Months of planning paid off - Matt and I returned from an amazing trip to New Zealand. Posts to follow! |
Sunday, October 25, 2015
The Sunday Snapshot
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
The Day on Miyagi Island
Okinawa is part of an island chain and is surrounded by other, tiny islands. Many require a ferry to access, but some are connected by long bridges. One Saturday Matt and I invited our friends to travel across multiple bridges to reach and explore Miyagi Island. While we wanted to simply drive around the island, we also wanted a specific place to search out. I chose a cafe found in one of my handy 100-series cafe guides. While the slim book is in Japanese, the stamp-sized map is fairly easy to follow on a tiny island with few roads. We ate at a cafe on the main island of Okinawa before setting out to find this cafe known for its bread. Specifically, bread in the shape of hedgehogs.
We found views of beaches from the top of cliffs, and we drove until we found views of beaches surrounded by the same cliffs. There was a sign warning away swimmers, so we simply enjoyed the water from the ankle-down. I highly recommend a day simply spent driving around Miyagi Island. And if any fellow foreigners want to try hedgehog bread you will be treated like celebrities.
The cafe, known as Boulangerie Cafe Yamashita, was within sight of the bridge leading to the island, so it was very easy to find. We all picked out a bread roll to sample, but only I selected the hedgehog bread filled with a chocolate/ red bean paste mixture. The owner was delighted to see us and asked us what base we were from and how we had found the little shop. We explained the cafe book, and she asked the four of us to pose for a photo for their website. I found the photo on their facebook page a few days later with this (translated) caption:
Camp
Courtney they came from, what a modern art published ' Okinawa hundred
series " has been found. Japanese is read, but a photo and map to rely
on you to say. (thank you! ) (please come here again! )Photo with you want to go!! And that 'Okinawa 100' also nice!!
We did not stay to eat our bread and enjoy the view as we had only recently finished lunch. I ate my little hedgehog as I was starving at the end of the day. It was an interesting mixture of savory and sweet in a crusty shell, but my American palate wished for more chocolate and less bean paste.
Too cute to eat... until I was really, really hungry. |
We simply drove the perimeter of the island and stopped the car whenever we found an interesting site. There was the seawall covered in colorful murals done by school children. The seawall also had a ladder so we could climb over and see the beautiful turquoise ocean.
The water was such a beautiful color! |
Saturday, October 3, 2015
The Top of Mt. Fuji
The view from the fifth station. |
We planned our trip to Tokyo during the summer climbing season, but Amanda informed me she would not be making the trek with me. We found friends who did want to climb: our neighbor Dave and one of my best friends Asa who flew all the way from the states for this experience.
We traveled with a tour group that Amanda booked. The group left from our hotel lobby at two in the morning. When we arrived at the mountain it was still dark, around four a.m, and a brisk breeze was blowing. Some of our fellow hikers scoffed at our shorts, t-shirts, and very light layers from beneath their heavy parkas. We purchased our fuji sticks (a souvenir hiking stick that you can have have branded at the different stations on your ascent) and, in our impatience to get ahead of the slower group, we set off on our path. Turns out it was the wrong path.
Sunrise from above the clouds. |
"Where did you come from?" I asked our tour guide.
"The only authorized trail. Where did YOU come from?" she asked in response. We had no good answer.
As our tour group stopped to shed their heavy winter jackets now that their bodies had warmed during the climb (hah! We win!), the three of us raced off again to keep ahead of the group. This time we followed the signs.
The entrance to the summit is guarded by a torii gate. We stopped to take pictures and made the final ascent. The view from the top, despite being nothing but clouds, was still breathtaking. We purchased a traditional bowl of hot noodles and our last brand for the sticks and admired the caldera. We had plenty of time to make our way down before the bus left.
A reminder that this serene mountain is actually an active volcano. |
The climb was a great experience made even more so by getting to do it with my friends, but I truly understand the famous Japanese proverb. "A wise man will climb Mt. Fuji once; A fool will climb Mt. Fuji twice."
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)