Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Sony Building

This is the Sony Building in the Ginza area. I "borrowed" this picture because I didn't have a good one of the outside of the building.


I took a picture of a picture of us at the Sony Center in the Ginza area. The center showed off its lcd tvs by displaying aquarium fish. It felt just like walking through a real aquarium.

The Sony Rolly amused this little girl. It's basically a dancing MP3 player. Here's a link to see what it does: http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=2ITLzs9k4j4 Deepest apologies if you don't like Ricky Martin.

Kids lined up to design their own turtle and add a personal message. After you picked out the colors, your turtle would swim by on the screens and then show the message you typed.

Of course, I got in line too. Like my turtle? I don't know why it put my name at the top, though.

View of a Ginza street corner from a sandwich shop. Oh, and Marie.


For our anniversary dinner we decided to eat at a yakiniku place. The meat was so good. The business guys in the background are sitting on the floor, but we chose a table.We also steered clear of anything that resembled innards.


We were able to go to the top floor of this office building and get a 360 degree view of the city for free. The 3 pictures below are shots from there.



Look at the tiny looking trees. It's easy to see how our necks were killing us the next day from looking up so much.

Meiji Jingu

Meiji Jingu (Shrine) is a Shinto Shrine in Shibuya. The torii (gate) is made of cypress and is 12 meters high and 9 meters wide.
In the back you can see the clock tower that we posted a night picture of.
The hanging wooden blocks have prayers on them. The girl in the picture is NOT me.

Cool picture Erik!

Sensouji Temple, Asakusa

Sensouji Temple Gate (Buddhist Temple)
We took the Sumida River Cruise from Hamarikyu Garden to Asakasa to see this temple.

Souvenir shopping arcade that is just through the gate and precedes the actual temple.







I put this picture in for those of you who watched "I Survived a Japanese Game Show." We did not ride in a rickshaw or pull anyone in one.

What is Marie thinking about? Must be thinking how much fun it is riding on trains all day.

This is a don't dive onto the train as the doors are closing sign.

Monday, September 1, 2008

Forgotten Park Photos

Here are a couple pictures from the park that is near us that I wrote about previously.

"I thought I was coming up for some grub...not for a picture. You better at least post it on your blog!"
The cicadas in one portion of the park were deafening. I actually had to cover my ears.
You can see the bamboo forest in back of this 300 year old bonsai ("not banzai, BONSAI, Daniel-san")

Monday, August 11, 2008

Tanabata


Our city had a Tanabata Festival this past weekend. It celebrates the meeting of the lovers Vega and Altair. The Milky Way separates these lovers, and they are allowed to meet only once a year. The characters on the streamer reads "tanabata." The city was very pretty with all the large streamers, some of which had lights and mechanical components to make them move. People write wishes on paper and hang them on bamboo. I read one written by a child that said "It'd be great if I could become a dog."



I was amazed at how many dancers there were. The parade kept going and going and going. I think the whole city came out.


There were vendors selling all kinds of food. There were lots of items on a stick including: sausage, chicken, potatoes, scallops, mussel, chocolate covered bananas, cucumbers, eggplant, candied plum, and the above pictured squid. The popular item seemed to be a baked potato with loads of butter.

The kids had fun playing games. In this game the kids have a paper scooper (plastic handle and rim, of course) and get as many balls out of the water as they can until the paper breaks. There is also a version with goldfish.






I thought these sparrows were mechanical at first! Everyone was watching the dancers and I was looking in the opposite direction squealing over the baby bird. I couldn't stop watching. People might have assumed I was drunk.




Erik got a big kick out of this huge poster. Apparently this guy used to be famous...

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Fire Insurance

Some of you have been asking me what I've been doing with my time since I'm currently not working. Other than the fun I had last week with vacation Bible school, I've been telling everyone that I've been doing move-related errands and random tasks. The following is an example of a "random task. " I spent a good deal of the morning translating our fire insurance paperwork. Luckily it had cute pictures to help out.

This poor guy needs accident insurance because his window is broken.

This guy is freaking out because his safe was broken into (good thing we don't have a vault in our home).

I hate when my luggage catches on fire at hotels. Now that I have this insurance I can, without worry, take my most flammable items with me on vacation.


This is obviously for structural damage.


I see two houses on fire so I suppose it covers me and my neighbors. It also covers bodily injury. It must be tiring holding his leg up like that.



Even though this guy feels so bad about breaking his neighbor's garbage bag shaped vase, they're still yelling at him. How rude! The second picture took me a while to figure out. The person is not injured nearly as badly as in the picture above (no head wrappings). And why is there someone bringing flowers? This insurance is for when someone gets hurt at your house. You are bringing flowers because you feel bad about it and because you still have money thanks to your insurance coverage.

Fun, eh?

Mini Olympics



I have been excited about the Olympics coming all summer. Our household goods (including our tv) have not arrived, but we haven't let that stop us from cheering on team USA. This is how we've been "enjoying" the Olympics. Our screen would be a 60" to Thumbelina.

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Park




Since we don't have our own cute kids to post pictures of, we took a few of some random Japanese kids (we actually took a bunch, but are only posting a couple). The slide was a lot of fun. We didn't try out the white bouncy thing, but several Japanese adults did.


Sunflowers


We visited a park not far from us and found a huge sunflower field with several different colors of sunflowers. The picture with the large tree gives an idea of how big the field was. The pictures look a little darker on the slide show and I don't know how to remedy it. If you click a picture you can enlarge it. BTW, I do realize that the pink flower is not a sunflower! Erik made some great tasting honey...what a cute worker bee.

Friday, August 1, 2008

Money Bags

We forgot to post this picture earlier. This money came from the bank, not a monopoly game. To get our mansion we had to pay: one month's rent (200,000 yen), deposit (200,000 yen), key money (one-time fee that everyone pays when renting a place in Japan: 200, 000 yen), agent fee (200,000 yen), and fire insurance (10,ooo yen). I don't know why we look so happy to be paying this much money. Anyway, we heard that it is much worse in Korea. A friend told us that he had to carry a suitcase full of money, 3 years worth of rent paid up front, to get his place. What we had to carry was mere chump change in comparison...