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- Dag 1
- zondag 15 september 2024 om 16:36
- 🌬 88 °F
- Hoogte: 25 m
JapanŌkei Ji35°40’12” N 139°41’7” E
Day 249: JAPANNNNN LET’S GOOO
15 september 2024, Japan ⋅ 🌬 88 °F
WE FINALLY MADE IT AND WE ARE NOT ALONE.
Introducing “Shots for the Ladies” Japan squad, staring Madison, Catie, and Hannah from Korea 2019 and second wife/husband Laura and James!! Our friends are incredible and made plans over the last year to join us; originally, we hoped for a Japan 2020 visit and we all know what happened there…So 4 years in the making, we are so happy to have this incredible friend squad with us the next two weeks.
While squad flew red eye from DCA -> Toronto -> Tokyo, we spent the day getting ready by picking up our rail and metro passes, riding the metro to mother fucking Shibuya (shout out Jujutsu Kaisen and the Shibuya Arc), and eating some delicious chirashi bowls. Also walked along Yoyogi Park and enjoyed the greenery.
Squad arrived at 7:45 pm and we prepared them the essentials: ramen and gyoza. They survived a 30 hour travel journey but were in good spirits. Once again, so happy to have them join us ❤️
Also, please note our Love Island Airbnb set up.
Food:
Chirashi Bowl
Ramen
Gyoza
Kirin Beer
Spots:
Shibuya
Yoyogi ParkMeer informatie
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- Dag 2
- maandag 16 september 2024
- ☀️ 82 °F
- Hoogte: 52 m
JapanNakano Eki35°42’29” N 139°39’57” E
Day 250: Nakano Broadway & Shibuya
16 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 82 °F
Solid first day with Japan squad. Jet lag team slept okay and were ready for a 7/11 breakfast excursion! So many egg sandwhiches and onigiri.
Catie led us to Shinjuku and the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building Sorth Observatory which offered a free skyscraper view of the city! Next we visited Nakano Broadway which is a nerd heaven shopping mall. Everyone was really patient with James, Kieran, and I exploring the gashopon ball machines and second floor figurine shops. We didn’t walk away with too many items. Grabbed lunched at a dumpling shop where Mary got to try horse tartare!
After some downtime in the afternoon, we went to a delicious omakase that Hannah located. The sushi was sooooo good and the chefs gave us so much food. Everyone was stuffed so we walked to Shibuya proper.
We got to witness the Shibuya Crossing scramble and beautiful glowing signs. We decided to hit a karaoke bar and got unlimited drinks for 2 hours for $22 per person! Amazing first day and night!
Food:
Dumplings
Horse Tartare
Noddles
Omakase sushi!!!!!
Spots:
Shinjuku
Nakano Broadway
Shibuya CrossingMeer informatie
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- Dag 3
- dinsdag 17 september 2024
- ☁️ 90 °F
- Hoogte: 12 m
JapanShintoyosu Eki35°38’57” N 139°47’23” E
Day 251: teamLabs, Ginza, & Harajuku
17 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 90 °F
Slept in a bit to recover from karaoke and the lag. We flexed our Instagram muscles and visited team Labs which is an interactive art museum. This exhibit was called Planets and had various pieces including a soft black hole, the famous hanging lights room, the bubble room, and then a water illusion. The art was memorizing and we had fun posing.
We made the mistake of not eating enough and started the exhibit at 12. Everyone was a bit hungry so we tried looking for something that was open and amenable to our less adventurous friends. We found Korean / Japanes yakitori. James and Mary ordered an apple sour drink in a pot and Laura got a cooler full of corn tea. We got a little lit and hit the Flagship UNIQLO store.
Before returning home for drinks and ramen, we stopped by Harajuku Street. The clothing is still cute and wacky, and we found a really cool vintage shop. Mary bought an old Cardinals jersey and James found an Orioles jersey!!
Food:
Chicken skin
Yakisoba Noodles
Rice balls
Spots:
teamLab
Ginza
HarajukuMeer informatie
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- Dag 4
- woensdag 18 september 2024 om 15:40
- ☁️ 81 °F
- Hoogte: 851 m
JapanAkasaka35°29’9” N 138°46’42” E
Day 252: Fuji Q Highland Theme Park
18 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 81 °F
Early wake up time to revert back to childhood: squad visited Fujikyu theme park which is literally a roller coaster park next to Mount Fuji!!
We woke up at 5:30am and metro’d to Shinjuku bus station; it was an hour long bus ride and it drove us through the mountains. As we pulled into town, Mount Fuji came into view.
Once we arrived, we went straight to the Attack on Titan ride because it just opened the day before. The ride focused on the War Hammer Titan attack. You sat in chairs that were lifted and moved through the air following characters. They also had jet stream air blasts; it really felt like you were in the scene.
Next we hit Zokkon (25 metres tall, 73 km/h) which was everyone’s favorite rollercoaster! It felt like you were on motorcycles and had fun music playing throughout the ride. We also got priority tickets to ride Fujiyama (79 metres tall, 130 km/h. Opened in 1996 and was once the world's tallest roller coaster. As of 2022, it is the world's 4th longest and 11th tallest roller coaster)
While squad hit the food courts, Kieran and Mary went to Naruto village for some Ichiraku Ramen. They joined us for a fun Naruto shooting game. The squad eventually split up into those who could handle one more ride and those who know the limitations of being 30-32 years old. Catie, Madison, James, and Mary hit the Takanishi roller coaster as the last coaster of the day (43 metres tall, 100 km/h. Contains a 121° freefall, as well as seven major inversions over 1000 metres of track. Formerly the world's steepest roller coaster, until the opening of TMNT Shellraiser in 2019).
Squad jumped on the bus and it took 2.5 hours to get home with traffic!!! It was awful. We hit a birria ramen shop next to our apartment and enjoyed mango tequila shots.
Food:
Takoyaki
Ichiraku Naruto Ramen
Birria ramen
Spots:
FujikyuMeer informatie
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- Dag 5
- donderdag 19 september 2024
- ☁️ 91 °F
- Hoogte: 6 m
JapanKinosaki35°37’35” N 134°48’39” E
Day 253: Kinosaki Onsen
19 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 91 °F
Really amazing day exploring a proper onsen town in south east Japan: Kinosake
We started with our first Japanese bullet train between Tokyo and Kyoto. Similar to the Eurorail pass, Japan has the JR Pass which pays for unlimited rides on the bullet train Shinkansen system and some metros around the country.
Made the mistaken of telling the group 15 minutes would be enough time to transfer in the station, assuming the tracks are in the same area. There were actually three different track areas and didn’t find the correct one until the very end; luckily made it on the train because everyone was running. It was another 2.5 hours to Kinosaki.
When we arrived, we walked to Onsenji Buddhist temple where one normally would complete a ritual to prepare for hot springs. This practice is no longer required, but we enjoyed the journey.
Our hotel was a traditional ryokan which includes its own hot spring, dinner, and breakfast. We booked a family style room for 7 guests. The ryokan had a beautiful view of Maruyama River.
The host made us tea and we got ready to hit the onsens. The ryokan also included shuttles, traditional Yukatas to wear, and the wooden shoes. The shoes were a lot harder than they looked.
First onsen was Jizo-yu Onsen and we only had 1 hour before dinner. The water was so hot and luckily there was a kids area with cooler water. The springs are gender separated, but we could still hear Kieran and James giggling.
Our driver picked us up at 6:15 pm and we returned to a fully set table in our dining room. The dinner included small plates, sashimi, shabu shabu, soup, and dessert. Many of us also tried a local sake tasting set. The meal was fantastic and the presentation absolutely stunning. After dinner we planned to hit two more hot springs.
The town was very beautiful at night so James, Laura, Kieran, and Mary broke off to explore the town while Hannah, Catie, and Madison hit Ichinoyu Onsen. Snagged incredible views from our walk.
Our shuttle picked us up again at 10:22 pm and we returned home to our dining room converted into a bedroom. Everyone fell asleep promptly (probably from heat exhaustion)
Hotel: Oyado Seri
Food:
Shabu-shabu
Sashimi
Spots:
Kinosaki-onsen
Onsenji TempleMeer informatie
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- Dag 6
- vrijdag 20 september 2024
- ☀️ 95 °F
- Hoogte: 42 m
JapanImagumano34°59’4” N 135°45’10” E
Day 254: Kyoto
20 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 95 °F
At the ryokan, the girls minus Laura woke up early to hit the spa bath one more time. The water was still tooo hot, but we were surrounded by peaceful ambiance looking over the river.
Our final treat included a set breakfast which contained grilled fish, clam soup, and curry chicken. Incredible and unforgettable experience at Oyado Seri and Kinosake!
We took a train to Kyoto and couldn’t check in yet so we stopped by In the Moon Irish pub for a drink; squad got turnt on Japanese whisky and Sapporo. We took a mid afternoon nap and then visited Pontocho alley for a night out. It was wayyyy too crowded and we couldn’t find a bar that didn’t also include smoking or wasn’t completely full. Madison found a metal bar in the Gion district so we visited there.
The bar and bartender were amazing and showed us Japanese metal. He also heard the bands we were talking about and played Electric Callboy, Sleep Token, and System of a Down. He also took requests and had us sign us guest book!
Food:
Chicken Curry
Clam soup
Grilled fish
Udon Noodles with TempuraMeer informatie
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- Dag 7
- zaterdag 21 september 2024
- ☀️ 88 °F
- Hoogte: 108 m
JapanNara Kōen34°41’3” N 135°50’29” E
Day 255: Nara
21 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 88 °F
Today’s excursion sponsored by Laura Michelloti. Nara is a small town in southeast Japan known for its friendly deer and shrines. The deer are considered heavenly and are protected from hunting.
Laura really wanted squad to wear the traditional Japanese kimonos / yukatas so she made an appointment at a rental store. The store owners were helpful in showing us designs, accessories (obi ribbon), and potential hair styles. After selecting our yukata (the robe) we went into the dressing room where the store owners put us into the clothing. You are given towel bands and a camisole to prevent sweating and are wrapped up tightly; Catie warned us to push out our stomachs so we could breathe later. Squad looked fabulous and paid for a hair accessory and Laura got a hairstyle.
We walked around the park and fed the deer. They would come up to you for snacks and some accepted scratches. Sometimes they would arrive in swarms for the food. Several deer also bowed to receive a snack. After visiting the park, we journeyed to Todai-ji temple and walked around the complex. It got very hot so James, Hannah, and us went back to the shop to return our yukatas.
Once squad was re-united, we ate at Menya Samurai Dojo which was Taiwanese / Japanese fusion. We continued to shop downtown and got the famous mochi produced by two men hitting and folding the pastry. Laura got a video of the action.
Squad returned back to Kyoto, napped, and split for dinner at yakitori and sushi.
Side note on cultural appropriation VS cultural appreciation: For us personally (Mary/Kieran), it was very uncomfortable to wear the traditional clothing. Online you will read that the Japanese people do not have issues with foreigners wearing kimonos/yukatas and that the government wants tourists and citizens to wear the clothing to generate interest and appreciation of its culture. We noticeably saw Japanese citizens pulling out their phones and taking pictures of us while smiling, but it still largely felt unacceptable. We love our friends and want everyone to be able to have a trip that is meaningful to them. So to abate our uncomfortableness, we made a donation to Hiroshima Peace Culture Foundation.
Food:
Yakitori
Mazesoba
Spots:
Nara Park
Todai-ji ShrineMeer informatie
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- Dag 8
- zondag 22 september 2024
- ☀️ 79 °F
- Hoogte: 47 m
JapanFushimi Inari-taisha34°58’2” N 135°46’24” E
Day 256: Fushimi Inari Taisha Shrine
22 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 79 °F
Early morning to beat the crowds at Fushimi Inari Taisha! Kieran, Laura, and James elected to sleep in while Korea squad woke up at 6 am to metro to the orange gates. In addition to waking up early, it was pouring down rain.
While this all sound horrible, it was absolutely perfect because there was almost no one at the shrine. Normally people shuffle like cattle to walk up and down the gates and get the perfect pictures: we had none of that.
We hiked all the way to the top and bought some sake. By the time we were done walking around for 2 hours and the rain stopped, the swarms of crowds arrived and we were so glad to wake up early.
We then metro’d to Tofukuji Temple where James and Laura met us. This was another peaceful experience with no crowds and a quiet Hoji Garden. On the way home we hit a Kakigōri shaved iced spot and enjoyed grape, brown sugar, and green tea desserts. Kieran eventually met up and got sushi.
After a big nap, Madison led us to Sannenzaka where we food hopped on sweet soy sauce, Japanese grilled beef, and cucumber. Squad did a sake tasting and waddled to Pontocho Street again to try our luck for dinner again. NOPE. Squad split: Korea girls at a Chinese dim sum restaurant and Kieran, Laura, and James at yakitori.
It was too crowded to properly enjoy a jazz bar so we returned home and played cards/drinking games.
Food:
Pickled cucumbers
Japanese beef
Sweet soy sauce rice balls
Dim sum
Spots:
Fushimi Inari Taisha Shrine
Tofukuji Temple
SannenzakaMeer informatie
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- Dag 9
- maandag 23 september 2024
- ☀️ 84 °F
- Hoogte: 38 m
JapanDōmu-mae-eki34°40’10” N 135°28’34” E
Day 257: Osaka Baseball
23 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 84 °F
New train, new city, new life: squad finally made it to Osaka (the Philadelphia of Japan).
We took the morning a little slow after drinking games and got lunch at the train station. We go to board the train and some French tech bros didn’t understand the ticket system; they took so long to get on the train that the doors start to close. Mary backs up and tells squad “We’ll see you in Osaka.” Kieran and Catie were also left on the track.
In the end, it was the best situation considering us three have very low travel anxiety. Our friends were mad on our behalf and shat on the tech bros. They didn’t have the JR Rail pass and got counted in our group since we were missing three. Madison even confronted them when they arrived in Osaka. Dude didn’t care and said “Lady at the station said it was fine.”
The three musketeers relaxed and hopped on the next train and arrived 30 minutes after squad. After arriving to our apartment, we visited Namba Yasaka Jinja Shrine with a large lion head.
Our next activity led by Madison was to watch a Japanese baseball game! Squad broke out their baseball gear and made our way to Kyocera Stadium to see the Orix Buffalo’s take on the Soft Hawks. Madison informed us the Buffalo’s were the second worst team in the league sadly but we would be cheering for them. Madison was very nervous about getting the tickets and worrying about potential issues (hence pictures of her stressed in line with support friend James). She did perfect and it was so easy that we had 40 minutes to shop for Buffalo gear.
The game started with a J-pop dance performance that Madison, Hannah, and Mary missed to grab whisky high balls. Each team cheered throughout and had chants, claps, and other moves. The Soft Hawks demolished the Buffalos and clinched their division for playoff games. Solid night of baseball ⚾️
Food:
Sashimi
Tempura
Chicken karaage
Spots:
Osaka
Kyocera Baseball DomeMeer informatie
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- Dag 10
- dinsdag 24 september 2024
- ☀️ 84 °F
- Hoogte: 11 m
JapanGenbaku Dōmu-mae-eki34°23’44” N 132°27’13” E
Day 258: Hiroshima
24 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 84 °F
Warning: Sad post today to reflect on US nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
There isn’t a good way to start this post without admitting that we (Kieran and Mary) couldn’t foresee visiting Japan without taking time to visit either Hiroshima or Nagasaki. As a military history major, defense contractors, and American citizens, it felt imperative to designate time for reflecting on these cities and the US’s impact during and after World War II. Hiroshima is a city more than just its tragic history, but even so it feels inappropriate to explore its joy and beauty when our government caused such devastation.
Mary planned and led the Hiroshima Day trip so the focus was primarily on the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum and the Hiroshima Peace Park. Assuming the day would be emotional, we left time to sleep in and kept the schedule very open depending on how the group was feeling.
The museum is incredibly detailed, graphic, and reflects on individual stories in addition to nuclear proliferation following World War II. Early on we were introduced to the city before the bombing and quickly shown its immediate aftermath and scale. The museum then funnels you into a room where tattered clothing is displayed and melted / damaged items from homes.
From there we continued to hear stories and first accounts from those who were in the hypocenter, the first responders who helped and still passed from acute radiation poisoning, and the families that lost their loved ones. Towards the back half of the exhibit, we learn of life after the bombing and the continued suffering from economic devastation, cancer, and orphans who lost their parents. There are still only a few survivors left from this time. Our final exhibit contained the paper cranes created by young Sadako who was born after the bombing and suffered from cancer she died at the age of 12.
The second half of the museum is dedicated to explaining the threat of nuclear warfare still hanging over the world and our international failures to sign anti-proliferation agreements and arms reductions. It focused on the Cold War and the build up to 70,000 + nuclear warheads across nation states and the impacts nuclear testing has had on environments and people.
As expected, the squad was extremely somber and quiet. We spent our final moments walking around the park to the Peace Memorial, the Children of the Atomic Bomb memorial, the Peace Bell, and A-Dome building which was directly under the hypocenter and survived the blast.
We decided to eat dinner in Hiroshima and tried its local style of okanomiyaki which is a seafood pancake; the difference is Hiroshima will place the pancake on noodles. To process the day, we chatted over dinner and talked about the especially cruel the decision to not warn Japan or look at other options such as denoting the bomb over the ocean in demonstration. In the end, it was a political decision to move forward with bombing Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The government spent $2 Billion on the project and if the American people / soldiers who fought learned we didn’t use the weapon, the administration would have been voted out. The United States is still the only country to use nuclear weapons on another country in war.
To get home, we road on the cable car route that existed before World War II and saw original cable cars still running in the line.
Food:
Okanomiyaki
Spots:
Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum
Hiroshima Peace ParkMeer informatie
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- Dag 11
- woensdag 25 september 2024
- ☁️ 86 °F
- Hoogte: 18 m
JapanŌsaka Heiya34°40’8” N 135°30’4” E
Day 259: Osaka Birthday Hangs
25 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 86 °F
Today was Mary’s 31st birthday and squad celebrated accordingly. We started with Kuromon Ichiba food market where we tried waygu sushi, toro (fatty tuna), Kobe beef, and octopus with an egg inside.
Laura, James, and Kieran broke off and we ventured to a cat cafe while Hannah, Catie, and Madison went shopping for Japanese knives and kitchen items! Before regrouping, cat cafe team visited Round One which is like a 7 story arcade, claw machine, entertainment venue. We played Taiko drum master, Mario, Air Hockey, and this weird punching game. We then met up with Madison’s friend from high school to see Osaka lit up at night.
Catie found an amazing bar crawl and food tour of Dontonbori street and we went to a takoyaki restaurant, a seafood restaurant, and whisky bar. We got to try jelly fish, sting ray, and puffer fish balls!!
Final activity was visiting one more karaoke bar and sing our heart out to silly songs. Thank you again friends for making this an incredible 31st birthday! Wouldn’t have wanted to spend it any other way.
Food:
Waygu
Toro
Kobe
Octopus with egg
Jelly fish
Stingray
Puffer fish
Spots:
Kuromon Ichiba Market
Round One
Dontonbori StreetMeer informatie
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- Dag 12
- donderdag 26 september 2024 om 11:25
- ☁️ 81 °F
- Hoogte: 30 m
JapanShinjuku Gyōen35°41’5” N 139°42’35” E
Day 260: Squad’s Last Day in Shinjuku
26 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 81 °F
The best things can’t last forever and our friends eventually need to go back home to real jobs and boyfriends. We would celebrate their last day in Shinjuku.
The team woke up a bit hungover from the karaoke, yet we made our train and slept the 2.5 hours back to Tokyo. We got lost in Shinjuku Station which is a real thing. On long trips you are bound to get some tension and getting lost definitely put everyone on edge. We made it to our apartment and got some down time.
The team split up to execute last minute shopping: Hannah, Madison, and Laura went shopping for soy sauce, Catie and Kieran went to the Nintendo store to pick up the new Zelda game, and James / Mary stumbled upon a weird rooftop chicken beer bar that we pretty sure was a front for prostitution. They had really good olives though.
For dinner, we ate at the chain Ichiran ramen which is where you can eat alone and interact with no one . They only serve pork tonkatsu ramen. Before heading home, we visited the Shinjuku Golden Gai which has at least 100 tiny bars in a small square area. It was going to be hard to fit 7 but we did find a bar that could accommodate our full group and we got plum wine, whisky high balls, and a martini.
Food:
Ichiran Ramen
Spots:
Shinjuku Golden Gai
Godzilla HeadMeer informatie
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- Dag 13
- vrijdag 27 september 2024
- ☁️ 75 °F
- Hoogte: 12 m
JapanAomori Eki40°49’46” N 140°44’10” E
Day 261: Aomori
27 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 75 °F
Squad had a 5:45 pm flight and would be leaving from Shinjuku at 1:20pm. We spent the morning walking around the Shinjuku National Japanese Garden and looking at the ponds, shrubbery, and pagodas.
After exploring the park, we ate at a conveyor belt sushi restaurant. Madison was obsessed with the fatty tuna and we ordered like 6. We finally said goodbye to squad and jumped on a 3 hour train to Aomori.
Aomori is in the far north and we selected the location based on the JR line. Was not prepared for how cool the city was in terms of its ocean views and bridges. We got to witness an incredible sunset from the 9th story of our hotel.
Kieran was very tired so we tried to order him some pizza (more sushi for Mary of course). We couldn’t figure out the ordering system so we walked to the restaurant; the pizza would take 25 minutes so he waited at the sushi restaurant. Once the pizza was secure, we rested in the hotel and watched Resident Evil 8 to prepare our bodies for another two weeks in Japan.
Hotel:
Apa Aomori
Food:
Sushi
Pizza
Spots:
AomoriMeer informatie
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- Dag 14
- zaterdag 28 september 2024 om 13:15
- ☀️ 73 °F
- Hoogte: 11 m
JapanNoboribetsu-eki42°27’8” N 141°10’51” E
Day 262: Noboribetsu
28 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 73 °F
While we loved our time with our friends, we knew Kyoto, Osaka, and Tokyo would be huge cities with lots of tourists. We looked forward to getting off the beaten path and Aomori offered that.
Aomori is home to the Nebuta Festival where artists build huge paper lanterns and place them onto parade floats. The human-shaped floats are 9 meters wide, 7 meters deep and 5 meters high and they resemble ancient warlords, historical characters, and kabuki characters. These floats parade through the streets of Aomori, with Haneto dancers and Nebuta bayashi bands.
There is a museum to learn about the festival and the winning floats from the previous year are on display; we also got to watch a mini bayashi band performance! After Aomori, we trained a scenic 3 hours past volcanoes to get to Noboribetsu on Hokkaido Island!
Noboribetsu is situated below a geothermal valley and volcano, and is one of the most famous hot spring resorts in Japan. The various pools offer iron baths, salt baths, and other chemical compositions due to the valley’s geothermal activity.
We took a bus from our hostel to the valley to eat dinner and hit a public onsen. Because of its volcanic hellscape, the Japanese believe there are demons or onis that guard the town. You can find demon statues everywhere and some dress up on the street to give candy to little kids.
Mary loves the town and we will be returning tomorrow for more activities.
Hostel:
Noboribetsu Guest House AKA & AO(登別ゲストハウス赤と青)
Food:
Curry
Chirashi bowl
Spots:
Nebuta Museum WA RASSE
NoboribetsuMeer informatie
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- Dag 15
- zondag 29 september 2024
- ☀️ 66 °F
- Hoogte: 219 m
JapanKarurusu42°29’50” N 141°8’44” E
Day 263: Noboribetsu Hell Valley
29 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F
Took our second day in Noboribetsu slow and steady. We started out at the Noboribetsu Bear Park which stars the Hokkaido region brown bears, native to only this island. They had several activities such as find the treat (bear exercise), fish hunting for the cubs, and a duck racing event. The bears were adorable and we enjoyed seeing them up close.
Next, we grabbed a quick ramen lunch and walked around the volcanic areas of the town. Noboribetsu is home to many active hot springs as it is situated between two crater lakes. The water here has many forms as there are salt baths, iron baths, alum baths, and sulfur baths. There was even natural foot bath for people to dip their feet in a hot river below the active sulfur crater lake.
Before dinner, we visited the top hotspring/spa in the area. It featured 10-15 different pools, all with varying water mixtures and temperatures. We loved the outdoor bathing area, which gave a beautiful view of the valley.
Lastly, we took the bus back down to our hostel and ate at a Yakitori place next door. The restaurant offered a wide variety of yakitori and small dishes. We stuck to the simpler options by getting pork, chicken, shrimp, and edamame.
Food:
Ramen
Yakitori
Spots:
Noboribetsu Hell Valley
Bear ParkMeer informatie
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- Dag 16
- maandag 30 september 2024
- ☀️ 72 °F
- Hoogte: 26 m
JapanGyokuhōzen Ji43°3’7” N 141°21’8” E
Day 264: Train to Sapporo
30 september 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 72 °F
If you didn’t already know, Kieran loves football and Gap Year has prevented him from fully enjoying the 2023 and 2024 season. We made an agreement that for a little rest we could stream the Buffalo Bills vs Ravens game from our hostel. Hilariously, the hostel WiFi went out right at the beginning.
After the game ended, we trained two hours to Sapporo, the capital of Hokkaido. The train curved around the island and the tracks lay next to the ocean. The trees and nature mimic the Atlantic Northeast with red, orange, and yellow peeking out between dark green evergreens. However, the housing colors match the Pacific North West with maroon reds, dark blues, and dark greens. It was so beautiful and recommend looking up these towns and neighborhoods on Google for this time of year.
We picked up some huge dumplings / shumai and located our little apartment for the next three days. Hokkaido and Sapporo are known specifically for a dish called Jingisukan which translates to Genghis Khan. It’s similar to BBQ but it’s all lamb. We found a place downtown that serves it and decided to walk 30 minutes there to enjoy the city. The restaurant was Japanese retro style and we enjoyed the counter top atmosphere and the two female chefs butchering away at the lamb to cut us pieces. It was so good. Big fan of Sapporo and Hokkaido so far and adding it to the list of places Mary will move to if we don’t make it 😉
Food:
Jingisukan
Dumplings
Spots:
SapporoMeer informatie
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- Dag 17
- dinsdag 1 oktober 2024
- ☀️ 75 °F
- Hoogte: 14 m
JapanKita-nijō43°4’17” N 141°22’8” E
Day 265: Sapporo Beer Factory & Museum
1 oktober 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 75 °F
Had the most beautiful day in Sapporo downtown. Started it by visiting the Sapporo Beer Factory Museum and walking through a self guided tour on their beer. It was fascinating to learn that the brew masters visited Germany to understand the craft and were charged with developing the Hokkaido / Sapporo region by building a brewery; this is because they have ice and snowmelt to keep the beer cold unlike Tokyo.
We also learned that during World War II, the Japanese government consolidated Sapporo and Asahi to reduce competition and put energy into only one beer brand, Nippon Beer. The citizens were very upset by this and by 1952, they asked for Sapporo to be separated into its own beer brand again.
After touring the museum, we enjoyed their beer garden where it’s possible to taste how the original Pilsner changed over the years. We both got the testing set and some Sapporo beer chocolate.
We proceeded to visit downtown Sapporo and view the clock tower, the TV tower, and Odori park. Kieran was a bit too big for the bus here. The fall leaves were coming in and red, orange, yellow flowers dotted the park. We tried the local Hokkaido curry soup dish which coverts normal Japanese curry into a broth/soup instead of a sauce. It was delicious.
Final stop included the Mt. Moiwa mountain cable car to view the city at night and sushi at the bar with the chef. The weather, trees, and activities today could have not been more perfect.
Food:
Soup Curry
Sushi
Spots:
Sapporo Beer Factory
Sapporo Clock Tower
TV Tower
Odori Park
Mt. Moiwa Cable CarMeer informatie
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- Dag 18
- woensdag 2 oktober 2024
- ☀️ 63 °F
- Hoogte: 9 m
JapanOkobachi-gawa43°12’0” N 141°0’6” E
Day 266: Otaru
2 oktober 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 63 °F
A month ago we planned to visit Daisetsuzan National Park to hike around the mountains and see the fall foliage. This was before the ankle injury in Korea. The hike planned was 6 hours so no way this trip could happen.
Instead we took a day trip to Otaru which is a port city an hour west of Sapporo. The town is known for its canal ways from and we recently learned from the Sapporo factory that they would ship to Tokyo from Otaru when the beer was first getting started.
The train hugged the coastline and mountain side (again), and it was dark and stormy (again 😍). When we arrived, we walked down to the warehouse and canal district; it started pouring immediately. We found cover in Otaru’s German Beer hall where they brewed their own crafts and fest beers for Oktoberfest! We tried their raspberry, woodruff, dunkel, and the fest beer. They also had a delivery robot that brought food to the tables.
We walked around Sakaimachihondori street and saw soooo many sushi shops. It poured again so we ran ahead to Tanaka Sake Brewery where we followed a self guided tour and tried samples of their sake; they’ve been making it since 1899! We purchased their Autumn flavor.
We visited Sumiyoshi Shinto Shrine after and it was super cool with the stormy clouds and ocean in the background. Stopped at a conveyer sushi restaurant on the way back and then spent the evening watching Solo Leveling.
Food:
Sushi
Spots:
Otaru
Sumiyoshi Shrine
Tanaka Sake Brewery
Otaru CanalsMeer informatie
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- Dag 19
- donderdag 3 oktober 2024
- ☀️ 57 °F
- Hoogte: 289 m
JapanJōzankei42°57’46” N 141°9’24” E
Day 267: Jozankei Onsen
3 oktober 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 57 °F
Day of highs and lows. We typically stay at cheaper places between the $20 -$90 per night range; Mary wanted a treat yourself day visit to the Jozankei Onsen town and splurge on a nicer hotel, especially with the leaf change into spooky season.
We rode the bus into the mountains and couldn’t get enough of the trees. Due to the 2024 Japanese heat wave, peak leave change season was moved a few weeks from its original days (early October to November). Either way, we still got great colors.
After arriving to the hotel, we dropped our bags and walked around the town. Made plans to go canoeing and walked to the canoe rental address….which appeared to be someone’s home that said “No trespassing.” We sent them an email and continuing exploring.
Luckily, we came upon another canoe company and their guide who was just packing up some canoes from a previous trip. We asked if it was possible to join the next trip and he said yes! It’s a small trip (only an hour) but you can canoe in the fall foliage, canoe against a second river, and a hot spring that enter the water. It was so much fun and ended the good part of the day.
To the bad part, the really nice hotel we booked…..kind of sucked…a lot. Won’t go into too many details but essentially after traveling for 10 months and booking 1 room, 2 adults, apparently this was the single time we didn’t list two adults on the reservation (read reviews online to learn there are a lot of glitches like this with this hotel) and they charged ALOT for the second person. Also, we paid for a room with a view of the river, trees, and mountain and they put us in a room with a parking lot view. The final shitty things were:
1. The hotel ran out of the traditional Japanese bath wear Yukatas….
2. They gave us free tickets to a local light show that’s 15 minutes away and only open from 7:00pm to 9:00pm…and scheduled our dinner for 7:45pm. We pretty much ran out at 6:45 and powered walked through the show to make dinner.
Overall, it felt like a slap in the face to pay so much for a really disappointing experience. After getting past the 5 star reviews on Google and Booking, it was clear a lot of guests experienced the same frustrations we had. Good reminder that paying more doesn’t always get better experiences and that it’s worth reading why people poorly rate a place.
Anyway, made up for the experience by drinking our Autumn Sake / wine from Otaru and watching Solo Leveling.
Spots:
Jozankei OnsenMeer informatie
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- Dag 20
- vrijdag 4 oktober 2024 om 10:28
- ☀️ 68 °F
- Hoogte: 18 m
JapanFurukawa-eki38°34’14” N 140°58’5” E
Day 268: Train to Furukawa
4 oktober 2024, Japan ⋅ ☀️ 68 °F
After an action-packed night of anime, drinking sake, and texting our friends about heat transfer and stove tops, we woke up at the ryokan and had breakfast at the hotel. It was a traditional Japanese breakfast with a wide variety of small dishes. Most of these dishes were fish based with steamed vegetables.
We tried to catch the bus back to Sapporo but the driver blew past us (never coming to this town again lol).
Rest of the day was train trains trains trains, making our way back down to Tokyo. It wad spooky outside so we did our favorite things: Kieran podcast and video games, Mary stares out train windows for 6 hours.
At one point very important business man sets down in his suit, breaks out his beer, and gaming system. After getting to the hotel, we got late night Izakaya and finished season 1 of Solo Leveling.
Food:
Keiseki Breakfast
Izakaya
Spots:
FurukawaMeer informatie
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- Dag 21
- zaterdag 5 oktober 2024 om 10:32
- ☁️ 70 °F
- Hoogte: 171 m
JapanNaruko Onsen Eki38°44’36” N 140°42’57” E
Day 269: Naruko Canyon
5 oktober 2024, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 70 °F
Woke up and enjoyed our hotel breakfast of miso soup, seafood curry, and small dishes. Our plan for the day is visiting Naruko Canyon and trekking the Miyagi Olle Trail hot spring course. The scenic route passes old roads surrounded by beautiful gorges and lush greenery / autumn foliage.
The train to the gorge was a scenic train and the station staff waved goodbye to the train as it left Furukawa 🤣 we get to the town and we are the only Westerners…everyone we pass on the street greets us with Hello and Konnichiwa very excitably (it was very cute).
We appreciated the quietness of the town and the mountains surroundings us. We didn’t appreciate the huge fucking yellow spiders that looked deadly but apparently are reluctant to bite humans and aren’t venomous. The gorge was awesome and we enjoyed udon noodles and local rice/grape beer from the area. In the hikes we also saw snakes and preying mantises.
The most hilarious part is we walked from one station to another and planned to take the 3:08pm bus back (train is down). We see a man with a white van and assume it’s an onsen shuttle bus. He keeps staring at us and us staring at him. Mary is taking pictures of the bus schedule and looking at maps. Dude gets in the van and starts to slowly pull out at 3:07pm…Kieran waves at him and he waves back…..and continues to leave. That white van was the 3:08pm shuttle bus lol
So we make the 1.5 hour trek back to the first train station. The van man sees us on his way back and we both wave at each other again. We count it as free exercises and rewarded with a onsen food bath they built outside the station. Overall we hiked 12 km that day 🤣 Got home, took a big nap, and went to a One Piece Themed Bar. The bartenders and chef were awesome.
Food:
Udon
Edamame
Roast Beef Bowl
Chicken Skin Dumplings
Spring rolls
Spots:
Naruko CanyonMeer informatie
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- Dag 22
- zondag 6 oktober 2024
- ☁️ 66 °F
- Hoogte: 13 m
JapanIshinomaki Eki38°26’4” N 141°18’17” E
Day 270: Ishinomaki & 3.11 Tsunami
6 oktober 2024, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 66 °F
Japan is a geological wonderland with its onsens, volcanoes, and mountains. It sits on the boundary of 4 tectonic plates including a subduction plate where the Pacific plate is moving under the Okhotsk plate. For the all the reasons Japan is wonderful to visit, it comes with the steep price of constant natural disasters and lives lost. From earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions to typhoons, landslides, and flooding, the Japanese government is determined to mitigate natural disaster impacts and safety measures are baked into the living experiences here.
That is why we visited Ishinomaki, the site of the most damaged city from the March 11, 2011 Tohoku earthquake, the 4th most powerful earthquake in the world recorded since seismology began. There is a huge museum dedicated to educating future generations on tsunamis and to remember the lively community that thrived here.
The city itself is a memorial and they created a reconstruction path where you walk along the buildings and houses that survived and are thriving today. We walked past two farmers markets playing reggae, karaoke bars, and breweries bagging up fresh hops. Children were enjoying their Sunday afternoon and women walking their dogs. However, all the buildings we passed had signs denoting how high the water was or the occasional artifact like a ship propeller next to the building it hit. You also walk past vacant lots with signs naming the previous business or home that resided there.
The real emotional impact is once you walk down from Ishimaki Shrine and see a completely green and flattened plain where the memorial resides; a huge levee blocks the ocean. This part of the city was completely wiped out; to remember the neighborhoods, they built the park sidewalks mimic the original roads and community centers.
Before entering the memorial park, you pass the Kadonowaki Elementary School which is now a museum with classrooms preserved so attendees can see how powerful water can be. There are cars and huge concrete blocks absolutely crushed inside.
The Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami Museum itself was super informative and all exhibits focused on tsunami and earthquake survival. We learned so much and the main museum message is “just run away.” They implored that you must focus on yourself and run to high ground as fast as possible. The best way to help others is to shout that a tsunami is coming but do not stop, keep running, and do not hold hands/try to help. Researchers discovered that 37% of people didn’t evacuate until after they completed an activity and that had major consequences.
The museum/memorial was absolutely worth it, and they want people to visit and see that reconstruction is essential. It made us re-think our current emergency response strategies, and we have so many new survival tips like wringing out your socks and clothes immediately or massaging warmth into your body.
Now for some irony, we stayed in Ishinomaki for the night and took an afternoon nap. Mary was woken up from the nap from shaking and didn’t want to say anything because obviously our anxiety would be heightened at this time. Kieran also peaked outside and saw that everyone was still relaxing at the farmers market so he didn’t say anything either. We got some sushi for dinner and went to bed.
Literally at 2:20am we get woken up again by shaking and Mary is adamant now that this is an earthquake. While the house is shaking, Kieran argued that it was the Shinkansen bullet train line (there isn’t one) because Mary has a sleeping disorder and will hallucinate things in her sleep. The house then had a big lateral shake and Kieran finally realized it was an earthquake. We waited for tsunami sirens to sound and made Kieran look up the Japan tsunami website.
Well we were right, there was a 4.0 magnitude earthquake at 5:07 pm during our nap and then a 4.6 magnitude at 2:20 am and we were 47 km (29 miles) from the epicenter. No tsunami warnings were issued.
Lesson learned …we will need to work EVEN more on our emergency preparedness strategy since it will likely involve a bit of arguing and sleep disorder gaslighting.
Food:
Ramen
Sushi
Spots:
Ishinomaki
Ishinomaki Minamihama Tsunami MuseumMeer informatie
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- Dag 23
- maandag 7 oktober 2024 om 15:58
- ☁️ 72 °F
- Hoogte: 79 m
JapanTashiro Jima38°17’52” N 141°25’11” E
Day 271: Tashirojima Cat Island
7 oktober 2024, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 72 °F
Not joking, it’s a real island! An hour off the coast of Ishinomaki, Tashirojima has over 100 stray felines that are cared for the by elderly residents. The cats were originally brought to help with pest control around the island's silkworm farms; they now outnumber the island residents four to one.
We took a ferry to the port Odomari where we were greeted by Jeremy (our name for him) who welcomes guests to the island. After everyone got their pictures, we stuck around and sat with Jeremy on the bench and he immediately crawled into Mary’s lap. 10/10 good first cat interaction.
It takes 36 minutes on foot to cross the island. As you climb the hill, a cat will occasionally appear marching down the road. We stopped by a cat shrine built by the fishermen to worship the cats after a rock fell on one 😢 three cats were chilling by the shrine.
We weren’t ready for Cat Island Station where at least 40 lazy cats were chilling. Some would soak up the sun on the concrete, others would chase butterflies in the grass, some were sleeping in their cubby holes. However we liked hanging out with the cats on the picnic benches. They usually wanted cuddles and pets. Kieran got a tiny cat that really digs his nails in your leg while Mary got a big fat cat that can’t breathe very well. At noon, the Island Station worker feeds all the cats and mayhem.
The cats are well cared for and fed by the island owners. They also have a vet that visits twice a month. Sadly some cats clearly are suffering from disease or perhaps cancer, and are at the stages where they stopped eating. It was hard to see them so skinny or sickly, but thats also life. We called those cats Mr. Scraggles for how cute and disheveled they were.
Eventually we walked the entire island, petting some young kittens along the way and hanging out at another big cat collective. We returned to the station for one more hour and got a nice lap kitty and two lazy boys on our bench. It was hard to leave, but we needed to make our way home.
Jeremy was at the bottom of the hill and next to the ferry stop to say goodbye to all the guests. He came and stood in front of Mary and got concerned which she dropped her ticket. Jeremy was the best host and we loved every minute of cat island.
Food:
Curry udon
Takoyaki
Spots:
TashirojimaMeer informatie
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- Dag 24
- dinsdag 8 oktober 2024
- 🌧 64 °F
- Hoogte: 19 m
JapanAkihabara Eki35°41’54” N 139°46’23” E
Day 272: Digimon Odaiba & Akihabara
8 oktober 2024, Japan ⋅ 🌧 64 °F
We are back in Tokyo two days before our Japan trip ends to hit a few more spots. Today’s journey was pure nerd shit: we visited the Odaiba island where most of Digimon season 1 takes place. We visited the Fuji Media Tower, Odaiba Park, and location of the Daikanransha Giant Sky Wheel (they tore it down 😢😢😢).
In addition to Digimon, Odaiba is home to the Gundum Base and life size Unicorn Gundum! Sooooo cool!!!
After a nap, we metro’d to Electric Town (aka Akihabara) where they previously sold discounted electrics. They still do plus they’ve added more anime and pop culture references all over. It’s also known famously for its maid bars where you can eat mediocre food while a girl dressed up as a maid will call you sir or madam. No, we didn’t go there; instead grabbed all you can eat Shabu Shabu for dinner with robot servers.
Post dinner, stopped by the Animate store and picked up some Kingdom Hearts merch and then partied at the GiGo arcade (previously SEGA arcades) playing retro games and Mario Kart.
We left around 10pm for an early start the next day and because the metro home takes about 45 min. Plus it closes at 12:00-12:30ish. One stop away from home Kieran realizes he can’t find our hostel room key lol We panic of course, but still have the back up of having our passports, credit cards, and phone to book another hostel.
The issue: Shabu Shabu closes at 11:00 and GIGO closes at 11:30pm. We metro back to Akihabara and split up; Kieran hits Shabu Shabu, Mary hits arcade. No luck; Kieran comes back to the arcade and we give it a really hard look over.
Kieran found the key in the most difficult spot: it was wedged between two Street Fighter II machines and really low on the ground; we had to get the staff to help to pull the machine out of its spot 🤣
Time is….11:30p! We race to the station; after getting to Shinagawa, we have one more train and hop on the very last train out at 12:06am. We make it home and promptly celebrate / crash.
Hostel:
Shinagawa Guest House
Food:
Sushi
Yakisoba
Shabu Shabu
Spots:
Odaiba
Akihabara
ShinigawaMeer informatie
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- Dag 25
- woensdag 9 oktober 2024
- ☁️ 64 °F
- Hoogte: 10 m
JapanKoyasudai35°29’27” N 139°39’49” E
Day 273: Kirin Brew Tour (Last Day 😢)
9 oktober 2024, Japan ⋅ ☁️ 64 °F
Can’t believe it’s our last day in Japan. It’s hard not to be sad or regret that we don’t have more time. Ended our Japan trip in the best way possible: a trip down to Yokohama for the Kirin Brewery Factory Tour!
We love beer and brewery tours in general, and Kirin has a special place in our hearts because it’s how we teach people to pronounce Kieran’s name 😅 When we get a, “What was that?!” or “Huh?,” we tell them “It’s like the Japanese beer Kirin, but spelled with an E.”
Our morning commute was a bit wild with heavy rain and major train delays! The rain was so bad they shut down the train line; we grabbed a taxi halfway through our trip. And because it’s rude to eat on public transportation, in taxis, and while walking, we scarfed down our breakfast outside the factory under an overpass.
The Yokohama Factory tour centered on their Kirin Ichiban brand (Kirin Number One), which is the only major brewery brand to use the first press wort rather than the second. It’s a fantastic deal at 500 ¥ which is around $3.5 USD for a 90 minute tour and 4 beers. The factory is immersive so they let you touch, smell, and taste barley and hops as well as the first wort and second wort pour before the alcohol is added. You can definitely tell the difference in flavor between the 1st and 2nd.
The tour was mostly in verbal Japanese but they had videos with subtitles and an extra English pamphlet card so we didn’t miss anything.
At the tasting, you get to try four different beers: the Kirin Ichiban, the Ichiban without carbonation, the Ichinan Premium, and the Kuronama (dark beer). And yes we had to get merch to bring home. When the tour was over, we visited their beer hall and tried three more beers: the Jazzy Berry sour, After Dark dark beer, and the Brau Meister. We were toasted so went home and got a big nap.
Since it was our last night and we had cash to spend, we absolutely had to get sushi one last time and hit the arcade. So we metro’d to Akihabara (again) and stopped in Kanda for an excellent locally owned conveyor restaurant. It was so high quality for a conveyor restaurant and we got our last sake pour too 🥲
Still whooped Kieran in Street Fighter II and he whooped me in Mario Kart. Also I killed it on one of claw machines and got three weird corn snacks!
We walked to the station and heard the Tokyo metro jingle one last time. Kieran was very solemn and could tell he was sad to be leaving. Comforting to know that it won’t be our last time in Japan (maybe a Japow 2026/2027 ski trip or Snowkkaido - Okinawa Honey Moon).
Sayonara Japan and Arigato Gozaimasu for the memories we will cherish with our friends and ourselves ❤️🇯🇵❤️
Food:
Sushi
Beer
Spots:
Yokohama
AkihabaraMeer informatie

































































































































































































































































































































































































































































