Category: Trip

Finally, owls!

When you first enter Akiba Fukurou, they sit you down amidst the owls and explain the rules: no loud noises or talking, no flash photography, how to touch the owls and how to let them sit on you. While the small group in attendance (advance reservations are mandatory; it’s always booked full) was paying attention, we were all mostly dazzled by the fact we were sitting in a beautifully clean and decorated smallish two-room space with 30 different owls!

Whilst technically an ‘owl cafe’, this was 100% owls and no cafe. We could touch the owls, photograph them, hold two each and mostly just he charmed by them. They ranged from very big (Yossie sized!) to very small (look in the top far left corner in the first photo) and all had a little plaque displaying their name, age, weight and species.

They were human-raised and perfectly calm and ‘friendly’ (for owls, I suppose), always seemingly more interested in watching what the other owls were doing than the people looking at them!

They have 34 owls in total, from all over the world, but 4 had ‘a day off’! They were all incredibly handsome birds, and the hour we had in there flew past.

That guy – Spring Onion was his name – was 1 kg and the third biggest they had. His half-orange eyes indicate he is not a nocturnal animal. I learned that yesterday 🙂

Some of the owls are ‘friends’, and we saw a little one preening a much bigger one. A few made noises too, rarely like the ‘hoo’ we all think of!

Akiba Fukurou was a remarkable place and a highlight of the trip. For such a relatively low cost (¥2000/person, which includes a custom laminated photo) it was absurd value for such a unique experience. If you’re ever near Akihabara, don’t miss it!

The rest of yesterday was Akihabara, which means heaven for an aging geek like myself. I trolled game/anime/card shops like a fiend, dazzling at everything I saw.

This Zelda game-and-watch is one of the few things ‘on my list’ but I’m not paying ¥39800 (about $400) for something I passed up at £50 in Cardiff last year!

This limited famicon-edition Gameboy Micro surprised me not just because I own it already, but because I actually brought it with me on this trip! I suppose I’ll treat it with a tad more respect now I know it’s worth hundreds 🙂

Akiba is pretty special. I feel like I could spend days here and never get bored. Alas, there’s never enough time…

Walking Tour

Yesterday we took a 35000 step 9 hour walking tour of Kyoto. Starting from our hotel (adjacent to the station) we first visited Higashi temple, said to have the biggest wooden building in the world:

This was followed by Nijo castle, which had an exceptional audio guide that over two hours told us all we wanted to know about the 400-year-old castle:

In the afternoon we hit the (famous) shopping district with its endless covered streets that shaded us from the sun.

We saw everything from gold poop statues…

To grilled sparrow…

To Japanese girls in kimono playing UFO catchers…

Plus we bought a giant duffle bag for the return trip; absolutely necessary due to how stuffed our cases had become 🙂

Kyoto

We’re in Kyoto now, speeding here yesterday on a bullet train. We spent the afternoon around the station area where there are several malls and lots to see.

We went up this tower and had a goosey gander. We were particularly taken by the mascot ‘Tawawa’ (geddit?); I’ll put one on your postcard!

Kyoto station has a department store in it with a super fancy food department. Even for someone that spent $60 to ride the bullet train for 11 minutes yesterday, $150 for a rockmelon seems excessive ?

Even though we’ve filled our cases to bursting we bought a bunch more stuff yesterday, from toys to books to food. How will we bring this home?

That’s KLS’s dinner, crab omelette over rice, at a restaurant in the station. No spaghetti photos today!