Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Mas Japon/More Japan
















So, what else did I do in Japan... I met some nice people and we unsuccesfully went out at night a few times- we are sure there must have been nightlife going on somewhere, but we couldn´t really find it. We went to the right areas (Shinjuku, Kabukicho, Roppongi) and although there were lots of people walking around in the streets, all the places we walked into were empty. So we just had fun walking into the love hotels and looking at the pictures of their rooms instead.
I met up with Nirmal (an american-indian guy I had met in Thailand) and spent a couple of days hanging out with him. We went to the area near Tokyo station one day. We looked at the Imperial Palace (from the outside, you are not allowed inside), we walked along Ginza (very fancy shops, labels such as Chanel and Armani, and we went into some of them dressed like cheap bakcpackers that we are), and we met a funny, funny, crazy old Japanese man (who insisted we were gonna get married and have 5 kids although we kept telling him we were purely friends and had just met about a week ago). We had some food in one of the little restaurants and cafes under the railway tracks (it's awesome, the train goes along a bridge over the road, and they have turned each of the bridge's "semicircles" at street level into restaurants and coffee shops, it´s so cool to be eating there and you feel all the vibrations every time a train goes past above). We walked to the river and then caught a train to Odaiba island and saw the beautiful city by night (hugeeeee!). In Odaiba we saw some weird futuristic buildings, a reproduction of the Statue of Liberty (but much smaller), and a bizarre shopping centre which was like being in Venice in Italy (so you walked in and all the shops looked like italian apartments, with balconies etc, the areas where you walked were like the streets, and the ceilings were lit up as if it were the sky, and it had fountains, arches, etc, so you felt as if you were actually walking outdoors in Italy). WEIRD!
The next day we woke up at 4:45am OUCH! to go see the Fish Markets (apparently a must see here!), but when we got there it was closed for 4 days. I was half disappointed and pissed off and half ecstatic and relieved (I absolutely hate fish and seafood, so I was dreading the stinky smell of the Fish Markets, especially so early in the morning). So instead, we got the bullet train (called Shinkansen) and went to Hakone for the day, which is a town near Mt Fuji. What a beautiful view! Nirmal and I went separate ways when we got there cause he only had a few hours and then had to go back to Tokyo to fly back home, but I spent all day in Hakone. Views of Mt Fuji, parks, train, cablecar, ropeway, bus, cruise boat, black eggs, smoking volcanoes, stinky sulphur smells. It was an amazing day.
And my last day in Japan I went to the Ueno and Asakusa areas- they are the areas with temples, shrines, pagodas, which remain from the older Japanese culture (from the Edo era)- beautiful buildings. And that was it, 5 days was not enough for all there is to see in Tokyo!
But, toilets are amazing!! I had so much fun going into every public toilet I could find, and playing with all the buttons- they have water, music, sounds, auto flushing, auto toilet seat cover lifting, auto bloody everything! And the best thing- heated toilet seats!! It's always been my dream to have a heated toilet seat, and although I never sit down on public toilets I could not resist it in Japan and I sat down on every heated toilet I found. NICE!

Que mas hice en Japon... conoci gente buena onda y fracasamos en intentar salir a la noche varias noches- estamos seguros de que en algun lugar seguro habia onda y joda, pero no lo logramos encontrar. Fuimos a las areas correctas (Shinjuku, Kabukicho, Roppongi), y aunque habia montones de gente caminando por la calle, todos los lugares a los que entramos estaban muertos. Asi que nos divertimos entrando en los hoteles del amor y mirando las fotos de los cuartos.
Me encontre con Nirmal (un pibe de USA-India que conoci en Tailandia) y pase un par de dias haciendo cosas con el. Un dia fuimos a la zona cerca de la estacion Tokyo. Miramos el Palacio Imperial (desde afuera, porque no te dejan entrar), caminamos por Ginza (negocios muy paquetes, marcas tipo Chanel y Armani, y entramos a algunos negocios vestidos como los mochileros baratos que somos) y conocimos a un viejo japones muy muy gracioso y loquisimo (que insistia con que nos ibamos a casar y tener 5 hijos, aunque le repetiamos que solo somos amigos y nos acababamos de conocer hace como una semana). Comimos algo en uno de los mini restaurantes/cafes que hay bajo las vias del tren (es una masa, el tren pasa por un puente sobre la calle, y transformaron todos los "semicirculos" que se forman bajo el puente en restaurantes o cafes, esta buenisimo estar ahi comiendo y sentir todas las vibraciones cada vez que pasa un tren por arriba). Caminamos hasta el rio y despues nos tomamos un tren a la isla Odaiba y vimos la ciudad lindisima toda iluminada (enooooorme!). En Odaiba vimos algunos edificios futuristicos extranios, una copia de la Estatua de la Libertad (pero mucho mas chica), y un shopping bizarro que era como estar en Venecia en Italia (entrabas y todos los negocios parecian como departamentos y edificos italianos, con balcones etc, la parte por la que caminabas era como si fueran las calles, y los techos estaban todos iluminados como si fuera el cielo, y habia fuentes, arcos, etc, asi que parecia como si estuvieras caminando al aire libre en Italia). RARO!
El dia siguiente nos despertamos a las 4:45am OUCH! para ir al mercado de peces (aparentemente algo imperdible aca!), pero cuando llegamos estaba cerrado por 4 dias. Estaba mitad decepcionada y enojada, y mitad aliviada y feliz (odio el pescado y cualquier comida de mar, asi que estaba odiando la idea del olor oloroso del mercado de peces, sobre todo tan temprano a la manana). Asi que en cambio, nos tomamos el Tren Bala (que se llama Shinkansen) y fuimos a Hakone por el dia, que es un pueblo cerca del Monte Fuji. Vista espectacular! Nirmal y yo nos despedimos cuando llegamos porque el tenia solo un par de horas y despues se tenia que volver a Tokyo para tomarse un vuelo de vuelta a USA, pero yo me quede todo el dia en Hakone. Vistas del Mt Fuji, parques, tren, cablecarril, gondola, colectivo, barco, huevos negros, volcanes humeantes, olores olorosos se sulfuro. Fue un dia espectacular.
Y mi ultimo dia en Japon fui a las zonas de Ueno y Asakusa- son las zonas con templos, altares, pagodas, que estan de la epoca antigua de Japon (la era Edo)- edificios divinos. Y eso fue todo, 5 dias no fue suficiente para todo lo que hay que ver en Tokyo!
Pero los banios son espectaculares! Me diverti muchisimo entrando a los banios publicos en todos lados y tocando todos los botoncitos- tienen agua, musica, sonidos, se tira la cadena sola, se levanta la tapa del asiento sola, todo se hace solo!! Y lo mejor- asiento de inodoro caliente!! Siempre fue mi suenio tener un asiento de inodoro caliente, y aunque nunca me siento en los banios publicos, en Japon no me pude resistir y me sente en todos los inodoros calientes que encontre. QUE LINDO!

1 comment:

  1. Esto es la antitesis de India no? Q ganas de ir a Japon!!! :D

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