Archive for the 'Japan' Category

Photo Gallery – Fuji Rock Festival

Here is an experimental gallery I am working on to keep track of my experimental hobby, photography. If you are interested, pop by there and have a look

Two ways to prepare for rain. Get your colorful rain jackets out or just fill up on Heiniken and dont give a damn. Naeba, Japan.
And then there were tattoo's too. Impressive work dont you think. Naeba, Japan.
This patch of land was grassy just a day before. Thousands of people and some rain turned the place into a slush. naeba, Japan.
Ah, the gents. Seasoned rockers. They picked good spots, and funny chaps to hang out with. Naeba, Japan.
Some hairdo adjustments. Naeba, Japan.
Ready for day 2. Reading the schedule for the day before the concerts pick up in earnest. Naeba, Japan.
Theme of the event. Beer and Sleep. Heiniken did a blast of a sale It would seem. Naeba, Japan.
Waiting in the rain for Corriene Bailey Rae. The grass is all gone and replaced by slush by this time. Stand or move on was the choice. I decided to move on after she started singing. She is pretty pedestrian in live shows. Naeba, Japan.
More rain. But that does not dampen the spirits. The motto seems to be 'Have Beer, Will Rock'. Naeba, Japan.
Rain + Beer. When you got to sleep, you got to do it. Rain is but an occational inconvenience. Naeba, Japan.
Free form dancing and showing off skills are common at come venues. Naeba, Japan
Really this is a Rock festival. Dont be fooled by the orderly crowds. Naeba, Japan.

Hope you enjoy the images. More galleries will be added in due course and the site design is in flux at this time. I am figuring out the right layout to keep the clutter down, keep the navigation consistent with the blog here and the page loads fast. Let me know if it works and more appreciation will be due if you let me know if something does not work :)

Hachinohe – peace at last

I was pretty much stoned out when I hopped on the train. Pretty crowded but comfortable as usual and I went in and out of consciousness. How I wished I was on a overnighter like the Baikal 007 and get some really good shut eye. The longest Shinkansen from Tokyo was a short 2:30 hr ride but the rest I got was worth every minute.

Arrived at Hachinohe on time and the motel we found is literally connected to the station. We were here at 10:30 and the check in does not start till 3 pm. What a bummer. But we being the good sport we are, decided to creatively while the time away. What do you do in japan wan you are stinking and got a couple of hours? Hit a Onsen. Heh…

It is unusual for me to be in a public bath let alone among dozens of buck naked men of all ages parading around and jumping in hot and cold pool. It was a, um relaxing experience. I probably had the longest bath ever and i didn’t realize a bath can be pretty relaxing. It was always a mundane chore that I would avoid if I could but I can now totally understand people obsessed with long baths heh… After a while one tends to forget all the naked people. Would have been a different affair if it was a mixed-sex bath I think :)

The good people at the motel let us check in early and also gave us pointers on what to do. The last time I was in this region, I took a scenic train ride around rice fields and the coast. It is not in the cards this time but I took a train to a coastal town called Tanesashi. This is a quaint little town with a brilliant coast line. The beach was very clean and I should say unique. It has a combination of sandy beach, really soft grass land and a rocky outcrop. Seems to be a pretty favorite hangout for family picnics. Luckily there was very little crowd and the weather was excellent. The train ride was very peaceful and the gentle wind and rocking waves were the perfect accompaniment. I cooed have spent many more hours but 2 was good enough to de-stress. We topped it with an excellent meal of rice and noodles prepared by local chef who accommodated the strange vegetarian request.

August is a time for parades and celebration in Aomori, and When I head into town, the revelry was starting. Large floats paraded the streets and seems like the entire town turned up to join in the fun. Japan is strange, it is a place where you find punks and traditionalists side by side and today was no different. Tons of girls in kimono’s and many more in mini skirts graced the streets and there are few better ways to spend an evening sipping coffee and watching people flock by… I guess a perfect day to top up the rather rough few days.

Tomorrow is a 4 hr train ride back to the airport, but now I am just about knocking off with some mindless entertainment on TV. Believe me, 100 Dalmatians is a lot more fun in Japanese :)

JR – service par excellence

The super standard JR staff as usual were completely accommodating to all the variations and changes I asked of them… I have 4 cancelled tickets and they didn’t even flinch. I guess I pushed my luck with a difficult reservation. My return trip was posed as a complex decision problem that went thus…

Hachinohe – Omiya preferably starting mid morning

Stay in Omiya for at least 20 mins

Omiya – Tokyo

Tokyo – Narita reaching narita before 2 pm.

If you know about train schedules in japan, you will know that making complex reservations is a tedious task and when posed with such constraints, things get really hairy. The feller did not bat an eyelid and started his complex punching of the numbers and consulting his big schedule bible… The best he could do after a long while was to give me a 12 min stop over at Omiya. That was not ideal for me to use the lockers and we decided to ditch the plan and carry our bags anyway… So off went the complex schedule and he took it with a smile.

Got to push my luck further, I asked him to help me find a hotel in Hachinohe. JR is a train reservation office and they have no business entertaining anything else. But the feller jumped out of his seat and after 5 minutes got me number for hotels near the station. Wow. I requested him to check for room availability and he did that too. Amazing. And all this with me not speaking a bit of Japanese and he speaking very very little English. They are really setting the standards on service excellence. Respect.