• Deb Young
  • Toby Barrett
  • Chris Barrett
  • Deb Young
  • Toby Barrett
  • Chris Barrett
  • Alex Barrett

Japan 2018

Et 17-dags eventyr af Deb, Toby, Chris & Alex Læs mere
  • Start på rejsen
    11. juli 2018

    DFW

    11. juli 2018, Forenede Stater ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    Hardly slept last night I am so excited about this trip! (Not particularly enthusiastic about the 13 hour flight, however.) Toby has me listening to Lil Pump, Diplo, & Drake while we wait to board. Once we are on, we need to get some sleep and try to adjust...Japan is 9 hours ahead.

    Toby is in heaven with these huge seats and trip-related swag. These are the nicest seats I've ever had on a plane, but he still doesn't totally fit!
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  • DFW PARTY

    11. juli 2018, Forenede Stater ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

    Me and mom are listening to Drake. I got some gummies from Starbucks. They taste like flavored dirt. Unlike mom, I’m hyped for the plane flight because flying business class is basically the life.

  • Narita

    12. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ 🌧 28 °C

    We got a little sleep (very little) on the plane, but the ride was really nice. The plane served Japanese and Western food, we had a little of each. We picked up our pre-ordered mifi device at the airport post office and caught a train to our next stop.Læs mere

  • Kamakura morning

    13. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    Had a decent night's sleep at the Prince Kamakura hotel and woke to a beautiful day. Walked to the station for the Enoden Electric Railway and then walked 20 minutes to the Kencho-ji Temple site, which turned out to be one of the most beautiful places of the day.

    We then walked back towards the station to the Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gu Shrine, which was super touristy, then to a tasty tempura lunch picked out by Toby.
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  • Kamakura afternoon

    13. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    After lunch we walked to Hokoku-ji Temple (small but beautiful) and then on to Sugimotodera Temple, which was founded in 734. The original steps are still there, but so worn they have built new ones beside them, but the originals are now covered in beautiful moss.

    By now we were drenched...its only mid-80's here but insanely humid - reminds me of the weather we just had in Myrtle Beach. We constantly have a drink in our hands.

    Back to the railway then and on to Hasedera Temple, which is up on a hillside and then the Kotokuin Temple with the Daibutsu Kamakura, or Kamakura Buddha.

    We are now showered and resting in the hotel, trying to scrounge up the energy to head back out to Enoshima for dinner.
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  • Sushi in Enoshima

    13. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ ⛅ 29 °C

    Toby was craving sushi, so I searched Google maps for the closest sushi restaurant to Enoshima station and came up with Masa Sushi.

    About 5 minutes walk from the station we came to a building that looked like the photo online - a classic pitched-roof wood sided building with a sliding wood door. I stood there trying to read whatever I could in the front before risking entry, but Toby just stuck his head in, called out and the proprietor came from the back and welcomed us in to the empty restaurant. I am so impressed with his sense of adventure…he has so much confidence to just walk in and make himself at home! For all l know he was motivated by hunger, we hadn't eaten since 11:30.

    We were given pretty solid English menus and sat down to a beautiful sushi meal. Turns out we are not big fans of the sea urchin (uni), which somehow turns to fish pudding in your mouth. The rest of the meal was great. We walked around Enoshima for a bit, then went back to bed.
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  • Enoshima Island

    14. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    We were up at the crack of dawn. Packed up the bag and left it in the hotel for the morning. We had yummy Western breakfast at a place called bills close to Shichirigahama station (they don't refill your coffee they way they do in the states…very sad about that.) Then off to Enoshima station to walk around the island.

    Kamakura and Enoshima are beach towns, with loads of surfers, SUPs, a few dragon boaters and an obsession with Hawaiian things. We walked through the town of Enoshima over to the pedestrian bridge to the island, and then around the island, which has loads of shops and restaurants, a shrine (of course) a lighthouse (referred to as a sea candle) and some caves. Tons of stairs and loads of walking, and at 9 in the morning we were dripping sweat.

    A couple of things I have noticed so far about the Japanese:

    * they linger over their meals like the French. I love this, there’s no wolfing down food in a rush.

    * they are absolutely petrified of the sun. We have been walking for 2 days through Heart of Darkness heat; this is a tropical climate. The Japanese (especially the women) wear hats, long sleeves (sometimes separate sleeves like kids wear in baseball), gloves, scarves over their neck/chest, long pants or leggings under dresses, and carry umbrellas.

    * we are the only Westerners in most places we go. What few Westerners we see aren't American. If course at the hotel this morning Toby was wearing a UT shirt and a guy asked if we were Texans…they were a family of Americans with Japanese ties.
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  • Shibuya & Meiji

    15. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ ⛅ 33 °C

    Breakfast on the 17th floor of the hotel was a great way to start, followed by a celebrity sighting in the way out. Exiting the elevator we saw a Jason Momoa lookalike but bigger (7 feet tall dudes stand out) and Toby and Alex immediately identified him as Thunder center Steven Adams. The boys introduced themselves and he was incredibly nice. We didn't bother him long, but Toby was completely star struck!

    Took the train to Shibuya to do the obligatory Hachiko photo, wandered through Yoyogi, then on to the Meiju Jingu shinto shrine.
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  • Harajuku

    15. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 31 °C

    Went to lunch at a great gyoza place in Harajuku, Alex was particularly happy with that choice.

    After we went to Takeshita-dori, the main locus of teen fashion & culture in Tokyo. The boys were super into it and had a ball. It was wild - packed and full of color and noise and teens EVERYWHERE.

    To wind down after all that excitement we hit the hedgehog cafe. Who thought of this idea for a cafe? It started with cat cafes, and now there are dogs, hedgehogs and even owls.
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  • Asakusa & Odaiba

    16. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    After the hotel breakfast this morning we headed out to Asakusa to the Senso-ji temple. The neighborhood is older and very quaint, and the approach to the shrine is full of touristy shops with lots of trinkets and street food. We had mochi balls, even though we’d just had breakfast.

    The Buddhist shrine is beautiful. It's a very old shrine, but was demolished in WWII and so needed a lot of repair. It's interesting that all these shrines (we’ve been to around 10) are all active places of worship even when they are swarming with tourists. Many of the tourists come and genuflect and pray, clearly moved by the experience of being there.

    The boys got their fortunes - you shake a box of sticks & pull one out, then take a fortune from the drawer with the number that corresponds with the stick. We needed some help there from a friendly Japanese girl, the numbers were in kanji and we were having some fun trying to match the figures up. They are close to the ones Alex learned in Mandarin class, but I think he only got to 20 this year. Alex’s fortune was unhappy so he tied it to the string so it would be changed.

    On to Odaiba and the science museum, which was big and beautiful and full of interesting exhibits. We spent about 90 minutes there and moved on to Joypolis, a video game/amusement park mashup that looked amazing, but was so crowded that they boys got one ride and one game in 90 minutes. Everything here is just mobbed all the time...
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  • Yokohama DeNA BayStars v Yakult Swallows

    16. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ 🌙 28 °C

    Yokohama is about an hour south of Tokyo, but it seems like it takes an hour to get places within Tokyo, so I find the whole distance thing here a bit confusing.

    The stadium is small - about 30k seats, and it was mostly full on a hot sticky weeknight, so the BayStars definitely draw. They don't win much, but this season they have won a few more than the Swallows, so they are both at the bottom of the Central Nippon League.

    Local kids stand on the field to greet they players as they are announced, and the players run out and meet the kids and sign their jerseys...it's a sweet way to start the game! The crowd chants the whole game, and the chants change to include each batters name as they come up (only the fans of the batting team chant.) We grabbed some bento boxes, a cucumber on a stick and some beer, got our seats and proceeded to chant along when we could figure out how.

    Girls go up and down the aisles constantly (every 5 minutes no exaggeration) dressed in the colors of the brand of beer they are selling with a mini keg on their backs. They smile and wave and look super happy, but they are the only Japanese women so far that I have seen break a sweat. There is a lot of beer consumed, and a lot of bento boxes.

    After so much running around the last couple of days, we only lasted about 4 innings before we headed home to bed, but it was a super cool experience and the boys definitely noticed differences between the baseball and and the baseball at home.
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  • Matsumoto Castle

    18. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 33 °C

    After a peaceful train ride out of Tokyo through rolling hills and into low, jagged green mountains, we came to Matsumoto. After a lunchbox ramen and gyoza we toured the largest castle in Japan, a gorgeous all-wood 16th century building.Læs mere

  • Tobira Onsen

    18. juli 2018, Japan ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

    A private bus full of senior citizens took us 45 minutes up into the mountains to the baths. We were asked to leave our shoes at the door and use their slippers (took them a bit to find their biggest ones for Chris, which were still too small.) They don't wear shoes inside and have an entirely different set of slippers by the toilet that are only for that room. Very interesting.

    We were given a run down on the baths - there are 3, separated by gender, all overlooking the forest with the sounds of the waterfall just below. Then we were asked to change into our yakutas before wandering the halls.

    This is a big ask for our teen boys, and they were pretty leery of baring it all in front of strangers, but in the end they both did it! And it was worth it, the baths are amazing.

    In the evening we had a 9 course feast in our robes, which kept slipping off the boys. The octogenarians at the next table would have gotten quite a show of green and blue fruit of the loom had they been paying any attention.

    After dinner we got back to our room to find they'd laid out the futons for sleeping.
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