Category: Trip

NYC 1

We’re in NYC! It’s chilly and there’s pigeons everywhere.

This is my belated (sort of) birthday celebration, and we don’t have any special plans aside from shop and eat.

We saw a Gandhi statue and an old dude selling religious iconography including one of Joe Biden. I also saw a bicycle with a set of mudflaps decorated with Dragonball characters.

Our hotel room is cozy with a nice view of Bryant Park. It’s the same place we always stay and the staff recognized us when we arrived.

As usual I’m sending postcards so watch your mailboxes. I bought 30 cheapo ones today for only $3, and I’ll use them for Postcrossing. The price was so good I wanted to buy more but I was embarrassed πŸ™‚

Right now we’re bloated and tired and I already regret eating all those ‘hot nuts’. But probably not enough I won’t do it again tomorrow!

Postcards From Japan

So far we have received 37 postcards from our recent Japan trip, all of which I sent myself. Here they all are:

The panda one was purchased at Ueno zoo the day we went and saw the pandas. The Godzilla one is metallic and plastic. I have a few more like this waiting to be sent one day πŸ™‚

The top right one is a lenticular postcard of an underwater scene. It’s the only lenticular we’ve received so far, and arrived about 6 weeks after it was sent. There’s at least one other lenticular card I sent us that hasn’t yet arrived, but it’s been about two months now and I’ve somewhat given up hope.

The left one was purchased in the gift shop of Hiroshima castle (which it depicts). The horse one was purchased less than two hours after we had arrived in Japan, and may be my favourite card of the trip (even though it has nothing to do with Japan). It effectively shows how I usually feel at the end of every day on a vacation!

The postcard showing ‘Alice’ is a mystery: I found it amongst some unsent postcards a few months ago and had no recollection or ever buying (or even seeing) it before. Naturally I took it with me so it could fulfill its destiny to be mailed! The Diavolo postcard depicts an Ultraman villian, and is an impressively metallic and textured card.

The cat one was mailed on Christmas Day!

The card at left was found amongst some old items when I was doing some spring cleaning a year or so ago. It’s about 30 years old and (I think) came in a magazine. I wonder if any Japanese postal employees looked and it and wondered where it came from?

The Buddha card was purchased in Kamakura in 2013 (when we visited with Bernard), and had been ‘gathering power’ – unsent – in my collection for over a decade. Now that power has been released into the world!

The Hermione (from Harry Potter) card is a beautiful high-quality all-plastic postcard and I doubted it would actually arrive. I may have purchased a few others at the same time…

I sent 12 New Years cards in different designs. Did you get the same one I sent myself? The Rilakkuma card was purchased at the Miyajima Island Rilakkuma shop which was insanely well-stocked considering how remotely it was located. I bought two in this series and sent the other to someone I knew would appreciate it πŸ™‚

Nothing says Japan like a photo of a quokka! I bought three copies of that cute card but forget who I sent the others to. The card in top left was part of a set purchased at the cinema when we saw the Kamen Rider film, but the set was for another movie (that we didn’t see).

Four of the cards show here – including the middle one above – I had made myself and taken with me ‘just in case’. I do this every trip, but I’m a fool for every supposing I wouldn’t be swimming with options when it came to buying cards in Japan!

And lastly this gotochi (shaped) card of a Buddha. It’s fairly large, and Japan Post is emphatic that these cannot be sent through the mail internationally. And yet I put a stamp on it and tossed it in the postbox with a wish… and it arrived safe and sound. I also bought an oyster gotochi (in Hiroshima, which is famous for oyster), and sent it to AW’s sister who lives in Japan.

What do you write on all these cards?” is a question I’ve been asked more than once. As an example, here’s one I wrote the evening of the Earthquake (we were in Osaka):

Most of the cards have silly anecdotes or in-jokes on them that we have invariably forgotten about by the time we receive and read them. They’re mini-diaries, and I’ve got decades worth of them now. They’re my most prized possessions!

In case you were interested, here’s (most of) the different stamps on the above cards:

I’ve become an expert at buying stamps in Japan, and always do my best to make sure I get a good variety for the cards. Take another look at the stamps on your cards!

37 (or more?) postcards in 16 days is a lot, but I never plan on sending myself so many. Truth is I always buy too many stamps, and then end up sending a lot of ‘extra’ cards in the last few days. Of course this post is just the ones I sent myself, and dozens more were sent to other people. I hope you enjoyed the ones you received πŸ™‚

Zoffy I’m Coming Home!

All good things end, and so too does this vacation. Today we head home.

Yesterday was a whirl of shopping – filling every available space in our suitcases. I stayed in Akihabara (which was insanely busy since it was pedestrian day) and Kristin went to a mega cosmetic shop in Harajuku. Both of us had fun, and then later in the evening we returned to Akiba to lose a bit more money not winning crane games!

What a full trip this has been! We had a somewhat loose list of things we wanted to see which we managed to complete, and then of course we added a few other things once we learned of them (wrestling, Ultraman). What we didn’t do was much resting; so we’ve saved something for when we return home.

Aside from the inevitable ‘pick up’ post once I’ve had time to recover/unpack/sort, this ends the trip report. I hope you’ve found it interesting, and in some small way been able to share the journey with us πŸ™‚