Category: Japan

Let’s All Go To Ikebukuro

As seems to have become tradition, we went to Ikebukuro today for shopping, Game Center’s and arcades. This is the sixth Japan trip in which day one has been spent at Ikebukuro, and as always it ended up being the right choice.

We are of course jetlagged and our food schedules are all messed up but we feel better than yesterday and I assume we’ll be mostly fine tomorrow.

That’s one of the limited Christmas drinks at Maccas (‘Double Choco Strawberry Frappe’). We ate in the Maccas in Sunshine City and even though Christmas here is hardly as big as in the west the entire mall was bonkers and it felt as if most of Tokyo had turned out to shop today! This was true for most of the shops we visited, and the lines at restaurants eventually became unreasonable, such as a three-hour wait at our local Kura Sushi.

Oh unlike last Christmas and when I was here in June, foreign tourists are conspicuous in their absence. Either my theory was correct (ask me!) or maybe they just don’t want to visit in winter?

We bought lots of stuff – stationary, cosmetics, candy, books etc – and as a result were laden with full bags all day. I still found time for some retro arcade gaming at Mikado, and I’ll say again if I lived in Tokyo I’d be visiting that place all the time.

Given we’d woken very early and set out hours before the shops even opened, it ended up being a very long day and by the time we dragged ourselves back to the hotel we were exhausted.

In fact even as I write I’m struggling to remain awake. But sleep is for the dead, since I’ve yet to sort and pack everything again so we can ship the suitcases to our final hotel as we travel away from Tokyo for the next week. Where will we go? Stay tuned…

A Day Of Travel

We’re in Japan. The trip was very long (~25 hours) and tiring and we’re both a bit ruined.

Almost eight hours of the trip was a layover in Detroit airport, and were it not for frozen coke mayhaps we wouldn’t have made it!

Don’t we look happy when we boarded the international flight? Fourteen hours later when we landed, all we felt was relief!

It was very late and we just went to a few shops near our hotel (which we’ve stayed at twice before). It’s in the Asakusa district which is full of restaurants, bars and entertainment venues and the above is a selection of a series of new signs on the street celebrating the vibe of this lively part of the city.

We’ve got an exciting vacation ahead of us. Stay tuned for details…

The Japan Postcards

It’s been more than a month since I returned from Japan, and I think it’s time I did the partner post to this one from a few weeks back. I was hesitating because six of the 35 postcards I sent us from Japan have unfortunately yet to arrive. Since it’s been a few weeks since we got the last one, I’ve all but given up on them 🙁

Why so many cards? Three reasons: I like writing and sending cards, the variety in Japan is astonishing and I had lots of stamps! The cards I send from Japan tend to fall into two categories: the tourist ones such as the four shown above, and the pop-culture ones such as these:

From the left we have a Godzilla card, a Junji Ito card and an Ultraman card. All these are metallic and foiled, and look wonderful.

I suppose there’s a third category as well: ‘unusual’ which includes shaped and lenticular cards. I’m beginning to think the Japanese post office has it in for such cards, since a lenticular I sent us back in January never arrived and I believe two of the missing ones from this last trip were shaped and lenticular as well.

Postcards are almost always written in the hotel room of an evening while watching trashy TV, although sometimes I’ll write them at a restaurant or to pass the time while traveling (on a train or plane for instance). Notably I almost always write them in laundromats, and have done so in about seven countries now.

Writing so many cards would be a challenge be for many I suspect, but I have a simple system: one describes the day (what I did, what I saw, what I ate, what I bought etc) and the other is unrelated musings or crazy nonsense. The above is an example of the former. (Yes almost all the clothes I took with me were discarded to make suitcase space!)

And that is an example of the latter. Bernard had sent me a set of (honestly terrible) Star Wars rubber stamps and the Chewbacca caught my eye and traveled with me. One thing led to another and soon enough the stamp was writing his own postcards under an assumed name. Did you get a card from APELINQ?

As I said I had loads of Japanese stamps, both because Sue had given me some in Australia (leftovers from her trip) and because I went crazy in several post offices. The above are the staples that have been in print for years now, and you’ll see them on Japanese cards going back a decade or more. There’s also a dog, but I think he must be on one of the missing cards.

Every month Japan prints a special set of themed stamps, and whenever I visit I buy them and use them. I forget the actual themes of the sets I purchased while I was there, but I believe one was ‘summer’ and another ‘flowers’. The rabbit and moon were from the same themed sheet, but I don’t recall what it was.

I hardly sent any flower stamps to myself, and there was an entire sheet of food stamps I don’t have any photos of because the ones I sent myself were probably on the lost cards.

As with most trips I try to vary the stamps on the cards I send, and since each of these themed sheets has ten unique stamps on it you very likely received some not shown here. Why not check yours and see?

The top left one was from a themed sheet showing photographs of tourist locations. I liked these a lot and since this is the only example on the cards I have received I assume I used them on the missing cards. I hope they one day arrive!

I wonder what the other circular bird stamps were and who got them?

I purchased the above stamps (which came from the same commemorative sheet) in Kinugawa, from a post office that was extravagantly staffed and stocked for such an ‘abandoned’ town. As usual communication was via translator, and the young lady that served me went to extraordinary lengths in giving me printed guides on how to mail items in Japan and how to affix stamps. She also gave me dozens of airmail stickers that I promptly lost, although I notice some of the cards we received have them on which means someone in the postal service affixed them!

I hope writing this post triggers some sort of cosmic reward, and the other six cards arrive soon. Regardless, I hope you enjoyed a glimpse into the postcards of my trip, which for me are always the #1 souvenir 🙂