30.7.2010

Kyoto

KYOTO. The cultural capital of JPN. I think I'm falling, hard.

(Sorry this entry is so late. I'm sorry, sorry, sorry.)

We came on Tuesday. (It seems we can only make one entry per week on average which actually includes what we have done. Coughtheentriesbelowcough. Oh, nothing.

So. Tuesday. Was a shit day all included. We woke up early, showered, gathered our stuff, had nothing to eat, went to the train station (I hate my suitcase.), bought very expensive onigiris', catched the train, stood on our luggage for an hour, scrambled out (I hate my suitcase.), realized it was even hotter in Kyoto than it had been in Osaka (about 35 degrees celcius in the shade), realized we would have to walk in that weather for a few kilometres to our hostel. Did I mention I hate my suitcase? It broke up on me. The wheels didn't move anymore and the handle was... Well let's say it wasn't working. We got to the hostel, sweaty and pissed, luckily didn't have to wait the two hours until the reception opened as we initially thought we'd have to, and flung out our computers.

And found out we didn't get in where we applied to in Helsinki University.

(See entry below.)

Maybe that's enough about Tuesday.

Wednesday we went to a local shrine which a a flee market going on. Also hanged out in Kyoto station, which is EFFING HUGE. It's like the same size as Helsinki-Vantaa airport? Architecturally similiar, too. Lol.

I bought a NEW SUITCASE, which is my new lover and which I would marry if it were legally possible. Fortunately for all of you potential bridesmades for that it isn't, so moving on. We bough a bagful of donuts, just for the hell of it, and decided we understand what it is with the Japanese and donuts. The were actually good, not that fat-dripping crap for obese kids we are used to. I also got my daily proportion of manga by buying a few volumes of Air Gear, while Mia bought a magazine or two.


Thursday we went to Kinkaku-ji and Rokuon-ji, the former of which if you haven't heard of, SHAME ON YOU. It's the Golden Pavilion, and it was very beautiful, calming. Though it was a bitch to get a decent picture of, as there were quite the number of tourists mulling around at all times.


+Rokuon-ji (rock garden). It wasn't large either in any mean of measurement, but the surroundings were beautiful.
 
We had a one-day pass for the busses so we took a bus to Gion, a traditional part of Kyoto in the central of the city. We hanged around for an hour or two, walkings past a hundred tea shops (which were all very expensive so we didn't get to try them). Apart from said tea shops the area is known for its Geisha/Geiko, which we saw (another day) but had bo chance of photographing.

On Friday we visited Fushimi Inari Shrine, which is known for it's path of torii gates, red offerings by worshippers. We were supposed to be there for about an hour or so, so of course we ended up walking four hours around it, mostly uphill.





After Fushimi Inari Shrine we took a train to Arashiyama to see the beautiful surroundings there, but unfortunately we were pretty knackered and didn't end up staying long, only doing a quick look-over.

Saturday we woke up early and me our new acquintances Fiona (from New Zealand) and Ai (from Tokyo) in the lobby, to go see the Gion Festival! The festival mainly included a long parade with traditional instruments and cloating. The best part were the lions in the festival: they walked around as if waiting to find pray, and randomly bit people in the head (which brings good luck by the way)!

The quality of the following video isn't very good (I drop the camera at one point, I'm ashamed of myself) it still tells more than a mile or ten of my words.


One of the highlights of the day was the restaurant Ai took us to, where the options covered mainly rice (with several meat possibilities) on top of which you poured green tea. It sounds suspicious, I know, and it was surprisingly delicious! After eating (and re-watching the parade from the windows of the restaurant which opened to a shopping street) we walked about the shopping district and tasted random weird things, DEEP-FRIED CHOCOLATE amongst other things. Yeah. It was good though!

Also, I'll spam you with a picture from the shopping area:

MODELS OF ICE CREAM.

I want to bring these things home with me.

While going around we saw a postcard of Sanjusangendo, and decided to go there as it was quite close by. See the link to get more info of the Temple, I'm feeling lazy and photographs were prohibited inside the temple.

On Sunday we rented two bikes and pretty much went around in circles in the central area of Kyoto. We cycled to the Imperial Palace Park (kvg) and again to Gyon (to get me Dango, those things are addictive I tell you).

Monday, our last day in Kyoto, we used to go to Kyomizudera, which was an unvelievably beautiful experience *---*

Check the link for photos or Google it, and still you won't even understand how wonderful the place was.

I'd want to add pictures but they're in Mia's camera so I won't. Sorry. I'll edit them here later so come check this entry again in a week or so.

21.7.2010

fuckshithellassfuck.


Sorry. Just found out yesterday that I didn’t get in any of the university options I applied to.

FINNISH SCHOOL SYSTEM I LOVE YOU TOO<3

So. Now my options are quite tied, it’s either getting a job or getting a job.

Well, I’m rather developing a plan of wedding a wealthy local, thus gaining a visa, thus being able to stay h e r e.

This is how my plan is worked out:

1)      Find an upper-class heir
2)      Converse to find out marital status
3)      Pop the question
4)      Wait for the wedding

Sounds good, no?

20.7.2010

Meet Me Halfway

We realized our Ultimate Expedition of Destiny has reached it's halfway point! It's kind of sad but the rest of the journey has the best parts including Kyoto, where we're leaving tomorrow, Nagoya, with the cosplay world vup or something like it there during our stay, and T O K Y O. Need I say more?

But well, I just decided to have a few laughs on the photos we've taken so far and... found myself wanting to add them here also, so here you go: ENJOY.

Btw, those who're here for SRZ BZNZ; be gone. You should know by now just not to read my shit.


The photo breaking the eyes is A CAT. I was looking over my shoulder and suddenly it popped up from out of nowhere. So I always laugh so hard when I see this pic.


It's and ESCALATOR. In a PARK. Only in Japan.

This was my... temporary system when I had slight problems with my adapter.

We found a RUISLEIPÄ-package somewhere IN THE MIDDLE OF NOWHERE -we were literally halfway up a mountain, some 15 kilometres away from Beppu. So it of course merited a photo.

We boiled eggs there. On a mountain. In steam, coming from a hot spring.

Moomin Cafe! Everything was so cute there but expensive so we only ate something small (=the head of Moomintroll with ice cream :D)

We answered some elementary kids' questions in the Peace Park of Hiroshima and got these as payment n__n (count them and you can see how many groups came to us asking those questions..... It took a while).

J-Hoppers Hiroshima; "I am beer machine. And you?" made us laugh so hard. Also the smaller comments like "I am beer", "almost beer" and "not beer" were enjoyable... 
 

The ugliest fish in the history of ugly fish. LIKE WHAT THE HELL IS THIS?
 

OUR PILLOWS in Osaka. Lol Im just cracking up with these pictures  myself XD
 

This one was cute, on the roof of Osaka Floating Garden were locks with the names of married couples~
 

Osaka Castle. I was prompted by Mia. Solution:
 

This sign made me laugh in Nara -do you need to be warned that a wild animal might eat your thinks if you give them to it? Obviously, in Japan, you do.
 

Osaka Castle (or rather the park surrounding it) and a HUGE-ASS cicada. It was like the size of my thumb. But fatter.


 This better keep you entertained for a while so you're welcome. I had a laugh so yeah all is fine.

18.7.2010

Spa World

Yesterday we went shopping to Dotonbori, and bought SHOES. Okay I bought only one pair but I love them to bits! Mine are the ones on the right, Mia bought two pairs and a handbag WHICH IS PINK inside!

Then, well, we came back to our hotel and ate takoyaki (...again) and started for SPA WORLD! It was made of awesome, just like we had predicted. Omg. I was speechless when entering the spa-area. GO CHECK THE PICTURES ON THE WEBSITE and fall in love and come to Osaka. (We were on the Europe side as it's for women on odd months, for men on even ones and vice versa on the Asian side.)

AND.

On the European side.

.
.
.

THERE WAS AN AREA TITLED "FINLAND" WITH SAUNA AND "LAKE WATER" XDDD

Like, if that's not MADE OF WIN I don't know what is! We were running between the lake and sauna and laughing at directing the distraught locals who went for the low-temperature sauna (probably not even a real one -I think it has to be over 70 degrees to actually be a sauna?) and then were shocked as the water was cold, not that wonderful temperature of 40 degrees celcius.

AND. I have to say this.

It was only 1000yen, which means UNDER 10 EUROS. IN TOTAL.

We're going again tomorrow. End of conversation.

But moving on to today (unless you wish to hear a tribute to Spa World). We went to the park near Osaka Castle and actually hanged out! We were just sitting there with our high-brow AMPM konbini onigiris' and reading manga or whatever. So wonderful *---* It was warm but not too hot and oh yes we so need to do this more.

Today we're still going out to eat somewhere (preferably soon, as I am hungry kthxbye) but we've yet to decide where~

But tomorrow it's day in Spa World and evening in Dotonbori, probably.

17.7.2010

Lazy Osaka

Some may have noticed the lack of entries during the last week or so. We arrived to Osaka on Tuesday and I have a trump card of THE INTERNET WASN'T WORKING. Well, maybe it was working and we were just  a bit lazy. I won't concede to anything because we had a REASON.

Well, nothing of especial interest happened during the first days here, just you know, hanging around IN OSAKA and in Dotonbori (the local shopping district we're visiting again today!), visited one of the worlds largest aquariums, Osaka Floating Garden, Nara aso.

Like, no biggie.

Well anyway.

On Wednesday we went to the aquarium. It had 14 floors. Enough said.


On Thursday we went to Osaka Floating Garden. It was architecturally one of a kind. Enough said.


Yesterday, Friday, we were in Nara and visited the shrines (although we refused to pay the entrence fee to most of them -we'd be pennyless by now if we hadn't, so we just hanged around in the area) and this one with the HUGE-ASS BUDDHA. And with my uncanny explanatory abilities it just might be better to introduce you to the place through an actual photograph.


FYI, the name of the temple was Tōdai-ji and the height of that Buddha is just short of 15m. It was HUGE. Who the hell had the thought process and materials to make it during the EIGHTH CENTURY?

Other than that there were about half-a-million smaller shrined but we didn't visit (did happily pay 500yen to see this Buddha though) and tame deer everywhere.

I wanted to add videos (mainly of the Pacific Ocean -part of the aquarium...) but the internet is so slow that after waiting for 45 minutes for it to load the friggin vid, I gave up and decided I'make the videos public later.

Also the explanations on this entry are bad. I know. But we're leaving in a second to GO SHOPPING and then to OSAKA SPAWORLD *wwwwww*

12.7.2010

Monday monday monday

Today we went to Shukkeien, a local Garden. The entrance fee was 150 yen and so totally worth it. It was really beautiful. As pictures give you more than a thousand words and video more than 12 pictures/second I'll give you just that:


YES, it is an otter. IN A PARK, IN THE MIDDLE OF HIROSHIMA. Yeah.
A quick look around, pretty much 180 degrees.
A FISH. It'd take a week for me to eat that. Like what the hell...
Aaaaaaand a lovely crab (*^u^*) the were EVERYWHERE so in the end I just had to document the movement of one. Sorry.

 

After the park we hurried around, trying to find some Okonomiyaki to dull our hunger. The first place we were directed to was closed (well it is Monday and many places are closed on Mondays) so we hiked for another half a kilometre or so and FOUND A PLACE. It was so good oh God. I'd stay here just to eat the food forever.

Miyajima

The day before yeasterday we went to Miyajima, one of the "most beautiful sights in Japan". I think it's ranked third or so. We sat in a tram for forty-five minutes and the ferry ride to the island took about 15 minutes. It was totally worth it. We arrived there during low tide and got to walk around Torii, the symbolic gate before the Itsukushima Shrine

 

Sorry for my face -it was sunny and my eyes were practically bleeding by the time that random person who gracefully offered to take the picture for us actually took the picture.

The Itsukushima Shrine in the middle picture is part of UNESCO World Heritage, by the way. I just wanted to say that, it sounds so civilized and intellectual and whatever I'll just get on with it now.

After visiting the main attractions of the island we went exploring, and found this lovely (and very Finnish in a way -it had pines -the trees- and all) area with steep stairs up to a path which led to a miniature almost-shrine ->

After buying Momiji (maple-shaped small treat with different fillings inside, we bought one chocolate, one cream-filled and one red bean paste filled or whatever. Surprisingly the chocolate-filled was best) we found a place to sit and eat our first ones in peace, and found a lovely seat with a view to the ocean and the Torii. It was fine for a few minutes until the tame deer tried to eat the from our hands... I can say, they were actually very good until the just DIDN'T GET that we wanted to eat them ourselves...... (Ignore the random kid posing on the video :D)