25 January 2016

Kanto Trip Part 1 - Kyoto (November 2015)

The week of (American) Thanksgiving happened to be a week of special testing for the students at my school, so I had no classes. Roxy had made plans to go to Kyoto and Osaka for the week, and she sweetly invited me to tag along. It was coincidentally the third anniversary of my first trip to Kyoto (and Tokyo, and Osaka).

Day 1: Kyoto National Museum and Kiyomizudera Illuminations

Roxy had already made night bus plans, but I decided to travel in luxury. I took an early shinkansen from Shin-Aomori, made a quick transfer in Tokyo, and arrived in Kyoto in the early afternoon on the 23rd. Shinkansen is probably the most expensive mode of transport in Japan, and in my opinion the best- I try to economize on every other part of a trip, but I'll treat myself with the bullet train (the ticket usually ends up costing as much as every other part of the trip combined).

Hayabusa Shinkansen waiting at Shin-Aomori Station
Monday the 23rd was a national holiday, Labor Thanksgiving day, so Kyoto Station was a bit crowded with travelers, I assume heading home from their three-day-weekends and not heading off on a week's adventure like me.

Crowds in the Shinkansen area of Kyoto Station
I met up with Roxy at our hostel near Shichijo station. We made our first attempt to visit the temple Sanjusangen-do, famous as Japan's longest wooden structure and the home of 1001 statues of Kannon, aka Guanyin, the goddess of mercy. The temple had just changed over to their winter hours and closed an hour earlier than we expected, so we looked around for something else nearby. Lo and behold, across the street from Sanjusangen-do we saw a crowd heading into the Kyoto National Museum.

As we stood in front of the ticket booth debating the ticket price, a young Japanese guy approached us and offered us a free ticket to the Rinpa special exhibit, which decided us in favor of checking it out. It turned out to be the last day of the exhibit, which included quintessential examples of the aesthetic style called Rinpa or Rimpa, founded in Kyoto and practiced from the 1600s to the mid 1800s. One of the crowning pieces was a calligraphy scroll called "Anthology with Cranes" featuring cranes painted in silver and gold in many stages of flight. There were also many folding screens, decorative containers and kimono. It was a pretty good opener for three days in Kyoto.

Meiji Kotokan Hall (currently closed) at the Kyoto National Museum
Welcome to the Kyoto National Museum courtyard
Heisei Chishinkan Hall, designed by architect Taniguchi Yoshio, opened just last year
After we left the museum, we squeezed into a very crowded bus headed for Kiyomizu-dera to see the night illuminations. The line for tickets for entry was quite long but moved quickly and we were inside in no time. A seriously powerful spotlight was shining from the northeast corner of the temple grounds off into the western night sky, and all the temple buildings were lit from below. Certain clusters of trees were lit with yellow, blue and green lights from below. The eponymous fountain (kiyomizu means "clear/pure water") had a line of devoted folks waiting for their turn to drink some of its water and hopefully gain some luck.

Kiyomizudera spotlight illumination
Crowds entering Kiyomizudera
Illuminated pagoda
An illuminated stand of trees above the temple grounds
Looking down from the viewing platform
Waiting to drink the water from the fountain
Pagoda and spotlight reflection
Looking back at the spotlight as we headed away from the temple
After that, rather than wait for another crowded bus back to the hostel, we opted for a taxi. It was a great choice, because our middle-aged taxi driver turned out to be a death metal fan who got along really well with Roxy and even played a little Slipknot from the taxi's stereo before letting us out near Shichijo station and driving off with a death metal salute.

Walking after dinner, Kyoto Station (on the right) looked like some sort of land-locked cruise ship
Day 2: Kinkaku-ji and Arashiyama

On my first trip to Kyoto three years ago, I had big plans to see all the sights on the west side of Kyoto, but I was totally stymied by the public bus system and never made it there. So, I didn't get to see Kinkaku-ji, the iconic golden pavilion, and I didn't see the bamboo forest of Arashiyama. It's safe to say these were probably the two things in Kyoto I wanted most to see this time around.

We got up and out of the hostel pretty early and walked to Kyoto Station to catch a bus to Kinkakuji. Honestly I'm still a bit stymied by the bus system in Kyoto, since it seemed like at least five different buses claimed to go to Kinkaku-ji, but we picked one and arrived just ahead of the first tour-busload of tourists. We even got the prime viewing spot mostly to ourselves (and about ten other people) for a few minutes.
Fancy iced siphon coffee in a fancy copper-plated mug
Map of the Kinkaku-ji grounds
Kinkaku-ji grounds
Postcard shot of Kinkaku-ji pavilion
Kinkaku-ji gardens
Ten minutes after we arrived, the tour buses unloaded 
Kinkaku-ji pavilion
Ducks in the reflecting pool 
Archinerd closeup on the thatched roof eave of the omamori shop
Kinkaku-ji grounds
From Kinkaku-ji, we walked about fifteen minutes to the eastern terminus of the Keifuku Kitano Line, and took it all the way to the western terminus at Arashiyama station. A long time ago, I read a post on the cooking blog 101cookbooks about how Heidi (the author) had visited Arashiyama in the rain and it was all atmospheric and empty... so I mistakenly got the impression that Arashiyama was 1) all about the bamboo forest and 2) not that heavily touristed. How wrong I was.

As soon as we got off the train we were in a slow-moving milling crowd of sight-seers, with fashion-model-quality couples wandering about in beautiful kimono eating yuba ice cream and sakura mochi, or riding in rickshaws. There are many temples, parks, restaurants, omiyage shops and ryokan, in addition to the bamboo forest, where hopefully you can walk without an obasan chattering in your ear or staring at you admonishingly for stuffing an onion roll in your mouth (I definitely got hangry and got a Look for eating in a non-eating zone).

We headed for the first temple we saw, which turned out to be Tenryu-ji, the most important temple in Arashiyama and one of the Kyoto gozan (five great Zen temples). We decided to walk through the garden and skip the building interiors in order to have time for other things.

I think this is (probably) the Kuri Hall at Tenryu-ji
Visitors walking on the long approach to Tenryu-ji 
Texture - raked gravel in the Zen garden
Sogenchi Teien (Sogen Pond Garden) 
Sogenchi Teien (Sogen Pond Garden)
We didn't go inside, but we could look into the ceremonial hall 
Archinerd shot of roof structure and copper gutters
The bamboo forest encroaches on the Tenryu-ji grounds
Texture - mosses, pebbles, momiji
Quince flower in the garden at Tenryu-ji
The north gate of Tenryu-ji let us out in the middle of the bamboo forest path, in what seemed to be the most crowded spot. The tall bamboo swayed dramatically overhead in the wind, and the crowds on the path oohed and aahed appreciatively. Maybe because I was hangry, or maybe because I had imagined something different, I felt a bit unfulfilled by the experience.

Crowds in the bamboo forest
A less crowded spot in the bamboo forest
After stopping to relax at the foot onsen ("Station Footbath") at Keifuku Arashiyama Station, we walked to the JR station nearby for the train back to the area of our hostel.

Keifuku Arashiyama Station has an illuminated "Kimono Forest" near the platforms 
The "Kimono Forest"
It was getting late but not go-to-bed late, so we thought we'd take a look at the Gion area, but almost everything on the main street was closed or closing for the day. We shuffled through the Yasaka Shrine and then wandered in dark and quiet streets of machi-ya style buildings and fancy chauffered cars before finally heading back for the night.

The Yasaka Shrine at night with hardly anyone around
At Yasaka Shrine
Wandering in the dark behind Yasaka Shrine
Lanterns on a side street in Gion

Informational Links:

Sanjusangen-do
Rinpa at the Kyoto Museum
Anthology with Cranes
Kiyomizu-dera Temple
Tenryu-ji Temple

02 January 2016

Hakodate Guide Hijikata (Part Two)

This is part two of my trip to Hakodate, which was back in early October. Better late than never I suppose... 

Saturday (con't):

After leaving Goryokaku Park, I stopped for dinner en route to a second attempt on the ropeway. The winds had died down and the temperature had dropped, so I was treated to a bone-chilling and gorgeous view of the city, the bay, and the ships in the Tsugaru Strait. Just as I was about to go inside and thaw out, the half-moon appeared over the city, pumpkin-orange and hanging so low that at first I wasn't sure what I was seeing... hot air balloon? U.F.O.?


View from Mt. Hakodate Summit (click for better view)
Mt Hakodate Ropeway heading up to the summit
Goryokaku Tower upper left of center; Red Brick Warehouse bottom center
Low hanging orange moon over Hakodate (compare to image at the top)
Although the ropeway car I took to the summit had only two other people on it, the return car was the last of the night and it was packed.

Sunday:

I did a fair amount of poking into shops and checking out souvenirs on Saturday, but I waited until Sunday to make my choices. After checking out of the hotel, I dumped my heavy backpack in a locker at the station and went off to kill a few hours until my train back to Hirosaki.

I took the cable car out to the Bay Area again for some souvenir shopping and stopped in at the Snaffles shop in the Red Brick Warehouse "Western Goods Hall" (赤れんが店洋物店, Akarengaten Youbutsukan) for the famous cheesecake. I treated myself to coffee and "catch cakes," one chocolate and one cheese flavor. Super light and delicious.



Snaffles "catch cakes" in cheese and chocolate flavor... yum.

Finally, I hiked back up the hill to the Motomachi district one more time to do a quick sketch of the Russian Orthodox Church, before heading down to the tram and the train station again.
Material and texture combination in the Motomachi district
Looking at the Catholic Church from the steps of the Russian Orthodox Church
Quick sketch of the Russian Orthodox Church
Tiles atop the wall of Otani-Honganji Temple
Camembert is not the first cheese that comes to mind when I think of cheesecake...
Hakodate Hijikata souvenirs near the train station