I do. The massages were great (so good we decided to book another one for Tuesday morning).
We found a restaurant that served Dim Sum which is a favorite of both Jeff and I and a huge treat. We can't get it in Boise or in Hagashi-hiroshima so to find it was a real treat. If you are unfamiliar with Dim Sum it is actually Chinese dumplings. Some are steamed and some are fried. They have different things inside of them such as pork, shrimp or vegetables and they are delicious!
After stuffing ourselves, we decided to do a little shopping. I thought Kyoto might be a good place to find some presents to take home to friends and family. We had a nice day, stayed mostly out of the rain and picked up a couple of things that we were looking for.
We met some friends for dinner (yep, we had friends from Hiroshima vacationing in Kyoto the same weekend as us) at a Mexican food restaurant and it was so good! It tasted like home. Some things are really hard to get in Japan and good Mexican food is at the top of the list. The chef spent 20 years in the US in southern California and that is where he learned to cook. His English was great and we had a great time with our friends. It was a good day. Sorry for the lack of pictures. I didn't even carry the camera with me. It was just too wet.
I am an American living in Japan for a year. This blog documents the adventures that I have and some of the interesting observations about living in a very foreign culture.
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Kyoto Day 2
We decided to get up early and beat the Saturday morning tourist crowds. Japan is not really an early morning country so it's pretty easy. Our hotel had a continental breakfast that was an interesting mix of western and Japanese foods. There were breakfast pastries, eggs, fresh fruit, yogurt, curry, rice, soup, salad and noodles.
A quick walk to the train station, a change to the subway and we got to Daigo-ji Temple. This is one that I had seen pictures of and really wanted to see. it was an added bonus that the fall leaves were starting to turn on the Japanese maples (my favorite type of tree). I totally love fall leaves. I apologize in advance for the abundance of fall leaf pictures on this trip.
This was a great stop. It's a little off the beaten path and with our earlier arrival it was very quiet and not many people here. This was one of my favorite spots in Kyoto.
Next we went to Byodo-in Temple. A quick subway ride and a train and we were there. This is a very large temple and was much more popular. I tried to keep the droves of people out of the pictures but it was a little bit of a challenge.
We then went back to Kyoto and took a short break in the hotel before heading out to see the To-ji pagoda lit up. I saw some pictures of it at night and it was really pretty. When we got to the temple we were told that the grounds closed at 5:30. No problem, sunset is around 5:00. As we are waiting for the lights to come on, we were reading a pamphlet we were given with information about the pagoda. It is the tallest pagoda in Japan and it has burnt down and been rebuilt 4 times!!! I couldn't help but think of this from Monty Python and the Holy Grail "When I first came here, this was all swamp. Everyone said I was daft to build a castle on a swamp, but I built in all the same, just to show them. It sank into the swamp. So I built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So I built a third. That burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp. But the fourth one stayed up. And that's what you're going to get, Lad, the strongest castle in all of England."
The grounds were really quite pretty and we kept waiting for the lights to get turned on but sadly we were asked to leave before they were turned on. At 5:32 the lights turned on and I could see the very top of the pagoda lit up but the rest was blocked by the fence and trees. Bleh! I was a little irritated since I specifically wanted to see it with the lights on. Why kick people out and then turn on the lights? Oh well. Here are the pictures I took while waiting.
After getting kicked out of the temple, we went walking to find dinner. I was hoping for something light after the previous nights fried gut bomb. We found a place that had large salads and that was good for me. Jeff had some steak and the normal Japanese fixings. We were pretty tired by the time we got back to the hotel and slept well.
A quick walk to the train station, a change to the subway and we got to Daigo-ji Temple. This is one that I had seen pictures of and really wanted to see. it was an added bonus that the fall leaves were starting to turn on the Japanese maples (my favorite type of tree). I totally love fall leaves. I apologize in advance for the abundance of fall leaf pictures on this trip.
Looking at one of the temple buildings through fall leaves. |
The big pagoda |
This is what I really wanted to see. So beautiful! |
The bridge over to the shrine. |
The other side of the bridge |
Just one more picture cause it's worth looking at again! This one you can see the hills in the background. |
Next we went to Byodo-in Temple. A quick subway ride and a train and we were there. This is a very large temple and was much more popular. I tried to keep the droves of people out of the pictures but it was a little bit of a challenge.
We then went back to Kyoto and took a short break in the hotel before heading out to see the To-ji pagoda lit up. I saw some pictures of it at night and it was really pretty. When we got to the temple we were told that the grounds closed at 5:30. No problem, sunset is around 5:00. As we are waiting for the lights to come on, we were reading a pamphlet we were given with information about the pagoda. It is the tallest pagoda in Japan and it has burnt down and been rebuilt 4 times!!! I couldn't help but think of this from Monty Python and the Holy Grail "When I first came here, this was all swamp. Everyone said I was daft to build a castle on a swamp, but I built in all the same, just to show them. It sank into the swamp. So I built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So I built a third. That burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp. But the fourth one stayed up. And that's what you're going to get, Lad, the strongest castle in all of England."
The grounds were really quite pretty and we kept waiting for the lights to get turned on but sadly we were asked to leave before they were turned on. At 5:32 the lights turned on and I could see the very top of the pagoda lit up but the rest was blocked by the fence and trees. Bleh! I was a little irritated since I specifically wanted to see it with the lights on. Why kick people out and then turn on the lights? Oh well. Here are the pictures I took while waiting.
Pretty reflecting pool in front of pagoda. |
Huge pagoda! Now equip with a lightning rod to try to avoid future fires. |
View from pedestrian bridge when walking to find dinner. |
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Kyoto Day 1
If you ask 10 people in Japan (expat or Japanese doesn't matter) 9 out of the 10 will say their favorite place to visit is Kyoto. Kyoto was the imperial capital of Japan for more than 1,000 years. It is known for having many shrines and temples in addition to fantastic food and beautiful gardens. It is pretty safe to say that Jeff and I were super excited about this trip. Our most difficult decision was choosing what to see. We had 5 days, but that is really only enough time to see a fraction of the sites.
We decided to take the Shinkansen (bullet train) which takes only 2 hours from Higashi-Hiroshima to Kyoto. The trains are super clean, fast, spacious and all around awesome. The things to see in Kyoto are fairly spread out so I found a hotel a short walk from the main train station and a subway station (I booked the hotel over 2 months ago. Hotels fill up quick in Japan. Walking through the train station to our hotel we passed an information center that said "no hotel vacancies in Kyoto").
Our first stop in Kyoto was the hotel, it was way too early to check in but they held our luggage for us and then we set out to explore. Jeff and I spent the afternoon wandering all over Kyoto on foot. Walking down streets that looked interesting without much of a plan. We had a lovely time and got a good feel for the city. We found some unexpected nooks and crannies. Jeff found a drum shop that made him really happy. Here are some pictures from our wanderings.
We decided to walk through a shrine around sunset.
After much exploring we got hungry. Jeff found a fantastic little tempura (lightly battered and fried) restaurant. They had 3 set meals. We opted for the smallest one which was still huge. We sat at the counter while the chef prepared our meal. They spoke some English which was really nice since they told us what to dip where (there were three dipping options). The food was excellent. Mostly tempura vegetables and seafood with rice, a salad, miso soup and sorbet for dessert. There were a couple of things that were a little on the "I'm not sure I want to eat that" side of things including an entire small fish (head, fins, guts, bones - eat the whole thing) and the head of a shrimp (legs, shell and all) but we tried everything and most of it was excellent. We left tired and stuffed and took the easy route and got a taxi back to the hotel.
I managed to get a non-smoking room* at the hotel which was a huge bonus but the room was tiny, I mean REALLY tiny. The bed was somewhere between a twin and a full (two pillows when laid flat overlap in the middle) with the bed pushing up against the wall on one side and about 2 feet of space between the bed and the desk on the other. Jeff and I are very small for Americans but it was still interesting if both of us were trying to do something in the room at the same time. After a couple of days we gave up and one of us would pretty much just sit out of the way if the other guy was getting dressed - lol.
With that being said, it was a clean room and well maintained. Our only really complaint was that it was hot. Starting in September, they turn off the cooling in the hotel room. You can run the heat or the fan. No cooling and the fan puts out a little bit of heat. We were on the 9th floor and it got pretty hot in our little room (especially since it was impossible to both be in bed without sharing a little body heat and Jeff is a furnace. If we opened the window it was a little loud from the street noise. Not ideal but we managed to sleep.
*Smoking in Japan: Japan is a little like the US was back in the 80's. You go to a restaurant and there is a smoking section and a non-smoking section but the restaurant is tiny and nothing actually separates the two sections. Very few hotels have non-smoking rooms. I really hate cigarette smoke but prior to this trip we only had one night in a hotel in Japan that was a non-smoking room. The do a very good job airing out the rooms but you can still smell the smoke. Fortunately, most public spaces are non-smoking like trains, train platforms, and shopping areas. They sometimes have a smoking room for people to go to.
We decided to take the Shinkansen (bullet train) which takes only 2 hours from Higashi-Hiroshima to Kyoto. The trains are super clean, fast, spacious and all around awesome. The things to see in Kyoto are fairly spread out so I found a hotel a short walk from the main train station and a subway station (I booked the hotel over 2 months ago. Hotels fill up quick in Japan. Walking through the train station to our hotel we passed an information center that said "no hotel vacancies in Kyoto").
Our first stop in Kyoto was the hotel, it was way too early to check in but they held our luggage for us and then we set out to explore. Jeff and I spent the afternoon wandering all over Kyoto on foot. Walking down streets that looked interesting without much of a plan. We had a lovely time and got a good feel for the city. We found some unexpected nooks and crannies. Jeff found a drum shop that made him really happy. Here are some pictures from our wanderings.
This was a canal we walked past that had restaurants along the water. |
This was a tiny street we enjoyed walking along. It was filled with shops and restaurants. |
The river |
Vermilion lamps through the temple grounds. |
Lit lanterns at the shrine. |
I managed to get a non-smoking room* at the hotel which was a huge bonus but the room was tiny, I mean REALLY tiny. The bed was somewhere between a twin and a full (two pillows when laid flat overlap in the middle) with the bed pushing up against the wall on one side and about 2 feet of space between the bed and the desk on the other. Jeff and I are very small for Americans but it was still interesting if both of us were trying to do something in the room at the same time. After a couple of days we gave up and one of us would pretty much just sit out of the way if the other guy was getting dressed - lol.
With that being said, it was a clean room and well maintained. Our only really complaint was that it was hot. Starting in September, they turn off the cooling in the hotel room. You can run the heat or the fan. No cooling and the fan puts out a little bit of heat. We were on the 9th floor and it got pretty hot in our little room (especially since it was impossible to both be in bed without sharing a little body heat and Jeff is a furnace. If we opened the window it was a little loud from the street noise. Not ideal but we managed to sleep.
*Smoking in Japan: Japan is a little like the US was back in the 80's. You go to a restaurant and there is a smoking section and a non-smoking section but the restaurant is tiny and nothing actually separates the two sections. Very few hotels have non-smoking rooms. I really hate cigarette smoke but prior to this trip we only had one night in a hotel in Japan that was a non-smoking room. The do a very good job airing out the rooms but you can still smell the smoke. Fortunately, most public spaces are non-smoking like trains, train platforms, and shopping areas. They sometimes have a smoking room for people to go to.
Thursday, November 6, 2014
Opening a Japanese Bank Account
Apparently I have been far too useful at my volunteer job at the YMCA since they have been really insistent on wanting to pay me. Last week they helped me change my Visa from a "dependent" to "part time work". This was an amazingly easy process and only took about 30 minutes.
Next they insisted on me getting a Japanese bank account so that they could deposit my earnings. They don't do checks in Japan and they can't direct deposit into a foreign bank. So far Jeff and I have been happily using our American bank card to take out money. Our account has a foreign transaction fee waiver and it works at all 7-11's (yes, there are a ton of them in Japan including one right next door to our apartment) and Bank of Japan also accepts foreign bank cards, so there has never been a need to open an account until now.
I was told on Tuesday that I needed a chop (stamp of my name) and that it could be three characters long. She asked what I wanted, my initials or my name. I said my name and was surprised today when it literally says "SKY" with the letters going downwards. I somehow thought it would be my name in katakana or hiragana, but nope - lol!
Aaron volunteered to help me get my account set up (thank goodness). His Japanese is very good, he's been living in Japan for around 14 years. We get to the bank and sit down and they look at my residence card and ask if I have a stamp. Yes and yes. They said it's okay if I write in romaji (basically spell out Japanese words with English letters) but they have to be all capitals. Okay, no problem. So, I fill out a couple of pieces of paper. One was to register my chop and essentially say that it is mine and legally binding (no signatures, you just use your chop). The second form was to open the account (you only need 1 yen to open an account in Japan, which is about a penny) and required my address (exactly as it was written on the residency card except romaji instead of hiragana) and my name and some other minor info. I filled out everything according to the instructions that Arron translated for me and then we started waiting. The bank closed, they rolled down the doors and we waited. It wasn't that long of a wait but it seemed like forever due to it's awkwardness. Note: the bank closed at 3:00 PM, strange! Finally they motion us over and I was given my bank card and an account book. Nice!
I walked back to the YMCA and was pretty happy about things and then my phone rang, which is weird since no one calls me in Japan. It was someone cheerfully chirping Japanese at me very rapidly. The only parts I understood were my name and sorry. I apologized and politely explained that I had no idea what they were saying in Japanese as and that I don't speak Japanese. There was another stream of rapid Japanese to which I repeated myself. Eventually there was an awkward hold and then a male voice explained, with some difficulty, that I had a mistake on my form and needed to go back to the bank and that they would "open it back up just for you". So I walked back to the bank (sadly, without a translator this time). The lady who looked over my paperwork was standing out front repeatedly bowing and apologizing (uh... I'm the one who made the mistake here?) and when I apologized since it really was my mistake she looked like she was going to panic so I stopped.
I had managed to use my fantastic powers of dyslexia to write Chou not Chuo in two places so I had to fill out all of the forms again. Then upon another inspection, they decided that my upper case "U" was not correct because it had a little bit of a tail and that is not a proper "U". So as they apologized several more times I filled out the forms a third and (hopefully final) time. This third from was meticulously inspected since at this point I figured they must think me a total idiot (and I wouldn't disagree with them). They deemed it acceptable and I was escorted out. Everyone still at the bank bowed to me as I left and the poor lady who was stuck dealing with me the most just kept bowing. So I bowed back. Then she bowed then I bowed, then she bowed. I thought I'd try a nod? Nope, she bowed. At that point I just ran away. I think that was what I was supposed to do anyway. Yep, Japan is an adventure. But! I now have a bank account.
Next they insisted on me getting a Japanese bank account so that they could deposit my earnings. They don't do checks in Japan and they can't direct deposit into a foreign bank. So far Jeff and I have been happily using our American bank card to take out money. Our account has a foreign transaction fee waiver and it works at all 7-11's (yes, there are a ton of them in Japan including one right next door to our apartment) and Bank of Japan also accepts foreign bank cards, so there has never been a need to open an account until now.
I was told on Tuesday that I needed a chop (stamp of my name) and that it could be three characters long. She asked what I wanted, my initials or my name. I said my name and was surprised today when it literally says "SKY" with the letters going downwards. I somehow thought it would be my name in katakana or hiragana, but nope - lol!
Aaron volunteered to help me get my account set up (thank goodness). His Japanese is very good, he's been living in Japan for around 14 years. We get to the bank and sit down and they look at my residence card and ask if I have a stamp. Yes and yes. They said it's okay if I write in romaji (basically spell out Japanese words with English letters) but they have to be all capitals. Okay, no problem. So, I fill out a couple of pieces of paper. One was to register my chop and essentially say that it is mine and legally binding (no signatures, you just use your chop). The second form was to open the account (you only need 1 yen to open an account in Japan, which is about a penny) and required my address (exactly as it was written on the residency card except romaji instead of hiragana) and my name and some other minor info. I filled out everything according to the instructions that Arron translated for me and then we started waiting. The bank closed, they rolled down the doors and we waited. It wasn't that long of a wait but it seemed like forever due to it's awkwardness. Note: the bank closed at 3:00 PM, strange! Finally they motion us over and I was given my bank card and an account book. Nice!
I walked back to the YMCA and was pretty happy about things and then my phone rang, which is weird since no one calls me in Japan. It was someone cheerfully chirping Japanese at me very rapidly. The only parts I understood were my name and sorry. I apologized and politely explained that I had no idea what they were saying in Japanese as and that I don't speak Japanese. There was another stream of rapid Japanese to which I repeated myself. Eventually there was an awkward hold and then a male voice explained, with some difficulty, that I had a mistake on my form and needed to go back to the bank and that they would "open it back up just for you". So I walked back to the bank (sadly, without a translator this time). The lady who looked over my paperwork was standing out front repeatedly bowing and apologizing (uh... I'm the one who made the mistake here?) and when I apologized since it really was my mistake she looked like she was going to panic so I stopped.
I had managed to use my fantastic powers of dyslexia to write Chou not Chuo in two places so I had to fill out all of the forms again. Then upon another inspection, they decided that my upper case "U" was not correct because it had a little bit of a tail and that is not a proper "U". So as they apologized several more times I filled out the forms a third and (hopefully final) time. This third from was meticulously inspected since at this point I figured they must think me a total idiot (and I wouldn't disagree with them). They deemed it acceptable and I was escorted out. Everyone still at the bank bowed to me as I left and the poor lady who was stuck dealing with me the most just kept bowing. So I bowed back. Then she bowed then I bowed, then she bowed. I thought I'd try a nod? Nope, she bowed. At that point I just ran away. I think that was what I was supposed to do anyway. Yep, Japan is an adventure. But! I now have a bank account.
Monday, November 3, 2014
Halloween in Japan
Japan is just starting to do things for Halloween. Our local grocery store had a tiny section of Halloween candy and for the 2 weeks leading up to Halloween the store employees wore either head bands with ears or bat wings or other silly things or witch hats.
Some of the schools in our area had things for the kids to do. We got a flier in the mail for a "Trick or Festival". I think they meant to say Trick-or-Treating but some how missed the treat part. The YMCA put up a ton of decorations. I spent several hours assembling a witch on a broom and spreading fake spiderwebs all over the place. They went all out and had several mechanical decorations including a spider that was about 8 feet across from leg to leg and swiveled back and forth. The kids love the decorations.
For adults there were a couple of places that had costume contests and people seemed to get really in to dressing up. I thought it was interesting to learn that several people though that Halloween was a actual "day off from work" type of holiday and not just a something we do after work (or maybe wear something to work) kind of a day.
I have a tradition of having a pumpkin carving party. This is something I started my third year of collage and I have not missed a year since. I was super excited a couple of weeks ago when I saw pumpkins at Costco so I bought 4 of them. They were little pumpkins maybe in the 10" - 12" tall range which is much smaller than the average American pumpkin. They we still big enough to carve. In the states I usually try to do pumpkin carving sometime before the actual day or earlier in the day so people can go trick-or-treating with kids or to costume parties. I figured in Japan I didn't really have to worry about there being competing parties.
I cooked up a batch of chili, I thought a little comfort food would be nice for the other expats, made guacamole, pico de guillo and brownies. Including Jeff and I we had 5 Americans, 2 Japanese people and a Greek. Unfortunately, it seemed like Costco was the only place that had pumpkins that were not the tiny ornamental ones. I was glad I had the extra. Fortunately with the extras that I had we had enough pumpkins for every one to carve one. It was the first time the Japanese couple or my Greek friend had carved a pumpkin and they found the whole thing very interesting. I even toasted some pumpkin seeds so that they could try them. It was a lot of fun for everyone and a successful pumpkin carving party.
Some of the schools in our area had things for the kids to do. We got a flier in the mail for a "Trick or Festival". I think they meant to say Trick-or-Treating but some how missed the treat part. The YMCA put up a ton of decorations. I spent several hours assembling a witch on a broom and spreading fake spiderwebs all over the place. They went all out and had several mechanical decorations including a spider that was about 8 feet across from leg to leg and swiveled back and forth. The kids love the decorations.
For adults there were a couple of places that had costume contests and people seemed to get really in to dressing up. I thought it was interesting to learn that several people though that Halloween was a actual "day off from work" type of holiday and not just a something we do after work (or maybe wear something to work) kind of a day.
I have a tradition of having a pumpkin carving party. This is something I started my third year of collage and I have not missed a year since. I was super excited a couple of weeks ago when I saw pumpkins at Costco so I bought 4 of them. They were little pumpkins maybe in the 10" - 12" tall range which is much smaller than the average American pumpkin. They we still big enough to carve. In the states I usually try to do pumpkin carving sometime before the actual day or earlier in the day so people can go trick-or-treating with kids or to costume parties. I figured in Japan I didn't really have to worry about there being competing parties.
I cooked up a batch of chili, I thought a little comfort food would be nice for the other expats, made guacamole, pico de guillo and brownies. Including Jeff and I we had 5 Americans, 2 Japanese people and a Greek. Unfortunately, it seemed like Costco was the only place that had pumpkins that were not the tiny ornamental ones. I was glad I had the extra. Fortunately with the extras that I had we had enough pumpkins for every one to carve one. It was the first time the Japanese couple or my Greek friend had carved a pumpkin and they found the whole thing very interesting. I even toasted some pumpkin seeds so that they could try them. It was a lot of fun for everyone and a successful pumpkin carving party.
Sunday, October 26, 2014
Large men with small outfits...
Sumo Face! |
This weekend Jeff and I went to a Sumo Match in Hiroshima. It was far more interesting than I expected.
The first little interesting bit happened right when we walked in the door, we were handed a little bag and instructed to take our shoes off. The bags were not for western size shoes. Jeff and I both have relatively small feet but I was wearing knee high boots so they didn't exactly fit in the bag.
We were shown our seat by a very helpful usher. I was extremely happy that we opted for the cheap seats. They were on the upper level and were actually seats. The floor seats were literally on the floor. There was a mat or tarp on the floor that was marked off with different seat numbers and people in those seats sat or knelt on the floor. Many people had cushions and they sold them at the arena as well. I was very happy to have a normal seat with a back and my feet on the floor. They were very narrow seats but my knees and back are not used to sitting on the floor. One other interesting thing about the arena was that they had no air conditioning on or fans on. It is October, but it still got amazingly hot and stuffy by the end of the match. Many people were fanning themselves (me included).
You can see the floor seats and the stage structure in the photo. This is the sumo wrestlers introducing themselves. |
Next there was a ceremony where the wrestlers took the stage and each sang a little song. It is my understanding that it was an introductory song where they told a little about themselves and did a little smack talk.
After everyone had a chance to tell their story they filed out. They came back in 2 at a time from opposite sides of the arena and approached the platform where the wrestling took place. The platform was filled with sand and a rope in a circle marked the wrestling area. The opponents would bow to the stage and wait their turn if another match was still in progress by sitting on the floor in front of the stage. When it was their turn to wrestle the announcer would sing their names and they would mount the stage and go to their respective corners and take a sip of water. Then they usually would drop to a low squat then tip over with all their weight on one leg and put their un-weighted leg high in to the air and then repeat on the other side. Then would then grab a handful of salt and toss it in to the ring (to purify it). Next the wrestlers would face each other, clap their hands and put their arms out to show they are unarmed. Then would then repeat the squat leg up ritual in front of each other. then would then squat down and glare at each other for a little bit before standing up and going back to their corners. There was usually a little ritual looking thing that each one would do (similar to any pro athlete before a game) then they'd grab and toss more salt then go back in the ring. They would squat low right in front of each other. Sometimes they would start wrestling and sometimes (something Jeff and I couldn't quite figure out) one of them would decide it wasn't time yet and they'd get more salt, toss it and then squat in front of each other again. This could happen 2 or three times before the match actually started.
Here is the leg lift ritual. These guys weren't as good as some of the others who managed to get their feet up to the level of their heads. |
There are basically two ways to win at sumo, you either get your opponent to step out of the rope circle (on the rope is ok) or you knock your opponent over. The day was set up so that the less experienced and skilled wrestlers went first and they finished with the more known and better wrestlers. The techniques varied but it was obvious even to our untrained eyes that the later wrestlers were much better. The match always started the same. The wrestlers would launch from their squat at each other with an impressive explosive force. There was no countdown or obvious signal to start. The wrestlers would just watch their opponent and decide to go or not. Some waited several seconds and others went right away.
The low squat right before they start. |
Techniques seemed to include: straight up pushing the other guy backwards out of the ring, picking the guy up by the sides of the loin cloth and out (this was often done with a twist from a guy with his back to the outside of the ring), repeatedly slamming in to your opponent to push him out, there was one choke hold where a guy was pushed out by his neck, and several slappers which was really odd looking when done by large adult men. There were several leg sweeps, one guy simply side stepped and pushed his charging opponent past him and out of the ring. The matches were fast and lasted from 30 seconds to maybe 3 minutes of actually wrestling.
Here is an action sequence of two guys smashing in to each other from the initial squat, this was at 7 frames a second, so less than a half a second passed.
Here are a couple other action shots that I took.
In this one, one guy is being picked up by his opponent by his belt. |
This is the match where the victor side stepped his opponent and ran him out of the ring. |
Like wrestling in the US there is a belt for the champion but it is quite a bit different looking and there was a bit of presentation that went with it. There was a victory dance by the champion before he got the belt with lots of demonstration on his ability to squat low and do the standing side split thing. Then a bunch of guys came out with the belt and tied it around his waist and made a very elaborate knot at the back.
The guys tying the belt |
The bow from behind |
The belt from the front |
Again, I'm not sure why this guy got the belt and no-one else but it was interesting.
It was a very interesting experience and glad we went. We followed with dinner at our favorite restaurant in Hiroshima, it was a good day.
Wednesday, October 22, 2014
New blog platform - any problems?
Hi all!
I decided to see what would happen if I changed the blog from Blogger which is a Google platform to Google+ which is also a Google platform. I think the transition will pretty much be seamless for all of you but I'm not 100% sure. If you see any differences please let me know. I've got 30 days to decide if I want to switch back to the old platform or not. This is what happens on rainy afternoons when I'm cooped up in the house, I start messing with things!
Sky
I decided to see what would happen if I changed the blog from Blogger which is a Google platform to Google+ which is also a Google platform. I think the transition will pretty much be seamless for all of you but I'm not 100% sure. If you see any differences please let me know. I've got 30 days to decide if I want to switch back to the old platform or not. This is what happens on rainy afternoons when I'm cooped up in the house, I start messing with things!
Sky
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