Around the World

januari - juli 2023
If you are not willing to risk the unusual, you will have to settle for the ordinary ... We travel not to escape life, but for life not to escape us! Läs mer

Lista över länder

  • Kanada
  • Japan
  • Taiwan
  • Filippinerna
  • Kambodja
  • Vietnam
  • Brunei
  • Visa alla (41)
Kategorier
Runt om i världen, Kryssning, Kultur, Fotgrafering, Tur, Semester
  • 65,6kantal resta miles
Transportmedel
  • Kryssningsfartyg38,3kkilometer
  • Flyg2 793kilometer
  • Gående-kilometer
  • Vandring-kilometer
  • Cykel-kilometer
  • Motorcykel-kilometer
  • Tuk Tuk-kilometer
  • Bil-kilometer
  • Tåg-kilometer
  • Buss-kilometer
  • Husbil-kilometer
  • Husvagn-kilometer
  • 4x4-kilometer
  • Simning-kilometer
  • Paddling/Roddning-kilometer
  • Motorbåt-kilometer
  • Segling-kilometer
  • Husbåt-kilometer
  • Färja-kilometer
  • Häst-kilometer
  • Skidåkning-kilometer
  • Lifta med-kilometer
  • Cable car-kilometer
  • Helikopter-kilometer
  • Barfota-kilometer
  • 377fotavtryck
  • 180dagar
  • 5,8kfoton
  • 1,7kgilla-markeringar
  • Osaka, Japan CASTLE - 2 of 3

    18 juni 2023, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 77 °F

    Then we drove to the 16th century Osaka Castle, a symbol of the city. General Toyotomi Hideyoshi built the castle in 1583 to be the most impenetrable fortress (which replaced a castle that had burned down 13 years earlier), it was destroyed 30 years later, and then lightning stuck the castle and burned the next one down in 1665 and rebuilt again in 1931 (this time in concrete). Ironically it had no damage in the war. There are 13 structures within its perimeter including gates, turrets, moats and storehouses for gun powder.

    The Nishinomaru Garden, encompassing the former "western citadel", is a lawn garden with 600 cherry trees, a tea house, the former Osaka Guest House and nice views of the castle tower from below.
    Läs mer

  • Osaka, Japan CASTLE & Goodbye- 3 of 3

    18 juni 2023, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 77 °F

    We had quite the send off when we left! The first video is at the end of the previous posting and the other two are at the end of this one.

    We look forward to coming back again as there was so much to see and do here!Läs mer

  • Shimizu, Japan - Toshogu Shrine - 1 of 2

    19 juni 2023, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 81 °F

    Shimizu is a beautiful port located in the north end of the Izu Peninusula and a quaint little town established in 1889 where two rivers flow. After merging with 11 small hamlets, this became an official town in 1963. We visited the two main sites here, the “famous” view of Mt Fuji and the Shrine of Tokugawa Ieyasu the founder of the shogunate.

    The day began with an Official Ceremony with the town “mayor” (local official) and our ship’s Captain. Each time the Oceania Insignia arrives a a port that it has never visited, there is a welcoming ceremony along with speeches, gifts (of the town and of the ship) and flowers exchanged by both sides. It is a civil, peaceful and official way to be welcomed and to appreciate arrival to a new port (see photos).

    Next, we took a tour that began with a bus ride to the Nihondaira Ropeway (or cable car). We went up this cable car .7 miles and 394 feet and had views of the Suruga Bay with Mt Fuji clouded in the background.

    At the top we walked “many” stone stairways taking us to the Kunozan Toshogu Shinto Shrine dedicated to the feudal lord Tokugawa leyasu who unified Japan in the early 1600s. Of course, in earlier times, worshippers and priests walked all the way from the bottom (an additional 1000 steps).

    Kunouzan is named after the founder Kuno Tadahito, who established a temple dedicated to Kannon-Bosatsu, during the time of Emperor Suiko (600 A.D.) Kuno-ji Temple was once a complex consisting of over 330 buildings attracting many famous Buddhist monks which ended due to a fire at the base of the mountain around 1225 and there are no remains of the original complex. In 1568 a castle was build atop Kunouzan and was named Kuno-jo Castle and in 1582 Kunouzan and all the surrounding lands within Suruga-no-kuni became possessions of the Tokugawa clan.

    Tokugawa leyasu was the first Shogun and his son built this Shrine after his death for his tomb … talk about a tribute. The shrine has a history of over 400 years, and enshrines Lord Tokugawa Ieyasu, who founded the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1603 that brought peace to Japan for 265 years. He devoted his life to bringing peace to Japan, by unifying a country that had fragmented into many warring states controlled by warlords and generals into a unified state, bringing an end to a long period of civil war. The basis of Tokugawa Ieyasu’s nation building policy was to value the life of the individual, to develop and strengthen education throughout the country and to pursue peaceful relations with foreign powers through diplomacy and trade.

    When you get to the Shrine, there are many buildings, shrines, purification areas, bells and other artifacts until you finally reach the tomb where he was buried in 1616. The Ishi-no-ma is the sunken space between the main hall and the worship hall that first started here at Kunozan Toshogu. It became a new architectural standard for shrines and temples. This style of shrine building with an Ishi-no-ma is called ‘Gongen-Zukuri” (the name also given to the Shogun). The Ishi-no-ma is an important space connecting the world of the gods and the world of mortals, where many religious rites are performed. The shrine has many beautiful sculptures and paintings and conveys an important message of peace from Tokugawa Ieyasu to us living in the modern era. Many annual events are also experienced in this sacred location.

    Considering when the first Temple was built here around 592 and the subsequent Shrines, this is an amazing feat and quite beautiful and meaningful experience. Of course, when you come down the mountain and down all the steps and the cable car and finally reach the place you started, it is “traditional” to have an “orange” (the fruit of Japan is mandarin orange) ice cream!
    Läs mer

  • Shimizu, Japan - Mount Fuji - 2 of 2

    19 juni 2023, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 81 °F

    Our next stop was the Miho-no-Matsubara pine tree grove, dedicated as one of the World Heritages properties. In this grove we found the 650-year-old pine which has mythical powers. At the end of a quiet tree lined park of 50,000 pine trees (reminds us of Pine Mountain Road our home in Redding) is the shore and the beach where many come to pray, admire and be inspired by the famous and sacred Mount Fuji (Mt. Fuji), Japan’s highest mountain (7th highest on Earth) and a UNESCO world heritage site. Mount Fuji is an active stratovolcano in Japan, with a summit elevation of 12,389 ft 3 in. Mount Fuji last erupted in 1707. About 11,000 years ago, a large amount of lava began to erupt from the west side of the top of the ancient Fuji mountain. This lava formed the new Fuji which is the main body of Mount Fuji. Since then, the tops of the ancient Fuji and the new Fuji are side by side. About 2800 years ago, the top part of ancient Fuji caused a large-scale landslide due to weathering, and finally, only the top of Shin-Fuji remained. There are ten known eruptions that can be traced to reliable records.

    Although we may not have had a perfect, or much of any view, of Mount Fuji today, we did look at some wonderful photos, walked the area of the Pines and visited a local museum of Mount Fuji history. We spoke with a guide that does hikes up Mount Fuji and has most of her adult life and was thrilled to hear her passion as to the majesty of climbing the mountain and reaching the top, giving us a feel for not only the beauty but the Mount Fuji mystic.
    Läs mer

  • Tokyo, Japan - Train & GARDENS - 1 of 3

    20 juni 2023, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 75 °F

    Key words in Japan:
    HAI (yes) SUMIMASEN (excuse me but used for any greeting or acknowledgement)

    The ship arrives in Odaiba, just outside Tokyo. When we got outside the terminal to take a train to the city, we immediately felt like home. There in front of us (see photo) is the Statue of Liberty and the Verrazano Narrows bridge. Odaiba’s replica of the famous Statue of Liberty positioned in front of the Rainbow Bridge gives off the impression that this re-creation is to scale but it’s about 1/7th of the size of the New York original (originally erected in 1998 as a temporary tribute to Japan’s relationship with France, but the statue became permanent in 2000). Lady Liberty is not the only one in Japan, she also has sisters in Shimoda and Osaka.

    Tokyo, the capital since 1868, is a very special place. The people, as all over Japan, are incredibly polite and helpful. Everything is clean here … beautiful walkways, and buildings and the subway, even with 14+ million people (almost twice NY).

    Lets talk about the trains ... over 4,000 trains in 822 stations. We loved our travel on the trains and we took many different lines (public and private) over the two days here. The trains in Tokyo have 10.8 million riders per day and 3.9 billion riders per year (compare that to NYC with a mere 2.4 million a day and only 1.8 billion per year).

    There are public lines, private lines and the bullet train and all together this makes for MANY trains and commuters. The Tokyo Central Station opened in 1885 and it is one of Japan's oldest subway stations and is still in heavy use today. Just one busy station we went to, Shinjuku station has an average of 3.6 million people use the station each day. The subways in Tokyo are impeccably clean, have many vending machines that sell everything from hot coffee to ice cream, the stations are vacuumed and sanitized all day and they have clean and well-stocked restrooms. The most shocking thing we found is that don't have trash cans anywhere… you take your garbage with you. In 1993, Mayor David Dinkins of NYC toured the Tokyo subway system, and upon seeing its cleanliness, order, and lack of rats, remarked "we have a lot to learn from the Japanese." We never saw litter on or off the platforms or tracks and “enjoyed” my visit to the little boy’s room, that was impeccable.

    We visited the Imperial Palace East Gardens of the Tokyo Imperial Palace, the main residence and administrative offices of the Emperor of Japan. It is a large 52 acre park located right in the central area of Tokyo. The palace grounds and gardens are built on the site of the old Edo Castle. The Edo Castle is the site of 1868 transfer of power from shogunate to imperial rule.

    Besides the East Gardens, the main grounds of the Palace are generally closed to the public. Although none of the original buildings remain, the gardens are still dotted with foundations, walls and stones, not to mention the beautiful moats and gatehouses.

    Within the wider gardens there are several interesting areas, including the foundations of the former keep, the traditional Japanese Ninomaru Garden. The public can enter the garden through any of the three historic gates, the Ōte-mon (where we came in), the Hirakawa-mon or the Kitahanebashi-mon. The East Gardens was laid out during the Meiji era when the Emperor seized control of the city from the Tokugawa Shogunate. It is an amazing set of gardenswith 285 acres (compared with the 850 acres of Central Park in NYC). Note: NYC has 8 million people and Tokyo over 14 million with the greater Tokyo area having 40 million people.

    The garden has nearly 30 species of cherry trees. Other notable plants are bamboo, peonies, a grove of plum trees and willow trees. The garden has over one thousand species of native Japanese plants. There is also a large green lawn, called the Oshibahu, that was once used for imperial ceremonies. One of our favorite gardens here was the Iris garden where there are 84 species of Irises.

    After leaving the Gardens we walked around this financial part of the city (stock exchange and major financial institutions, government offices) and took a tour bus around the loop to get a better overview of the city. The buildings were a mix of stone and brick of the 19th century but mostly skyscrapers.

    Our next stop was the Character and Ramen Streets of the Train Station. Yes, the train station. We were told not to miss this hot spot to get some of the best food in the City. Character Street is a long passageway filled with shops selling popular Japanese animated characters, like Hello Kitty, One Piece or Domo-kun. There are shops from every television station, so you can buy goods from TV dramas and variety shows here, too. Then there is “snack land”, selling every candy ever imagined and many you have not in stores that are making these treats, often fresh. Of course there is a big area of Japanese manga and anime with more than 30 shops dedicated to household names (none looked familiar except Pokemon, and Snoopy).

    Next we went to Ramen Street which is underground under the train station in a maze of restaurants and stores. Eight of the best rated restaurants in Tokyo are here. We had a great noodle meal here after we figured out how to order and pay (both from a machine!) and realized people don’t linger. You get your meal and slurp it up quickly and get out.

    Before we left the underground of Tokyo to take our train back to the ship, we had to stop for some much-needed Kit Kats. Yes, there are over 400 varieties, and the Japanese are obsessed with Kit Kats. We bought some macha and sake Kit Kats to try when we get home. Under the category of strange things, we saw was California wine on sale and 3 Coins stores (like a dollar store but it cost 3 – 100 yen for many items). There are “3 Coins”, “3 Coins Plus” and of course “3 Coins Ooops!” stores selling a range of items from batteries to gimmick fans and socks.
    Läs mer

  • Tokyo, Japan TEMPLE & SHRINE - 1 of 3

    21 juni 2023, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 77 °F

    We went first thing to the Asakusa area, again another set of fun trains to figure out. This area used to be the main entertainment district with kabuki theaters and “other” types of theaters through the early 1900’s. The Kaminarimon (Thunder) Gate and Buddhist dieties welcome you at the front of the Nakamise street and at the entrance of Senso-ji temple. The gate, with its lantern and statues, stands 38 ft tall, 37 ft wide and covers an area of 746 sq ft. The first gate was built in 941, but the current gate dates from 1960, after the previous gate was destroyed in a fire in 1865. Nakamise Street came about in the early 18th century, when neighbors of Sensō-ji were granted permission to set up shops on the approach to the temple. The length of the street is approximately 820 ft and contains around 89 shops. You can see kimonos worn everywhere, all types and qualities, worn by locals and tourists.

    Senso-ji is a very popular Buddhist Temple built in the 7th century and Tokyo’s oldest. Large parts of Asakusa were destroyed in the air raids of 1945 and never returned to those days. The Kaminarimon is the first of two large entrance gates leading to Senso-ji Temple, officially Kinryū-zan Sensō-ji. First built more than 1000 years ago, it is the symbol of Asakusa. Formerly associated with the Tendai sect of Buddhism, it became independent after World War II. It is dedicated to Kannon, the bodhisattva (someone that can reach nirvana) of compassion, and is the most widely visited religious site in the world with over 30 million visitors annually.

    Adjacent to the temple is a five-story pagoda and the Asakusa Shrine, also known as Sanja-sama, was built during the Edo Period and survived the air raids of 1945.

    We spent a few fun hours walking around this are and visiting the Temples and Shrines …not to mention get our fortune read by the Omikuji, also known as paper or wooden sticks, are common at Buddhist temples and Shinto shrines in Japan. Omikuji, a literally meaning "sacred lot" in Japanese, have fortunes etched on them; some are positive, and some are bad luck. It was POSITIVE!
    Läs mer

  • Tokyo, Japan - Shibuya Scramble - 2 of 3

    21 juni 2023, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 77 °F

    THE WORLDS BIGGEST CROSSING

    Yes, we engaged in the iconic landmark in Tokyo, the Shibuya Scramble Crossing that sees upwards of 1,000 people crossing the multi-cornered intersection at a time. Despite converging in mass from all directions, everyone skillfully manages to avoid colliding with one another. Amazing.

    The incredible 'scamble' occurs every time the traffic lights turn red, stopping all vehicles in every direction to allow a huge wave of pedestrians to flood into the intersection for a few moments.

    Yes, we did go up to the iconic Starbucks windows to take photos of the phenomenon that happens below. But the best vantage point was just being PART OF IT. We crossed back and forth a few times … and it seems strange but no one every bangs into another person or needs to excuse themselves for colliding … it doesn’t happen.

    The Arts are big in Japan (is the cross walk an art form?). There is also abundant theater, kabuki, modern drama, music, opera and western dance & music. In addition, it's easy to find and enjoy one of the dozens of interesting museums in the city, parks, zoos and gardens.
    Läs mer

  • Tokyo, Japan Day 2 RAMEN AGAIN - 3 of 3

    21 juni 2023, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 77 °F

    Our last stop on this last day in Tokyo was another RAMEN shop. We found many places to eat in the Shibuya area but we didn’t want pizza, bagels, burgers or many other Western foods that seem to be popular but just good old ramen. The highest ranked one had a long line which we were willing to stand on until someone on the line told us this ramen place was made famous in NYC! We opted for a brand new place just opened called ABURASOBA. Once again had fun ordering, paying, figuring the sides and then eating… while of course, slurping not biting the noodles. What a mess that makes.

    Then we enjoyed watching people in the streets and the trains in all different situations and outfits. See photos for the most amazing story we saw. A little girl gets off the train right in front of us her shoe falls off between the train and the platform, the train is still in the station. In “most” cities, the shoe would be gone but not Tokyo. Here, within 2 minutes there were 3 trainmen, one supervisor and they quickly considered the situation. Within another 2 minutes one ran and got a few tools: a broom, a grabber, a stick, a pointy spear, etc and the train was moved up just enough for them to reach their tools down and retrieve the shoe without upsetting the train schedule! Within 5 minutes we had a happy family and the girl had her shoe back.

    On the way back we got to see the sights on another train and once again the famous Statue of Liberty!
    Läs mer