• F and S World Tour
Nykyinen
  • F and S World Tour

World Travel

Flight to Munich Lue lisää
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    🇺🇸 Denver, United States
  • Hakone, Rain and Rain ...and Art ...

    31. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    Despite the heavy rain..we had a wonderful time here..... The Hakone Open-Air Museum, Japan’s pioneering outdoor sculpture park, masterfully blends modern art with Hakone’s dramatic natural landscape. Nestled in the mountains of Kanagawa Prefecture, it invites visitors to wander among large-scale sculptures that interact dynamically with their surroundings. Artists like Rodin, Henry Moore, Miró, and Japanese creators such as Taro Okamoto contribute to its diverse collection, set against misty peaks and lush greenery.Lue lisää

  • Tokyo's Subway/Train experience !

    27. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    ....and city impressions while exploring the neighborhood of Harajuku and Shinjuku.
    The train rides can feel endless — sometimes 50 to 75 minutes standing the whole way. In a metropolis of 37 million people, it’s incredible how locals handle this daily routine with such ease. For us, navigating these crowds is exhausting and at times overwhelming, but for everyone here, it’s just another normal day in the city!Lue lisää

  • IMPERIAL PALACE...and Cherry Blossoms!

    27. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    Cherry Blossoms, Magnolia, and Camelia blossoms.
    A very special day— we caught something that only happens a couple of times a year and only for a short window...!!
    A normally restricted part of the Imperial Palace grounds, Inui Street, is opened to the public just twice a year: once for cherry blossoms and once for autumn foliage, and this spring opening is only for nine days. The path is about 750 meters long, lined with around 100 cherry trees, and is usually completely off-limits, so being able to stroll there freely is a rare privilege. This public opening itself started only in 2014, to commemorate former Emperor Akihito’s 80th birthday, so it’s a relatively recent tradition and still feels like a limited, somewhat “insider” experience...!!Lue lisää

  • Takahatayamadainichido 大日堂

    26. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    Cherry Blossoms....and our neighborhood Temple here in Hino, about 1 hour west of Tokyo,

    Takahatayamadainichidō (大日堂) in Hino is a hall within the wider Takahata Fudōson Kongo‑ji temple precinct, one of the major historic temples in western Tokyo. The overall temple complex is believed to trace its origins to around the 8th–9th century, and later grew into an important site after an imperial order in the early Heian period to enshrine Fudō Myōō for the protection of the eastern Kantō region.
    Within this precinct, Dainichidō is dedicated to Dainichi Nyorai (the Cosmic Buddha), and today it also functions as a calm sub‑hall where visitors join goma (fire) prayers and other temple rituals. Takahata Fudō as a whole is famous for its hydrangeas (around 7,500 plants and some 200 varieties) and its miniature 88‑temple pilgrimage route on Fudō Hill, so Dainichidō is part of a larger landscape that blends old halls, gardens, and seasonal flower viewing.
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  • One more Day in Kyoto !!

    24. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    More Temples and Shrines and neighborhoods...

    The 1,200 stone figures at Otagi Nenbutsu-ji were not carved by a single person. They were carved between 1981 and 1991 by many amateur sculptors and temple visitors who came to learn stone carving under the guidance of the head priest and sculptor Kocho Nishimura.Lue lisää

  • Todai-ji Daibutsuden, Great Buddha Hall

    22. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    The Daibutsuden, or Great Buddha Hall, of Tōdai-ji in Nara is one of Japan’s most famous wooden buildings and the symbolic heart of a temple long tied to Buddhism, state power, and national identity. Built to house the immense bronze Great Buddha, it has been rebuilt after major fires and remains a powerful reminder of the scale and ambition of early Japanese temple architecture. We also visited a nearby Shinto Shrine with thousand year old Japanese Cedar Tree!...Lue lisää

  • Kyoto and Shrines and Gardens.

    20. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Kyoto’s religious landscape is unusually rich: sources describe it as home to more than 1,600 Buddhist temples and around 400 Shinto shrines, with many dating back centuries. Famous temples such as Kinkaku-ji, Tenryu-ji, and Kiyomizu-dera show the city’s range, from elegant gardens to dramatic hillside settings and iconic architecture. Kyoto’s temple tradition is also linked to major Buddhist schools, especially Shingon and Rinzai.
    Kyoto is also the heart of geisha culture, where geiko and maiko preserve a highly refined performing tradition. In Kyoto, geisha are called geiko, and apprentices are called maiko; they train for years in dance, music, conversation, and hospitality, especially in districts like Gion and other historic hanamachi. This living tradition gives Kyoto a rare blend of spiritual heritage and artistic elegance.
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  • Shimao Quarry Hotel...wow

    12. maaliskuuta, Kiina ⋅ 🌙 7 °C

    We had to see this incredible Hotel and one of several giant Botanical Gardens surrounding Shanghai !!

    The InterContinental Shanghai Wonderland is a luxury hotel built into the wall of a reclaimed quarry on the outskirts of Shanghai, famous for having most of its floors below ground and some rooms underwater.

    • Official name: InterContinental Shanghai Wonderland.
    • Location: Songjiang District, in the Sheshan/Tianma Mountain area, about 40–50 minutes’ drive from central Shanghai
    • Setting: Built against the vertical rock face of a former stone quarry, with an artificial lake at the bottom of the pit.
    • Scale: Around 18 stories total, with only 2 above ground and 16 below ground level, including 2 underwater levels.
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  • Shanghai ! 上海

    9. maaliskuuta, Kiina ⋅ ☀️ 11 °C

    Just a little information of what is happening here..:

    Status: Largest city in China and a leading global financial and commercial hub.
    • Location: Eastern China, at the mouth of the Yangtze River on the East China Sea.
    • Population: Roughly 25 million residents in the metropolitan area.
    Economy
    • 2025 GDP: About 5.67 trillion yuan (around 815 billion USD), among the top five city economies in the world.
    • 2026 growth target: Around 5 percent, with a focus on “high‑quality” rather than purely high‑speed growth.
    • Pillars: Finance, trade, advanced manufacturing (integrated circuits, biomedicine, AI), and digital services.
    Development and planning
    • Long‑term goal: By 2035, fully upgrade its “five centers” role—international economic, financial, trade, shipping, and sci‑tech innovation hub status—to leading global levels.
    • R&D intensity: Spending on research and development is around 4.5 percent of GDP and planned to rise further.
    • 2026–2030 blueprint: Emphasizes advanced manufacturing, green and smart infrastructure, urban livability, and better public services...

    that is the tip of the iceberg...🤩 And the train got up to 300 km/h.
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  • Miyajima Island and Temples...

    7. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Itsukushima, popularly known as Miyajima, is a scenic island in Hatsukaichi, Japan, famous for the UNESCO World Heritage Itsukushima Shrine and its iconic "floating" torii gate that appears to float on the water at high tide. The island is considered sacred, with ancient temples, forests, and free-roaming deer, and is one of Japan's "Three Views". Access is via a short ferry ride from Miyajimaguch.Lue lisää

  • Hiroshima, A somber Day ...

    6. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ 🌧 9 °C

    Hiroshima is a modern, lively city that carries an unusually heavy past in its streets and riverside vistas. On 6 August 1945, at 8:15 in the morning, an American B-29 bomber dropped the first atomic weapon ever used in war over the city, killing tens of thousands instantly and many more in the months and years that followed. The destruction of Hiroshima helped force the end of the Second World War, but it also marked the beginning of the nuclear age, when humanity acquired the ability to annihilate itself.
    In the heart of the rebuilt city stands Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, created after the war on the once‑devastated delta to dedicate the city to peace rather than revenge or triumph. The park is not a battlefield monument but a carefully designed landscape of lawns, trees, and water that invites quiet walking and reflection. At its center is the arched cenotaph, a simple stone structure under which lie a registry of the victims’ names and an inscription that can be read as both remembrance and a promise to the dead.
    Across the river rises the Genbaku Dome, the skeletal remains of the former Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall that stood close to the bomb’s hypocenter. Preserved almost exactly as it was left after the blast, the dome is the only large building still standing near that point, a frozen fragment of the moment when the bomb exploded above the city. Recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, it has become a stark symbol of both the destructive power humans have created and the determination to prevent such a tragedy from recurring.
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  • Last Day in Okinawa...

    4. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

    Do to high winds and even higher waves..all Whale watching tours have been cancelled for the entire week..🐳...and while it was our main reason for the visit here....we explored the island and it history and visited the Himeyuri Peace Museum....

    " Okinawa, the southernmost of Japan’s main islands, became a decisive battleground in the final stages of World War II. The Battle of Okinawa, fought from April to June 1945, was one of the bloodiest conflicts in the Pacific. American forces sought to capture the island as a launching point for a potential invasion of mainland Japan, while Japanese troops defended it fiercely, prepared to fight to the last man.
    During the Battle of Okinawa in 1945, teenage schoolgirls—most famously the Himeyuri student corps from the First Girls’ High School of Okinawa and the Okinawa Women’s Normal School—were conscripted by the Japanese army as auxiliary nurses.
    These 222 girls (aged 14-17) and 18 teachers trained briefly in nursing before being sent into frontline hospital caves near Shuri and Haebaru, where they endured hellish conditions: amputations without anesthesia, carrying stretchers under shelling, cleaning maggot-infested wounds, and living amid dysentery, starvation, and the dead.[latimes +2]
    As U.S. forces closed in, many units were abruptly abandoned by doctors; the girls fled into other caves or the battlefield, where soldiers often blocked their escape, fearing they’d be captured and “dishonored.” Over 136 Himeyuri died from combat, disease, starvation, or suicide—some coerced by troops or choosing grenades to avoid rape, a fate they’d been propagandized to dread.
    Other groups like the Shiraume, Fuji Gakutotai, and students from Yaeyama (near Ishigaki) faced similar horrors in southern Okinawa caves, supporting the 24th Division with nursing and messaging until the war’s end.
    Their story is preserved at the Himeyuri Peace Museum in Itoman, with survivor testimonies highlighting the tragedy of child soldiers in caves.
    The battle devastated the island. Over 200,000 people died—among them soldiers from both sides and tens of thousands of Okinawan civilians caught in the crossfire. Many locals were forced into hiding, and entire villages were destroyed. Beyond the immense human suffering, the battle also marked a turning point: the United States’ victory at Okinawa paved the way for Japan’s eventual surrender after the atomic bombings later that summer."
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  • City of Naha and Shuri Castle..

    1. maaliskuuta, Japani ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

    Naha grew from a cluster of coastal villages into the bustling heart of the Ryukyu Kingdom, shaped for centuries by trade winds and ships moving between Japan, China, Korea, and Southeast Asia. Today, it is a modern island city where castle walls, market streets, American-era influences, and resort life coexist in everyday routines.

    From at least the 11th century, the Naha area functioned as an active port, linking the Ryukyu Islands with the Japanese archipelago and the Korean peninsula through maritime trade. In the 15th century, it became a key port and then the political and commercial center of the unified Ryukyu Kingdom, thriving as a hub for exchange with China and other Asian countries.
    Four bustling villages known as the “four markets of Naha” formed the core of this trade town, supported by warehouses, temples, and defensive forts guarding the harbor. Chinese merchant families settled here in the late 14th century, helping to create a cosmopolitan community and shaping local food and customs. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Naha was opened as a treaty port, then formally established and expanded as a modern city, later becoming the capital of Okinawa after World War II.
    Shuri Castle, rising on the hills above Naha, served as the royal palace and political, diplomatic, and ritual center of the Ryukyu Kingdom. The complex blended architectural influences from Japan, China, and Southeast Asia, with bright vermilion halls, curving tiled roofs, and massive limestone walls that looked out over the port city below.
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  • Off to Okinawa !!..

    28. helmikuuta, Japani ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    ......Okinawa, Japan’s southernmost prefecture, is a captivating blend of subtropical beauty and distinct cultural identity. Once the independent Ryukyu Kingdom, Okinawa developed its own language, customs, and trade networks long before becoming part of Japan in the 19th century. This independent spirit still echoes through its music, festivals, and cuisine, giving Okinawa a rhythm that feels uniquely its own..Lue lisää