The Japan Postcards

I sent home 55 postcards this past trip, and they’ve all arrived safe and sound. I sent an average of 3 per day we were in Japan, plus an extra on New Year’s Day.

Most of them are full of vivid and often humorous anecdotes about the trip, and I know I’ll be enjoying rereading them for years. I never seem to run out of things to write, perhaps not surprising since I estimate that including all travel and Postcrossing I wrote over 800 postcards last year!

It’s become a little difficult to find tourist cards in Japan now – I saw none in Osaka – but the Japanese still seem to enjoy postcards in general so it’s easy to find artistic ones. Based on the stamps used I think I sent about 115 in total.

I write them every evening, although there were times I was too tired and wrote them the next morning. When I travel alone I often write them in restaurants but I only did that once this trip. Here’s the exact card:

I was going to write a ‘sequel’ to the above since as I was leaving an unexpected song started playing but by the end of the day I had forgotten and that card was never written. I often use my phone to record ‘postcard ideas’ but apparently I’d not done it that day.

The above was sent from Arima, and was the day I went to the postage museum. Both eki stamps were collected inside the museum, and of course I had blank cards in my backpack for that purpose! We saw a lot of good eki stamps this past trip, and they all were collected on at least one card. Many of you would have got one in the mail.

Do you remember ‘someone else’s dog‘? The above card chronicled my discovery of a similar gacha machine on the penultimate day! Tiny things like this are a common topic on cards I write.

Many years ago Bernard send me a set of Star Wars rubber stamps and – for reasons long forgotten – I took to the Chewbacca, named him ‘APELINQ’ and have been using him to deliver sage comments on postcards ever since. Maybe you’ve even received one? The above card was written the day we found a sold out drink machine selling cans with stickers of a Japanese idol group. I made it my mission to find them for sale somewhere before we left…

Some two weeks later, I succeeded. Alas it wasn’t ‘the white one’. And if you’re observing that the above card is massive, then that’s because it is:

The above shows the two largest and the smallest cards all compared to a normal-sized one (bottom right). The biggest one is about five times larger than a normal card, and since it’s also lenticular it’s stiff and somewhat heavy. I put ¥918 postage on it and crossed my fingers and as is obvious it arrived in immaculate condition.

As it turns out I have an even larger card – twice the size of that one – that I plan send on a future trip. I’ll probably put even more postage on that one!

As I mentioned during the trip I went into a post office early on and bought a kings ransom of stamps, including one of each of the basic types, which include the ¥10, ¥30, ¥50, ¥300 and ¥500 above. In the end it wasn’t enough and I needed to buy more, but even sending over a hundred cards it still cost only a fraction of what it would from here or Australia.

It costs ¥100 to send a card airmail from Japan, but when cards are oversized or unusually shaped you need to pay extra. In the past I’ve had such cards take much longer to arrive or not arrive at all, so to be safe now I load on extra postage. Someone got a card with a ¥350 stamp on it this trip. Was it you?

The above are the shaped cards I sent this trip. I was very pleasantly surprised the one at the bottom right wasn’t damaged in any way. In fact very few of the cards show any evidence of being damaged by USA mail sorting machines, which gives me hope they’ve improved their automation.

The stamp at the top is massive. In fact it’s so big I couldn’t really use it on some cards. I had exactly four of these (all different) and two came to us so maybe you got one?

The old stamps on the right were purchased at the postage museum. The had a tiny amount (only four) of unused stamps for sale and I bought them all, wishing they had more. A week or so later I found a stamp & coin shop in Osaka and bought several sheets of stamps from a couple of decades ago. They will be used on my next trip.

In fact I’ve even got most of the cards for that trip, since I found a stash of new tourist ones on the very last day we were there. I’ve got three dozen cards and about ¥4000 in postage all ready to go.

I suppose I should return so I can start sending them 😉

Big Snow

We had a giant snowfall a day ago.

The forecast became increasingly unbelievable, beginning a week before at about a foot and by the morning of the blizzard rising to 2.5+ feet. Everything closed and we both worked from home.

The snow began Sunday before lunch, and continued for over a day, although most of the snow had fallen before we woke on Monday.

The last photo above was taken at first light Monday morning. The bird feeder remains under the snow as I write this, a day later. Since it’s going to remain below freezing for at least the next ten days I don’t expect to see it again for a while.

Official tallies of the snowfall range from 12.5 to 15 inches, but according to what I read measuring the actual totals was a challenge since many of them depend on volunteers that in some cases were unable to report. The tallies seem to vary wildly as well: a town not five minutes away from us is reported to have received over 5 inches more which seems dubious.

I cleared the snow three times. The first time with just a shovel, and then I used the snowthrower to clear the driveway just before dark on Sunday. This was quite a challenge since it was awesomely cold (below -15C) and I couldn’t stay out too long. When we woke on Monday it looked like I hadn’t even cleared the day before, since what seemed like at least as much again had fallen overnight. Without the snowthrower we would have had a mighty challenge indeed.

The photo on the left was Monday morning. Keep in mind that the previous afternoon I had already cleared the steps twice! There was so much snow that the usual method – just push it off the steps and patio – wasn’t an option since the snow level was higher than the patio. Clearing the steps is usually the easiest task, but yesterday it was a chore.

Luckily we didn’t lose power, and I haven’t heard of any serious disruptions from the storm. During the worst it seemed like everyone just stayed at home (the only vehicles we saw on our road Monday were ploughs).

I like snow but maybe this was a bit too much 🙂

Japan Pickups: Five More

Last pickup post, and today I’ll share five random things, chosen for how unusual they are.

Kristin had wanted a vinyl figure for a few years now, and had even spied this guy (in a different paint job) on a previous trip. He’s a demonic little frog, and this particular version has what appears to be a dipped paint job using metallic paint.

There’s an entire industry of creators sculpting and manufacturing small batches of figures, and lots of collectors eager to buy them. This guy wasn’t expensive, but some of them are very pricey indeed. And if you’re after originals from the 70s or 80s… that’s a path to bankruptcy 🙂

This guy fits in your hand though and is very cute. I doubt he’ll be our last vinyl figure.

I bought this Krull movie program at a tiny used bookstore in Kobe. I only found it by accident after seeing a sign on the street, and the store was up a narrow staircase and occupied a single small room with no other door or even cupboard. An elderly man sat at a desk with a skull on it and quietly read as I browsed dense bookshelves full of magazines and movie programs.

I have fond nostalgia for Krull, and given this was only ¥50 (about $0.32) I grabbed it at light speed. It’s a beautiful little booklet, and will happily live in my cupboard for ever. Or at least until I send it to Bernard as a birthday gift.

The above is ‘Blood Pond Ointment’ and was purchased at the ‘Blood Hell’ in Beppu. It’s a small pot of mud from the bottom of the red pool at the ‘Blood Hell’ (seen in this blog post) and is sold as a cosmetic item. Or maybe medicinal? We haven’t opened it yet, and before traveling we sealed the sealed paper bag in two ziplock bags since it absolutely reeks of smoke.

The above photo – I found online – shows what this product looks like. It’s literally mud, and makes wild claims about curing skin conditions and even removing blemishes or liver spots! Allegedly when it dried out you can submerge the pot in water to regenerate the healing power of the mud. KLS purchased this with some excitement, but since she hasn’t even opened it yet I wonder if she’s scared?

I purchased the above set of five postcards at Mandarake for the surprising price of only ¥200. This was surprising since it’s a 27-year-old Ultraman item, but at the same shop I also purchased two other postcard sets for a similar price. I suppose Mandarake doesn’t value postcards very highly?

To my amazement once I opened the set I discovered these are pre stamped cards! This postage is still good, which means I essentially purchased ¥250 worth of postage for only ¥200! A small profit admittedly, but one of the deals of the trip. I’ll send them all next time I visit Japan. If you want one let me know.

In Arima after exhausting myself walking up a steep the hill to the Postage Museum, I reunited with KLS at a strange little shop that houses the salt and pepper shaker museum on the second floor. KLS waited downstairs while I whirlwinded through the museum, and she noticed (as I had not) that the shop predominately sold bucket hats!

I love bucket hats. I wear them all the time, and even wrote a eulogy for one I lost! But the ones I had purchased always had a weakness: they weren’t warm enough for winter!

Which is why that little store in Arima was so special: they sold woolen bucket hats for cold weather. I was delighted to find the above, and from that day on wore it more or less nonstop during the entire trip! It’s now my favourite winter hat, and I love it so much I regret not buying a few.

As mentioned this is it for pickups from this past trip. The dozens of books, 9 Switch games, anime figures, endless piles of candy and trading cards: all this will remain unmentioned on this blog. Except maybe, one day, the cards 😉