Tokyo Ginza district and tower
29 dicembre 2025, Giappone ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C
All alarms were turned off this morning so we could have a lazy start to the day without any rush to catch something or to do anything by a certain time. Bliss.
We did a load of washing before we went out. Craig also discovered a good/bad thing depending on how we look at it. Bad = we are not flying out from Tokyo but rather Osaka so we need to catch a Shinkansen at about $170 each early Friday afternoon for a 9.45pm flight home. Good = we discovered that today rather than rocking up to the wrong airport on Friday!
The plan today included a fair bit of walking, with the first destination being the Imperial Palace Gardens about 4km away. About 5 minutes down our street though Craig comments on a giant building which I look up and it is the Ryogoku Sumo Stadium, which explains all the people lined up. And just as we pass it, we comes across three actual sumos in the street dressed in the their mawashi showering off under a garden hose on the footpath!!! Wow! I demonstrated great restraint to not stop and ask for a photo. Kate on the other hand refused to even cross the street because she didn't think it was proper to walk past near-naked men on the footpath. She is strange sometimes.
When we got to the palace, the entire precinct is closed for the week. All this enabled was for Craig and Kate to add a sleeping swan and a new duck to their bird list. Next stop, Itoya, the multi-level stationary story in the Ginza district, but on the way we had to walk past the Tokyo Station, which in fact just invited us to go in and have lunch in one of the shops in the vast underground shopping malls underneath the station.
When we got to Itoya, we left Craig on the third floor in all the fountain pen buying craziness to enquire about the Platinum (brand) ultra fine nib pen he has been eyeing off, and Kate and I ventured up each floor to floor 7. This shop sold all sorts of beautiful papers and pens and stationary stuff I didn't even know existed. It was beautiful, but also very busy. Too many people for Katie, so she was happy to get back outside again. Craig was successful in his pen purchase, getting it tax free, and discounted for an end-of-the-line pen, so he was a happy camper. We continued along the very expensive shopping street full of Louis Voutin, Jimmy Choo, Prada, Valentino, Tag, Rolex etc.
We were going to head to the fish markets, however by now they would be close to closing, so we scratched that idea and headed to Tokyo Tower instead.
Kate and I think we eat more sushi in Australia in a week than we have in Japan and decided that this needed rectification, so I searched for sushi restaurants near our accommodation. Kate wanted a train, so I found a place where it is made to order, and delivered on a conveyer belt. We decided to walk home first, have a bit of a rest and then walk the 1 km to the sushi restaurant. However, on the train we worked out if we just stayed on it for a few more stops we would more or less be at the restaurant, so did that instead. And what a find! OMG I think we ate our body weight in nigiri with velvet fresh sashimi tuna and salmon. Kate counted 22 dishes between the three of us, and including drinks it was $58. I feel like I have died and gone to sashimi heaven. In addition, the sushi restaurant was right next to the giant golden sweet potato we saw when we arrived in Tokyo yesterday (which is actually the Asahi HQ building), so we were able to see the sweet potato at night.Leggi altro
Tokyo Shibuya and TeamLabs
30 dicembre 2025, Giappone ⋅ 🌙 10 °C
Katie had some shopping to do today, so we headed into Shibuya to start the day with the scramble crossing. To be honest, I think YouTube videos had hyper-inflated expectations here, and as it turned out, we ended up walking through it several times without much fanfare, although I did read that at its busiest there are 3,000 or so people using the crossing at each light change, which certainly wouldn't have been the case when we were there this morning. We left Kate in one of the multi storey clothes shops and headed off to find interesting things of our own. This included walking through a shop called Tokyu Hands which is a variety store full of practical and interesting things with a quirky three tier offset floor layout. Craig ended up buying a new sketch book here.
Rendevouzing with Kate, I was required to give an opinion on a new jacket. We then set off to walk through nearby Cat Street which was supposed to be a pedestrian friendly trendy vibe unique fashion and cool street food place. It seemed to be more international shops like Patagonia, Adidas, Nike etc. It was still a cool street, and we grabbed some street food here for a light lunch.
We took a long way back to Shibuya Station to walk through Miyashita Park which is a shopping complex with a rooftop green space and apparently on a clear day there are views to Mt Fuji. But just like the Imperial Palace Gardens, this week the rooftop is closed off. Kind of weird...
We had a date at TeamLab Planets Tokyo about an hour away, so we jumped on several trains to make it to our 2.30pm reservation time. This was a mix of some super cool immersive experiences where you are wading around in white milky water to just below your knees with light generated koi fish swimming all round you, to many different 3D light and mirror experiences, to a hanging garden where orchids are suspended and raise up and down as you walk through them. After a few hours in here, we walked to Toyosu Gururi Park for sunset views across to Tokyo, and then walked on a little further to Odaiba Seaside Park. We had a yummy Udon noodle dinner here with the twinkling lights of Tokyo, the Tokyo Tower and views of the rainbow bridge, although no coloured lights on it tonight.
It was nearly an hour home view several trains tonight and we got our first experience of being packed in like sardines. It was kinda weird because this guy starts chatting to us, and to us he looked Japanese, but he was being a) chatty on the train and b) super helpful to people getting on and off and speaking to Japanese people in English so we could tell he was not local. Had a lovely conversation with him, an international student from Khazistan who is studying his Master's here for 18 months, and he makes a funny joke about how no-one bothers him as he looks Japanese even though he is a foreigner.Leggi altro

ViaggiatoreThe best view of Shibuya crossing is up on floor 9 I think of a building at one corner
Tokyo NYE Part I
31 dicembre 2025, Giappone ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C
We had a few goals for today, and sadly not all of them were realised to their fullest potential.
Goal #1 was to buy Kate and me some new spectacles because even though we had private health insurance, it is still cheaper to buy them here. Only catch was that same day service is for single focal length only. No worries though because Kate has apparently had bad eye sight forever but neglected to tell her parents, so she now has a lovely new pair of glasses and it is like watching a baby giraffe learn to walk... She is wandering around Tokyo like she is living in a whole new world now, literally with a look of amazement on her face. I bought a new pair of distance and a new pair of reading specs. All three pairs for just under $300 and ready within 45 minutes.
Whilst waiting, goal #2 was to walk along "kitchen street" (Kappabashi Dougu Street). Major disappointment here and I almost wanted to cry because this was one thing I really wanted to do in Tokyo; explore the kitchen shops. And pretty much every single one is now closed until next Monday. Wahhhh. There were a few knife shops open, and Craig bought himself his first shop-bought Japanese-made carbon steel knife. He has made them before at home. A lovely young Russian kid in the shop served us so had a good conversation with him, in Japan studying his MBA. There was one non knife shop open and I bought myself a new kitchen pastry brush. The shop lady said "hand wash only", I said "I will tell the kids no dishwasher" and she laughed, obviously recognising the futility of this statement. To my children: if you read this, do not put my new brush in the dishwasher... like ever!
After the quick pickup of the new specs, we headed to Akihabara which is the anime and tech district. Kate needed to buy some Pokemon cards as a gift. I was also thinking we would go to a maid cafe for lunch but the food looked crap, and I guess you are paying for the experience so we went to an izakaya instead, and it was brilliant! We couldn't spend very long (25 minutes to be precise) because we had a 3pm chopstick-making workshop to walk to 25 minutes away, but we were given a plate of sardines and other things to cook at a grill at the table which comes with the experience. This in addition to our share plates of nigiri and sushi rolls. Because we couldn't linger like we really wanted to, we are going to find another izakaya for dinner tonight as our last meal of 2025.
In a very un-Japanese way, our workshop was running 30 minutes late to start, so we could have actually lingered...
And we are now all the proud owners of our very own hand made chopsticks. Craig and I made ours out of Japanese Cedar, Kate made hers out of Hinoki Cypress. It was good fun. After that we walked home on the hunt for a stupid lightning cable so Kate can go out for NYE with a functioning phone. Craig seems to think there is no need to start staying awake until midnight, so I might end up out with Kate, although fireworks are not a big part of Japanese NYE, and in fact it is being actively discouraged to gather around Shibuya Crossing which explains why the rooftop garden was closed off when we wanted to go there yesterday. Katie and I think we might head to Tokyo Skytree since it is only 1.5km from our house. There is a gathering at temples at midnight where a gong is struck 108 times to dispel the 108 worldly temptations, so we may well end up there too.Leggi altro
Tokyo NYE Part II
31 dicembre 2025, Giappone ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C
We strolled back to Asakusa at about 7.30pm and wandered the laneways until we found a place we liked the vibe and the menu. We went in but the owner said "sorry sorry" because he was full. We went back out again and started to walk away when he opened the door and yelled out " sorry sorry, you come you come". An American family was just leaving. This restaurant only seats 16 people, so space is at a premium. We had an excellent meal of share plates of different sashimi, skewers, and cheese potato cod rice thing, the most delicious fried chicken and melt in your mouth prawns. Yummy.
We then came across a huge multi-storey Don Quixote, and since it was heaving with people and I hadn't been in one yet, and we had time to fill in between now and midnight, in we went! What a weird shop, but awesome in the quirky way you can only find in Japan. We bought a present for Finny, so worthwhile.
We then walked towards Senso-ji temple and there were loads of food stalls, many with very delicious looking okonomiyaki. Almost made me hungry again. Instead we lined up for some dessert ball things and waited, and waited, and waited. The line didn't move or get shorter whilst we watched granny and her old mate son argue incessantly as he painfully slowly mixed the batter in a series of giant plastic bins with a giant electric drill and a piece of plastic tubing. Craig's notoriously short fuse for lining up was burning, so he wandered off and I ended up with an attack of the giggles, mainly because of the exasperated facial expressions of the guy in the line in front of us, and how ridiculous it was that we were still lined up more than 30 minutes later. Craig's ultimate appraisal of our dessert when we finally got it was "boring as bat shit". Both Kate and I were inclined to agree.
Since it was clear by now there was not going to be any huge "hurrah" at midnight, Katie relented on her desire to stay out 'til midnight, declared it was midnight in Australia, so we wandered back home via the waterfront for views of the skytree and our favourite giant golden sweet potato for a quiet drink at home.
Happy new year!!! 🥂 🎉Leggi altro
Tokyo New Year's Day
1 gennaio, Giappone ⋅ ☁️ 7 °C
We didn't get to bed until 1am and knew that pretty much nothing was going to be open today, so along with that and the fact that the cough I started to develop on the rainy day of the terrible ski lessons over a week ago has been steadily getting worse, I was happy to do absolutely nothing today. We didn't waked up until about 10.30am, and I then slept on and off for the remainder of the day, whilst Craig did some sketching and painting and Kate played games.
Living right across the road from a konbini (in our case Seven Eleven) is like having the world's best room service but at a way better price. Fabulous cafe lattes for breakfast at about $2.20 each, fruit smoothie for $2.60, brilliant selection of lunch for under $7 each and then dinner and dessert for under $10 each.
It was nice to have a lazy day because it has been a reasonably cracking pace for me for the last 4 weeks. Too bad I wasn't feeling the best, but quite possibly if I was feeling better I would have been out and about. I did an online grocery shop so we have a fully stocked fridge and pantry when we get home. Big day tomorrow getting back to Osaka and filling in time before a very late flight home.Leggi altro
Tokyo to Osaka
2 gennaio, Giappone ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C
We woke up to find that our 8.45pm flight was now delayed until 9.00am tomorrow, so hurriedly booked some accommodation near Kansai Airport (in the same building I stayed with Lynette on our first night arriving in Japan). We caught the connecting trains to Tokyo Station, hopped on a Shinkansen, and got to see Mt Fuji out the window, with barely a cloud to obscure it! Very exciting because that was one thing we would have otherwise missed.
After stowing the luggage in lockers at the very large Namba Station, with google maps pins and photos to ensure we could actually find them again, we set off in the direction of Osaka's version of kitchen street. As we walked put of the station, it started to snow a little. Stopped for lunch on the way at a very cheap but extremely tasty hotpot restaurant. We ordered two beers and the manager came to check we were driving (they wont serve alcohol to drivers in Japan) and that we wanted two. Yes we said. OMG, they were gigantic!
This kitchen street was just as disappointing in terms of closed shops at Tokyo, but it only takes one shop to be open with the thing you want to buy, and luckily a set of cooking chopsticks could be procured.
Our next stop was 30 minutes away by train: Osaka Aquarium. We got there to find you should have ore purchased tickets, and the wait time to get in was 75 minutes. Nope... Kate had just informed us as we walked past the gigantic Ferris wheel next to the aquarium that she had never been on one. Because we are the nicest parents on planet earth, and to ensure we just hadn't wasted a one hour round trip, we went in that instead. According to the sign it was the largest giant Ferris wheel in the world. Looking it up later, I think that claim was short-lived, but it was 100m in diameter, so pretty big.
At Namba Station, we passed a shop selling the special Osaka wobbly souffle cheesecake, so grabbed one of those for later, eventually found the lockers again and headed to our accommodation in Rinku-Town.
Dinner was a nearby, very gigantic, sushi train shop. Good, but not quite as good as our Tokyo experience.Leggi altro

ViaggiatoreShe was being a true Japanese person falling asleep on public transport and magically waking up just in time to get off at the correct stop.
Osaka to Brisbane
3 gennaio, Giappone ⋅ 🌬 8 °C
We woke up to find that our flight was delayed a further 1.5 hours, so not so much of an early rise was required, but a moot point since we had already arisen.
An uneventful flight home.
Sadly that is the end of our Japanese adventure. An excellent time had by all ❤️🩹. Time to save up for our next holiday... and to remember how to do "real life" again.Leggi altro














































































































Viaggiatore
Steve and I just watched a movie with Abigail Breslin and have decided that her and Kate could be sisters
Viaggiatore
That is so cool
Viaggiatore
Great photo