Japan: Highs and Lows

screenshot_20241130-101223~34194303731757339452.

Now that we are back home from our six-week trip in a campervan around fascinating Japan, it’s  time to reflect on our experience. We flew into and out of Osaka and in between travelled a circuitous route in South Western Japan  through the large islands of Sikoku and Kyushu, often changing course because of the weather. Japan is about five and a half times the size of Ireland but feels much bigger, stretching from within touching distance of Russia in the extreme north to islands in the East China Sea that almost nudge Taiwan.

I’ve included a dozen highlights but I could easily have included a dozen more. So here we go…..

Climbing a Holy Mountain .Japan is a mountainous, heavily-forested country with many sacred mountains but for us, the most special was Mt Hiko in Kyushu, a place where hundreds of years ago, white-clothed monks trained in strenuous physical activity, believing that this was the path to enlightenment. We hiked past countless, moss-shrouded shrines towards misty summits on a glorious Autumn day with the leaves dressed in their burgundy and golden finery. This was truly a spiritual experience especially as we seemed to be the only two people on the mountain. On the way, we also paid homage of the resilience of  Onisugi, a huge cedar tree estimated to be around 1,200 years old.

Hell on Earth. Nagasaki could be in the category of lowlights but it belongs here in the highlights. We spent two days here, the first with torrential rain which felt like it might never stop and the second with skies so blue, it almost hurt our eyes.  This was almost a metaphor for Nagasaki, a beautiful city which exuded a firm belief in hope and brighter days after tragedy. Visiting the Atomic Bomb Museum was harrowing, so harrowing that I don’t think our minds were able to comprehend the immensity of it all. I will just copy here an inscription on a bridge near the centre of devastation.

At 11,02am on August 9, 1945, an atomic bomb exploded in the skies over Matsuyama. The stream, Shimonakawa, flowing through the eastern part of the neighbourhood, was soon filled with the corpses of victims who died groping for a drink of water, or mortally burned and wounded, collapsed and perished there. A survivor who witnessed the scene the following day described it as follows. ‘I crossed the half destroyed Maysayama Bridge over Shimonakawa. There were so many corpses under it that they formed a dam in the stream. It was like a vision of the Apocalypse, a living hell on earth. Not a speck of cloud tainted the sky above, but the earth below was a panorama of carnage and destruction.’

Getting high on Mount Ishizuchi Mount Ishizuchi, the highest mountain in South Western Japan, was an entirely different experience to our Mt Hiko hike. We trekked on a blue-skied Sunday, it was the Sports Day public holiday weekend which promoted an active lifestyle and we weren’t alone. The climb started on gradual paths that became steeper, much steeper.  In some nearly- vertical sections, steel chains were embedded into the rock as an aid to haul ourselves up. It was exhausting but fun, surrounded by many friendly Japanese.

Stairway to Heaven We visited the charming little town of  Kotohira, famous for its proximity to the Shinto shrine, Konpira-san, which is dedicated to sea-farers. In a country of islands, this is a very popular shrine, nestling in the forests of Mt Zozu above the town and requiring a climb  of a whooping 1340 steps.   Arriving in the early morning, there was an air of serenity, broken only by the clattering on each step of a man wearing wooden clogs.  Little birds chirped and landed on our outstretched hands looking for seeds. We passed a stable of beautiful white horses which were considered so divine that they could only  be ridden by the gods.  

Tea and Shade We were charmed with a visit to  Ritsurin Gardens in Takamatsu with it’s beautiful teahouse of bamboo, screens and cushions. The windows framed the outside view like serene paintings and we drank tea to the gentle sound of flowing water from the small waterfall outside. In the coolness of the teahouse, we began to appreciate the Japanese fascination with light, shade and symmetry and to understand the philosophy that ‘less is more’

Island Hopping by Bike  The Shimanami Cycleway is an island hopping adventure by bike, traversing several islands in the inland Seto Sea which are linked by magnificent bridges. The 75kms route joins the town of Imbari in Shikoku Island with the town of Onomiche in Honshu. Cycling along the Kurushima Bridge which has a span of almost 5 Kms was a memorable experience.  Ships passed in the turbulent  waters beneath us while traffic whizzed by on the bridge. There were sublime views in every direction of mountains, islands, sea and the bridge itself.  

Glorious Beaches of Amami Amami Oshima is the largest of the Amami Island Group, a sub- tropical, nature-lovers’ paradise in the East China Sea, halfway between Okinawa and mainland Japan. Camping by the white-sand beaches here was truly wonderful, topped only by swimming in the clear turquoise water with lots of colourful, flickering fish.

Food, Glorious Food– the food in Japan was a pleasure, a delight and a taste sensation. We had so many gorgeous meals from simple bowls of noodle soup to trays of tempura with a multitude of side garnishes. Good quality ingredients coupled with attention to detail made it special. The Japanese were very proud and fond of their ice-cream which was delicious. However, we were served raw cabbage and soy sauce to go with own beer 😁. It wasn’t as bad as it sounds but it may be an acquired taste.

Relaxing Baths Onsens are public thermal baths, which are part of daily life in Japan, a place to cleanse and destress, to socialise and relax. The idea of stripping off and sharing a bath with naked strangers was an intimidating prospect at the beginning but we grew to love our immersions and appreciated their therapeutic power. Our favourite onsen was high in the hills outside Nagasaki with an outside section and gorgeous views over the city. It was so relaxing lying up to my chin in hot water, fanned by a cool breeze, watching leaves drifting down from the trees and trying to process all that we had seen in that lovely, vibrant city which has witnessed so much sorrow. (no cameras allowed inside the onsens for obvious reasons)

Path of Philosophy….Kyoto, the ancient city of history and dreams, was full of national treasures, World Heritage Sites, countless shrines and temples ….. and visitors, lots and lots of visitors. We shuffled along in crowds at most of the attractions except one. The Path of Philosophy in the Northern Higashiyama neighbourhood was tranquil and meditative. The path meanders along by a canal carrying murmuring water from Biwa Lake with the occasional family of paddling ducks and temples peeking through the foliage that borders the path. It’s very popular in spring when the overhanging cherry trees are in blossom but for us, it was blissfully quiet on a chilly November morning. Along the way, we chatted with a lovely Australian couple who enquired if they were actually on the path….none of us knew for sure where the path began or ended but maybe that was the true philosophical question.

Temple in the Clouds  All over Shikoku, we saw pilgrims on the Pilgrimage Trail of the 88 Buddhist Temples. This is a long route, over twelve hundred kilometres, which circumnavigates the entire island of Shikoku. Most pilgrims do it in sections but we met a few who were devoting six to eight weeks to completing the entire pilgrimage in one go. Many had sore feet as the majority of the route is on hard road surfaces. Although we didn’t do the pilgrim’s trail, we visited several of the temples. Our favourite was Unpen-ji, the highest of the 88 temples and often called The Temple in the Clouds. Hundreds of life-sized statues of Buddha’s disciplines lined the walkways among the cedars. It’s said that if you look hard enough, you will find your likeness among them. Although I searched and searched, I couldn’t find mine

Making Connections  ……No matter where you go in the world there are always connections to home. We visited the Lafcadio Hearn Museum in the city of Kumamoto. In the mid 1800’s having an Irish father and a Greek mother,  Lafcadio spent many boyhood summers in Tramore, Co Waterford just a few miles from our home. The gorgeous Lafcadio Japanese Gardens in Tramore were established in his memory.  He was enthralled by Japan, setting up home there and he is still reversed in his adopted country because of his writings and translations.

We met another man from Tramore, who has also made Japan his home, making fine craft beer in the beautiful Kamiyama area. We can certainly vouch for the quality of his produce. Manus and his Japanese wife, Sayaka, welcomed us, introduced us to some locals and gave us lots of tips, particularly about the etiquette of using the onsens. Strip completely, wash thoroughly before soaking in a bath, no splashing, no swimming, hair tied up, no tattoos.

LOWS

Dramatic Weather –We endured several bouts of torrential rain for days on end each time although it wasn’t the rainy season. Japan is green and gets a lot of rain but this level of rainfall in October and November was unusual. We had numerous phone alerts warning of typhoons, mudslides and flooding.

Packaging The amount of plastic packaging on everything but particularly on food items made us weep. Carrots were individually wrapped in plastic. I know that in Ireland we are guilty of using too much plastic as well but this was a totally different level. All food bought in a convenience store/supermarket/restaurant came with a wet wipe wrapped in plastic and some disposable chopsticks and that’s just for starters.

Disposing of Garbage….The contradiction is that the streets are super-clean with rarely even a scrap of paper on the ground and all this without a trash bin in sight.  Getting rid of our rubbish was certainly an issue until we started discarding it in pieces. When we shopped in supermarkets, we disposed of excess packaging before we left the shop. Convenience stores (konbinnis) had some segregated bins (meant for items bought in the shops) which we used. Motorway stops also had some segregated bins.

Campervan Sulks…. Our van wouldn’t start when we were in the queue to board the ferry to leave Amami. The rain was torrential and we didn’t even know how to open the bonnet. After trying several times, we were getting desperate. One last try and the engine turned over and we got on the overnight ferry. We didn’t have any more trouble.

Parking in Kyoto…..Mainly we availed of free wild camping in scenic spots in the countryside but  in the cities we parked in city centre carparks which usually cost about €5 to €10 for overnight parking. In Kyoto, we misread the tariff board , and  discovered that we could easily have stayed in a nice hotel for the price of the parking charges😲

Encounters of a Small Kind Japan is an extremely hygienic place with a huge emphasis on cleanliness , partial to the liberal use of disinfectants and  wearing face masks. Neither of us had any issue with tummy upsets or health concerns. One morning, I woke up in the van feeling like I had a brick over my partially closed left eye. I expected Caoimhin to say it didn’t look too bad but his reaction was one of horror. It took two days to subside. I’m still not sure what caused the spectacular inflammatory reaction but suspect a mosquito.

On Amami Island, we were warned about the viper snakes everywhere we went…..by the locals and by the many warning signs. Thankfully we never saw one or heard a slithering sound of one.

So many things surprised us about Japan from practical things like the abundance of public toilets and the people of all ages who use bicycles as a means of getting around to the greenness of the countryside and the enormous number of trees. Most people profess to have no religion but mark key life events with Shinto rituals and visits to Buddhist temples. The people are polite and reserved but welcoming and love to laugh, especially the women, and we gave them plenty of opportunity for amusement.

We covered less than a third of the country, we didn’t go anywhere near the big-ticket tourist items like Tokyo or Mt Fuji and barely scratched the surface of the places we did visit. We came anyway, changed in some indefinable way, fascinated by the blend of traditional and modern, mesmerised by the natural beauty of the country and perplexed by the contradictions. Japan still remains an enigma. We may have to return for a deeper dive, to breathe in the mystery of this fascinating country.

Japan: Highs and Lows

Japan: Kyoto, City of Crowded Charms

We  arrived in Kyoto  in the dark after a six-hour journey from the Sandan Gorge. We hadn’t planned on such a long drive, thinking that we would stop somewhere along the way but we just kept going. Driving conditions were good (no rain) and the lure of Kyoto, a place that is on the itinerary of every visitor to Japan, enticed us on until we found ourselves in an empty carpark in Arashiyama, a western neighbourhood of Kyoto and near several tourist attractions.

It was a cool, bright morning, just after 7am, as we hurried over the bridge of the wide, Katsura River, where egrets were busy fishing beside some empty tourist barges that were still moored, waiting for the day to begin.  We were on our way to see the famous Bamboo Forest and hoped to beat the crowds by our early morning start. It was looking hopeful until we skirted by the side of nearby Tenryu-ji temple (The Temple of the Heavenly Dragon) and saw groups of people coming from both directions, all about to converge in the Bamboo Forest pathways. It wasn’t as crowded as it would become later in the morning  but it was certainly busier than we hoped. The  towering bamboos were still an enchanting sight with their faint rustling leaves and the morning light peeking through the crown of the trees. There was even a hush in the crowd as people walked slowly, gazing upwards, stopping to allow others to get their photos. As we walked away from the whispering forests, coaches were pulling into the carparks, disgorging noisy passengers, the streets were fulling up and the tourists shops were beginning to open their shutters.

Surprisingly finding an open café at 8.30 am was difficult but eventually we struck gold with a little establishment run by a husband and wife team. He had the calm demeanor of a benign Buddha, she was a masked whirl of energy, reciting the menu, seating people, serving food and settling the bills. The atmosphere was busy, warm and steamy and a welcome place to sit down and escape the chill of the morning (it was about 7 degrees). The menu was simple, toast with butter, toast with jam, toast with cinnamon and the additional option of hard-boiled eggs. We had seen sliced pans of  white bread in the supermarkets with various thickness but far thicker than we have at home. Half a sliced pan could contain a mere three or five slabs of bread (calling them ‘slices’ doesn’t do them justice.) Anyway, the toast in this café was made with these thick hunks of processed bread and mine which was  smothered in crunchy cinnamon brown sugar tasted divine.

Breakfast Café, Kyoto

Kyoto has been described as a city of dreams, a place steeped in twelve hundred years of history, built as the capital of Japan in the 8th century and  home to the Imperial Court until 1868. It has roughly a quarter of Japan’s national treasures, countless shrines and temples and seventeen sites recognized by UNESCO as World Heritage Sites. It is located in a lovely area with rivers, canals and a backdrop of green mountains. When you walk the streets, the past is a constant presence. There are ancient monuments everywhere, tucked away in Zen gardens, at the end of backstreet alleys or even beside traffic-choked thoroughfares, all bearing witness to more than a thousand years of history. But expect to share it with lots of other visitors, clicking their experiences into the Cloud with smartphones.

In a city crowed with people from all over the world, our major sport was people-watching especially as this was the first time in Japan that we were exposed to such a variety of people. We remembered Fukuoka in Kyushu, where we were given a voucher worth a thousand yen as a welcome gesture to foreign visitors,  a group who were so thin on the ground that we were easily identifiable. Kyoto has no need of such inducements, in fact all hotels charge a ‘tourist’ tax. There were English menus, knives and forks and vegetarian (even vegan options) in the restaurants. In one way, it’s the ‘real’ Japan but watered down for Western appetites and sensibilities. Kyoto was easy, almost designed for tourists and I confess to feeling a certain smug superiority. We had already experienced sacred temples and shrines, even trekked holy mountains and through silent forests to reach them, we had struggled with menus using Google Translate and rarely met anyone who spoke English.  Of course there’s are good reasons why people gravitate towards Kyoto but the volume of tourists has been steadily increasing especially since covid (and the favourable currency rates is another inducement). Lets hope that it doesn’t become a victim of its own success.

It we were fans of people-watching, we weren’t the only ones. In the monkey sanctuary not far from the Bamboo forest, troupes of macaque monkeys roamed freely and seemed to enjoy looking at all the humans looking at them. Reaching the monkeys involved a twenty minute uphill climb through forests and it could have been a tranquil experience  except for  constant loudspeakers in several languages issuing a list of instructions, telling visitors not to feed the monkeys, not to display any food, not to stare at them (they don’t like it) and to keep a distance of at least two meters away from. It was difficult to obey the distance rule as one young macaque ran over my shoes. They were adorable, especially the babies, with such expressive faces and they appear to be thriving. Although they are not caged, they only stay in the area because they are fed. These monkeys, often called Snow Monkeys because they have adapted to live in cold climates, usually make their home in the mountains to the far north of Japan and are not endangered. Although, it was dressed up as education and there were lots of interesting facts, it still carried a whiff of exploitation for commercial gain.

Although Kyoto was crowded, there were still spots where you could sit by the river and listen to birdsong and  the flow of the water particularly in Arashiyama which really was a lovely area especially in the evenings when the majority of visitors departed. On our second morning after a particularly cold night in the van when temperatures dipped to 2 degrees, we struggled to the park to do some yoga and straighten out our stiff limbs. It was the first time I  did yoga with a coat, hat, gloves and shoes on. A stiff breeze blew off the water, a big crow cawed at us from a treetop as if we had just invaded his territory while a dozen well-muffled senior citizens practiced Tai Chi  on the opposite riverbank.  A siege of egrets flew over the river to land in the stream near us with the sun turning their wings a glinting silver. Despite the cold, there was something magical (and almost zen) about the setting. The heated toilet seats in the public loos that we had scoffed at the beginning were now really appreciated by  our cold bottoms

Chilly’ Yoga by the River in Kyoto

A little later we joined the crowds of mainly tour groups visiting the Golden Pavillion, a Zen temple of Shokoku-ji School of Rinzai Buddhism.   We read that it was one of the most important attractions in Kyoto, that visiting Kyoto and not seeing this pavilion was akin to going to Paris and not bothering to visit the Eiffel Tower. Despite the crowds, it didn’t disappoint especially as the sun turned it into a truly golden stupa which reflected off the surrounding lake waters. There was a collective gasp from the crowd  as we got the first glimpse just inside the entrance gate before shuffling along in a sea of people.

A visit to the nearby Zen gardens of Ryoan-ji, which contains one of the most famous and enigmatic rock gardens in all of Japan, was a less crowded experience. Zen gardens are intended for meditation and contemplation where a special place is given to every plant, rock and grain of sand in an effort to create harmony, tranquility and balance. The small rock garden was created in about 1500 by a revered monk and has been defying attempts to explain it since then. Enclosed by an earthen wall, fifteen carefully placed rocks seem to drift in a sea of naked white sand. The cool of the morning had given way to warm sunshine  which cast shadows over the rocks and Caoimhin was scratching his head and wondering what all the fuss was about. But maybe the point is to interpret the garden in an individual way and not to seek the ‘true’ meaning, to look only for your own truth.

Famous Zen Rock Garden, Ryoanji, Kyoto

Downtown Kyoto was not very Zen ….crowded with tourists, traffic and tourist shops but in the midst of all this mayhem was Yasaka Shrine, a huge shrine with vermillion gates, regarded as THE place in Kyoto to welcome in the new year with a fire festival where fragrant herbs are burnt. We moved from our little oasis out in Arashiyama and parked overnight near the beating heart of this shrine.

Tourists swanned around Kyoto dressed in kimonos, clattering along in wooden clogs and pretending they were Geishas.  We were interested in gaining some insight into the real Geisha culture so we took a night walking tour. Our guide, Saki (not to be confused with sake, the national beverage) was enthusiastic, funny and knowledgeable. Geishas are a declining profession and when Saki explained their vigorous training, it wasn’t so surprising that the numbers are dropping. If a girl wishes to be a Geisha, she must be young, about fifteen to eighteen and she must leave her family and live in one of the special boarding houses in Kyoto. Training takes a minimum of five years and involves classes in etiquette, singing and dancing. The trainees are not paid and cannot have a smartphone or go to McDonalds (Sari’s words.) They are primarily entertainers who work in the teahouses (these are drinking houses where businessmen entertain guests). One can only go to a teahouse by invitation, prices are never discussed but they are calculated on a sliding scale depending on your ability to pay – the richer you are, the more you will be charged. You will receive your bill weeks after when the sense of enjoyment has faded. Entertaining in teahouses was once very much part of Japanese business culture but as Japan’s fortunes have declined so too have the glory days of the teahouses and consequently the Geisha profession. Geishas have to resign if they marry but as the numbers have declined, the rules have relaxed a bit and they are allowed to practice if they divorce and foreign girls are allowed to become Geishas where once it was compulsory to be Japanese.

With so many places to visit in Kyoto, it was impossible to fit them all in.  Sometimes it was the name of an attraction that caught our attention and so it was with The Path of Philosophy in the Northern Higashiyama neighbourhood of Kyoto. We visited on another early morning where for a change, there were few people. Its very popular when the overhanging cherry trees are in blossom. Along the way, we met a lovely Australian couple who enquired if they were actually on the path….none of us knew where the path began or ended but maybe that was the true philosophical question. When saying goodbye to the Aussies, both Caoimhin and I found ourselves bowing without even realizing it. Maybe we have been too long in Japan😍

Nevertheless the path was tranquil and meditative, meandering along by a canal carrying gentle, murmuring water from Biwa Lake. There was the occasional duck and lots of temples. We paused at a shrine where a statue of an ox was reputed to have healing powers. If you rubbed the part of your body that was ailing and then rubbed the equivalent part of the sculpture, you would be cured.

With our wedding anniversary approaching and the cold nights, we went on Booking.com to find a hotel or guest house.  When looking for hotels in Japan, there are a few things that you need to be aware of, apart from price and location.  If it is a contactless check-in, if there is a mention of privacy and sound-proofing and/or it is Adult Only, then you may be about to book into a Love Hotel. They tend to be cheaper than ‘normal’ hotels and could be a real bargain just as long as you know what you’re getting. We read of one man’s hilarious account of inadvertently booking  a love hotel for two nights.  His first difficulty was actually checking in, as there was no reception desk and he couldn’t locate his room or his keycode. He had some Japanese so he was able to phone an emergency phone number and a person eventually materialized. His next problem was that he kept getting locked out of his room. Everytime he left the room, his keycode was disabled. As he said, these rooms are not really designed for coming and going (so to speak), when you’re done, you’re done. The hotel we found was not a love hotel, the reception was manned by two guys and although it was 2.30pm and check-in was 3pm and all the rooms were ready, there was no possibility of been checked in a minute sooner than the designated time.

Although our hotel was not in a touristy area, a five storied pagoda which was built in 826 was only a 5 minute walk away. This Toji pagoda stood at 57 meters ,making it the tallest wooden pagoda in Japan. Not only was it a beautiful silhouette against the skyline but it was also earthquake proof and the large roofs were designed to protect the delicate wood underneath from the wetness of rain and snow.

A long tunnel of bright orange gates stretched uphill, mesmerizing and a bit disconcerting, with glimpses of forest and cemeteries in the spaces between the gates, known as torii. This shrine called Fushimi Inori Taisla, at the base of the Inori mountain dates back to 711 and is free to enter and open all day. We visited in the morning but the middle of the night might have been better to avoid the throngs of people. Over the years worshippers have donated gates to express their prayers and their appreciation until at least ten thousand gates stretch up the hillsides making an enthralling spectacle. There were statutes of foxes along the route which is the symbol of the shrine.   This was the last shrine we visited in Kyoto before we headed back to Osaka..

Back to the beginning where we started, almost six weeks ago, we handed back the van which had taken us on our journey through Southern Japan. It has been an amazing round trip from the vibrant city of Osaka, to the island of Amami in the East China sea. We began with unseasonably hot weather, endured torrential rain for days on end, had phone alerts warning of typhoons, mudslides and flooding, slept shivering in the van when the night-time temperature at one point hovered around two degrees. We camped out in forests, at the base of holy mountains and on the shores of deserted beaches. We climbed thousands of steps to reach mist-shrouded temples and shrines, cycled over water as we island-hopped across an inland sea on bridges that at times spanned several kilometres. We have been in places so remote that it felt like we were the only two people left in Japan and we have waded in a sea of people at the popular attractions, particularly in Kyoto. We will always associate Japan with trees, tall majestic cedars, maples in their autumn coats and everything in-between. After six weeks, we realize that we have barely scratched the surface.

Japan remains an enigma. The people are friendly but love silence. Most live in cities but revere nature. The country is industrial but is mainly forests and greener than Ireland. It is very wet even when it isn’t the rainy season. As we turn towards our long journey home, we need time to process our journey and reflect on this fascinating country.

Thanks for reading and for your company along the way

Till next time x

Inside a Tangerine Dream
Japan: Kyoto, City of Crowded Charms

Japan: Holy Mountains and Glorious Gorges

Sandan Gorge, Japan

Our visit to Fukuoka didn’t start well. The traffic was horrendous as we made our way into the city from Nagasaki. Fukuoka is the largest city in Kyushu (one of the main four islands in Japan) and is one of Japan’s ten most populated cities…and it certainly felt like it when we were there.  With its closeness to the Asian mainland (closer to Seoul than to Tokyo), Fukuoka has been an important harbor city for many centuries and was chosen by the Mongol invasion forces as their landing point in the 13th century. It is often called a ‘mini’ Tokyo, it even has a smaller version of Tokyo Tower and as we don’t plan on visiting Tokyo, Fukuoka seemed like a good option.

We thought that we might treat ourselves to a hotel but the reasonably-priced hotels/guesthouses were booked out so we resorted to searching for a parking spot close to public loos. In the city centre, we found a possible spot that met our criteria (proximity to toilets) but it was just off the main road with roaring traffic so our search continued. Google directed us to another parking area which involved a heart-stopping lurch across four lanes of traffic into a tiny alleyway. With the van almost touching the sides of the buildings, we prayed that it was one-way system and hoped we wouldn’t encounter anything coming in the opposite direction.  Thankfully, we found ourselves in a little oasis with some free parking spots, quiet but still in the heart of things. There was a little park nearby with public toilets, festival stalls selling food and local produce and best of all, a jazz band playing on a small stage. At one tent, a woman beckoned us over to give us some vouchers (a thousand yen each (about €6)) which could be redeemed  at any of the stalls….a welcoming gesture for foreign visitors. We sent a German man who was cycling around Asia in her direction so that he could get his ‘welcome vouchers.’  The sun was shining, the music was good and we relaxed with some seaweed dumplings and a cold craft-beer. The beer was in plastic glasses…..but hey, you can’t have everything.

Later we wandered around a crowded Chinatown, and marveled at the long queues outside many of the restaurants and the patience of the Japanese who formed orderly queues, keeping a little distance from each other.  Christmas also came early to Fukuoka with coloured decorations, dancing Santas and flashing lights festooning  the bridges, streets and shopping malls. Christmas is not a public holiday in Japan and less than 1% of the population are Christian but the commercial aspect of the season is enthusiastically embraced. Christmas Eve is regarded as the most romantic night of the year, a bit like our Valentines Day when couples are out and about, love is in the air and not having a date if you’re young requires staying at home to avoid embarrassment.

 Away from the queues and crowds, we found a cellar bar with subdued lighting, soft music where we were the only patrons, the other extreme and not really what we wanted. The bartender gave us soft, hot towels to wipe our hands as soon as we sat down. This wasn’t totally unusual as even the most shabby of establishments hand out wet wipes wrapped in plastic to clean your hands.  Bowls of spicy nuts in dainty porcelain bowls appeared on the table (no raw cabbage and soy sauce in this establishment to munch with your drinks). We should have known that we would pay dearly for such luxuries.  When the cover charge,  was added to our bill (we didn’t even realize that there was a cover charge) our two drinks (one each) cost significantly more than we had paid for dinner! Thank goodness we didn’t opt for a second round.

Our quiet oasis turned noisy during the night with garbage trucks collecting trash, vans parking and then moving off, filled with workmen dismantling the festival stalls in the park. In the morning, we went bleary-eyed in search of coffee/tea only to find more orderly queues stretching down the street outside all the open cafes. Although we normally avoid places like Starbucks, this time we were thankful to sit down with coffee and cinnamon buns without any tiresome queueing and avail of their  strong  Wi-Fi where I was able to upload the last blog post with photos. Maybe we should take lessons in patience from the Japanese who queue patiently, mainly in silence, without any visible sign of irritation.

The mountains were calling us and  we felt a strong urge to get out of the city and into the countryside but there was something we had to do before we left. Fukuoka has a reputation for making the best ramen (a noodle soup) in the entire country so we couldn’t leave without sampling some.  There are several traditional recipes but the one that is most prized involves boiling pig bones for hours, maybe days, until the marrow leaks out and becomes a thick cream which is then used as a base for the soup. The ramen was served in big bowls and eating it should be accompanied by loud slurping to show appreciation.  Bibs are provided to protect clothes from the inevitable splashes. Reading the descriptions of the pork-bone soup made me feel queasy so I didn’t ‘pig out’ but opted for a tomato based ramen with seafood which also used a traditional recipe. It was delicious but I have my suspicions that a pig was involved somewhere along the process.

About a hour and a half’s drive outside Fukuoka is a  mountain where over 400 years ago,  white-clothed monks, practitioners of an ancient ascetic religion called Shugendo, chose sacred mountains until they reached their ultimate goal of enlightenment. We were eager to follow in their footsteps and hike the holy mountain to see what  enlightenment and spiritual power it might bestow upon us.

The winding mountain roads coiled through pottery villages with tables of ceramics set up under flame-coloured maple trees and smoke rose from the many kilns. Even before we reached  Mt Hiko, we were enveloped by a sense pf peace mixed with exhaustion from lack of sleep from the night before. We parked by a stream next to toilets at the base of the sacred mountain with nobody else around, cooked up a dinner of potatoes and mushrooms ( the quality and variety of both in the supermarkets was amazing) and watched the stars come out one by one until the sky overhead  was a star- studded canopy, more beautiful that all the twinkling city lights.

The following morning dawned cool and bright as we began hiking past moss-shrouded shrines with birdsong  and the higher peaks still draped in drifting mist.  Maybe it was because we had read the history of the mountain and were open to its power but right from the beginning we felt that we were in a special place. The hiking trails were well-marked with lots of looped walks and decisions to be made about whether to continue, to turn back or to walk in circles. Maybe this was the essence of true enlightenment, that all paths are correct, you just make a decision and accept it.  Mt Hiko really consisted of three peaks and as we neared the first peak there were signs in Japanese that the path was closed and a barrier was pulled halfway across.  It was easy to bypass the obstacle so we continued regardless, we could always plead ignorance if challenged.  As we ascended we heard hammering and saw that there was construction work going on at the summit where the existing shrine was being enlarged. We kept our heads down and skirted around the building works and headed for the adjacent peak with stunning views of the surrounding mountains, dressed in their glorious autumn foliage, vivid hues of red, gold and purple. If the first section was beautiful and easier than expected, the next section was more challenging but truly ‘wow’. There were chains embedded in the rocks in places but they were more as an aid for climbing rather than strictly necessary. We diverted to see an incredible ancient cedar tree named Onisugi, reputed to  be  1200 years old. This was truly a special day, a hike that was good for the soul and we were physically tired but spiritually refreshed after a six hour round trip…..although true enlightenment may require some further strenuous activity.

It was time to leave the large island of Kyushu and head over another long, impressive bridge to Honshu, the second largest and most populated of the Japanese islands. We arrived at dusk at the small town of Hagi and parked up on the north side of town beside a small beach. We didn’t realize how beautiful the spot was until dawn when an early morning trip to the toilet revealed islands, distant mountains, a calm sea and boats moored in a little harbour. But then you’ve guessed it….it began to rain and this time the rain was cool and drizzly.  It was about 12 degrees, the coldest we’ve had in Japan apart from when we were high in the mountains. Hagi is also famous for ceramics which are mainly in delicate pastel shades.

We were in need of a laundromat so while our clothes were whirling in the washing machines, we wandered around town with its wide streets and many traditional buildings, a place little changed from the time of the Samurai. We stumbled across a shop selling clothing for a reasonable price so prompted by the chilly wind, we bought a warm jacket each. We didn’t know it then but the cosiness of the jackets were going to be very welcome in the coming days with a  further dip in temperature. In the meantime we drank tea in a coffee house and eat home-made cake made from locally- grown figs and mandarin oranges, probably the most delicious cake we have eaten on our travels.

Our breaths blew clouds in the cold morning air as we parked at the starting point for the Sandan Gorge, A small man, muffled in a thick coat, was sitting outside the information booth.  He got up on our approach, leaned heavily on a cane, and pointed to a map giving us the bad news that the recent heavy rains had caused landslides and several parts of  the Gorge were closed because of the risks of more rockfalls and mudslides. He told us that he was a guide but he was out of action because of a bad fall a few months previously, that his favourite country was Alaska and that he had once stopped a grizzly bear in his tracks  with his stare. He gave us an example of the ‘stare’ which also involved barring his teeth. Since then, everyone in the village called him Big Bear.

Although our hike was shorter than envisaged it was still worthwhile, true forest-bathing where a  tree lined stony path hugged the side of the ravine before descending to cross the green river on a swaying rope bridge. A short ferry ride gave us an appreciation from the water. Our boatman didn’t quite know what to make of Caoimhin who was singing ‘Don’t pay the ferryman until he gets you to the other side.

But our journey goes onwards, towards historic Kyoto, the city of dreams and the most visited city in all of Japan. Have we left the best until last? Time will tell.

Thanks for reading

Until next time

Japan: Holy Mountains and Glorious Gorges

Japan: War and Peace

Peace Park, Nagasaki

In my last post, I said that we were hoping to leave Amami Island, a small island in the East China Sea a few days early because there was a risk of a typhoon coming in our direction. The bad news was that we couldn’t change the ferry return date because of lack of availability for the campervan  and the good news was that the typhoon changed direction and headed in a more southerly path towards Taiwan and North Korea. The tail of the hurricane still lashed Amami with rain  so we booked into a really comfortable hotel -The Wa,  enjoyed some pampering and sampled a few of  the many restaurants in Naxe, the main town on the island.

We have become fans of Japanese food although we had rarely eaten it before coming here. However a word of caution to vegetarians –  a strict vegetarian would probably starve as even the miso soup has a meat base and tofu floats alongside slivers of pork or beef.  So we opt for as little meat as possible but even the meat dishes aren’t very ‘meaty’ and there’s usually lots of fresh vegetables.  Google Translate lets us down at times when we are looking at menus.  We thought that we were ordering the local dish of the Amami Islands (Keihan) which is chicken and rice but we got noodle soup with pork. The presentation and the attention to detail is truly magnificent, with a multitude of side dishes and garnishes.  There is such a high standard even in the cheapest places. Eating out is a real pleasure and much more affordable than at home ( we eat local as much as we can)A huge bowl of ramen is about €4 -€5, dinner main course is about €10 to €12 and lunch is cheaper. Some things take a little getting used to. When we ordered two beers, they were accompanied by a bowl of raw cabbage which should be dipped in a couple of varieties of soy cabbage and eaten with chopsticks….surprisingly nice. We haven’t even seen a knife and fork anywhere in Japan yet.

If we are out in the middle nowhere in the van, we cook simple one pot meals ourselves so we also frequent the supermarkets and the little convenience stores known as Konbinni which are everywhere. They are amazing places, usually manned by very friendly staff. They have ATMs, toilets , free WiFi and sell everything from toiletries to Pot Noodles. You can buy all your meals here with a huge selections of  high quality, ready-meals with microwaves to heat them up, a counter with stools or a few tables to sit at. There’s coffee, cold drinks and a selection of magazines and comics. They are open late, often 24 hours a day, and are really an extension of the Japanese home which are often shoe-box size especially on the cities. Apparently some Japanese apartments (and student bed-sits) don’t even have a kitchen.

Last  Wednesday evening, we were sitting in the van in the ferry queue to get off Amami Island. It was dark  but it was also warm -about 25degrees- and very humid. The rain was torrential. Caoimhin tried to turn on the engine to clear the windscreen and turn on the wipers. Nothing happened. There was an ominous creaking sound (a bit like a hoarse corncrake) but nothing more. After several panicky tries with no luck, Caoimhin got out to see if we could get help. I was frantically thumbing  through the Japanese van manual to find a graphic representation of  out how to open the bonnet(words weren’t any help😲). Meanwhile Caoimhin was out in the rain, holding his useless umbrella which the wind had turned inside out. One of the attendants, an elderly man, came over to us and  Caoimhin tried to start it again. The same creaking sound. The man nodded and walked away without a word. We sat there, still not knowing how to open the bonnet. Then one last try……and the engine turned over. A few minutes later, the row of cars started to move to board the ferry with the usual shouting, whistle-blowing and reversing up ramps. The ferry we embarked had come from Okinawa and again there were lots of Japanese army vehicles and personnel onboard but there were also hundreds of schoolchildren travelling to the mainland of Japan for school sports events The US still have a big army base in Okinawa, which was under American control from the end of World War 2 until the 1970’s.

The crossing was rough, much more turbulent than our outward journey. At times there was such loud banging that it sounded as if vehicles were sliding around the car deck. After a few hours, it became calmer but we were more than delighted to see land and disembark in Kagoshima.

No matter where you go, there are always connections with home. Our next stop was Kumamoto, a town where Lafcadio Hearn lived for a few years with his Japanese wife and children. Lafcadio was a writer with an Irish father and a Greek mother and spent many summers in Tramore as a boy. The beautiful  Lafcadio Japanese Gardens in Tramore were established in his memory.  Lafcadio is very much revered in Japan for his writings and his house in Kumamoto has been turned into a museum. There was a small entrance fee and the attendant was very friendly (although he didn’t speak English) giving us some postcards as presents.

As we drive into the mountains out of Kumamoto, we can see the hazy peninsula of Nagasaki across the Araike Sea. Along the way, there are small farms and little villages by the shore, both traditional and modern houses, roadside shires and cemeteries. It’s mandarin season  and most houses have a persimmon tree outside with it’s ripening  orange fruit decorating the branches like balls on a Christmas tree. The land becomes flatter with rice and beans, tractors and enormous greenhouses.

Caoimhin has been talking about the wonders of Japanese steel since we arrived in Japan so on our drive to Nagasaki,  we divert to visit a small family-run  business who have been making hand-forged knives for centuries. The knives with their glinting blades and carved handles are truly a work of art.

Careful now!!!!!!!!

Nagasaki is a beautiful city with gentle hills on three sides and a long narrow bay to the sea. It was the only harbour port in Japan where contact and trade with foreigners was allowed during Japan’s self-imposed, two-hundred year isolation. There’s a gorgeous old stone bridge, built in 1634  that has survived all the trials and tribulations of time including the dropping of the atomic bomb. ‘Mothers’were posing on the bridge with their Lovots ( baby robots) when we visited yesterday.

It’s almost impossible to imagine the horror of that day in 1945. The photographs and descriptions in the Atomic Bomb Museum are so  harrowing  that’s it’s difficult to process it all.  The  terrible plight of the survivors, their awful thirst and the grim legacy that they carried afterwards is beyond words. A prison near the hypocentre vaporized leaving only the foundations of the building. Several schools were left with just a wall standing, ceramic roof tiles more than a kilometre away, boiled and bubbled when exposed to the heat flash. 73,884 people died instantly and a similar number were injured. Despite everything Nagasaki has risen like a phoenix from the ashes and the emphasis is firmly on peace and friendship so that nothing like it can ever be allowed to happen.

The Nagasaki Peace Park is filled with statues, commemorative plaques and remains of the bomb drop. There are sculptures from various countries around the world pledging friendship and solidarity. Many of the sculptures depict mothers and children emphasising that we must protect not only present generations but also the coming generations so that all the peoples of the world can live in harmony.

The weather was extremely wet in Nagasaki for our first day.  Western and central Japan has recorded their largest-ever 24-hour rainfall for November. After the devastating floods in Spain, it was a bit disconcerting to be sleeping in the van while rain bucketed down as if it would never stop. (Most of the photos are from our second sunny day 🌞)

A Saturday morning visit to an onsen (thermal baths) was just what we needed after our very rainy (and windy) night in the van, parked in the corner of a carpark. The onsen was high in the hills above Nagasaki and had an outside section with gorgeous views of the city. We have become so accustomed to onsens at this stage (and walking around in the nip) that it’s difficult to believe how awkward and intimidating we found the whole process a few weeks ago. It was so relaxing lying up to my chin in hot water, fanned by a cool breeze and watching leaves drifting down from the trees and thinking about all we have seen in this lovely vibrant city which has seen so much sorrow.

The storm system gradually moved away and the sun came out on Saturday afternoon…..stunning blue skies after all the rain, almost like the motto of this city, ….a belief in hope and brighter days. Our phones are calling for people to be on high alert for landslides and flooding, while also being careful of lightning, tornadoes and violent winds through late Saturday.😲😲. But we are loving the clear blue skies, the sunshine and the ’weather forecast is good for the coming week.

Until next time…thanks for reading x

Nagasaki

Let there be peace.
The Centre of Devastation ( marked by a black plaque with concentric circles radiating from it).
So peaceful now

Japan: War and Peace