Japan Sea

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    • Day 1

      Time to say goodbye ✈

      March 2, 2020, Japan Sea ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

      Mit eim brüellende aber au eim lachelnde Aug hani mich vo mine Liebste verabschiedet und mich ih das Abendtüür gstürzt 😊😍🌏🏝

      Pünktlich 13.10 Uhr isch am 2.3.2020 de Flüger Richtig Osaka (Japan) gstartet✈ die erste 3 Täg verbringi im Land des Lächelns 😆 nachere Flugzit vo 11h 10 Minute bini ohni dasi es Aug het chöne zuetue (bin so nervös gsi 😂) am Flughafe Kansai glandet. So schön gsi selber wiedermal dörfe als Passagier unterwägs zsi. Für die nöchste 3 Mönet wirdi schaffe sicher nöd vermisse 🙈

      Währedem Flug hani es spannends und passends Buech ahgfange lese: Das Café am Rande der Welt vom John Strelecky.📥 📖 Es isch eh Erzählig über de Sinn vom Lebe🤔 Chani wärmstens empfehle, regt eim ah biz über s'Lebe nahdenke.

      Begeisteret bini vo de ÖV in Osaka 🙌 es het nämli ih jedem Zug eh Sitzheizig 😂 würs das bi eus diheime geh, wür au ich meh mitem Zug umefahre haha :-) Au isches eh mega Velostadt 🚲 hüt hani die schöne Pärk bsuecht und bi dem strahlend schöne Wetter mitem kitschig, blaue Himmel isches en wunderschöne erste Tag gsi mit ganz vielne Ihdrück ☀️
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    • Day 6

      At sea

      April 14, 2019, Japan Sea ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

      After returning to the ship yesterday, we triumphed at trivia before dinner! Today was a chilled day at sea - eating too much, reading lots and sleeping. We did take a class in learning Japanese calligraphy in the morning with a lovely mother and daughter volunteer showing us how to write our names and other phrases. After lunch, we enjoyed the hot tub before some afternoon trivia in which we were not so successful.Read more

    • Day 21

      Flyger hemåt

      March 23, 2018, Japan Sea ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

      Peter hade fixat buss till Osaka airport o följde med oss tills vi checkat in. Så duktig, rolig o entusiastisk han varit. Hans japanska är bara underbar, talar som en infödd efter 20 års blandad vistelse mellan Japan o New York. Riktigt, riktigt sorgligt att säga hej då.

      Eftersom jag redan i Sverige bokat sittplats satt jag inte med gruppen. Hade bra plats, o kunde sova eftersom de andra i gruppen inte stör. Såg som bra avslutning på Japanresan, Memories of a Geisha, innan sömnen. Riktigt bra!

      Så klart sken solen när vi for, men bara 5 grader ute. Sett på mobilen att det är minusgrader hemma. Nu vill vi ha vår!
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    • Day 20

      We see Japan

      October 5, 2023, Japan Sea ⋅ 🌧 64 °F

      I was awake about 4 o’clock this morning and went up to the Explorers Lounge. The servers had not even arrived to make coffee. We had to set our clocks back again last night to Japan time. But we are in Japanese waters now. The Russian trawlers have disappeared. We can see mountains on our starboard side and a beautiful little island sticking up out of the ocean on the port side. we are so excited that we are about to see Japan.Read more

    • Day 20

      Nets, Nylons & Nurdles

      October 5, 2023, Japan Sea ⋅ 🌧 63 °F

      Nets, Nylons and Nurdles
      Flotsam & Jetsam in the Oceans
      Lecture by David J. Drewry

      ⁃ Charles Moore Natural History 2003 found plastics in ocean
      ⁃ Flotsam- debris floating in sea
      ⁃ Jetsam- garbage thrown deliberately into sea
      ⁃ Lagan-debris sitting on sea bed
      ⁃ 60-80% is plastic
      ⁃ 100,000 marine mammals die each year from ingesting plastic
      ⁃ Causes blockage. And starvation
      ⁃ Whale dead with 90 lb plastic in its guts
      ⁃ Tangling in fishing lines
      ⁃ Poisoning by sunlight degraded plastic
      ⁃ Chemicals interfere with reproductive system
      ⁃ Microscopic plastic fibers from washed clothing
      ⁃ Destroys coral formation
      ⁃ Why plastics?
      ⁃ Buoyant, durable, transparent, common
      ⁃ One million plastic bottles made each Minute
      ⁃ The miracle material of the twentieth century, we have become thoughtlessly addicted to using plastics for everything
      ⁃ Estimated decomposition rates
      ⁃ Plastic cups 50 yr
      ⁃ Beverage holders 400 years
      ⁃ Different types of plastics have different rates of decomposition. Some types of plastics are easy to recycle/degrade, others are difficult. Plastic cups are especially difficult and long-lasting.
      ⁃ Where does plastic come from
      ⁃ 80% comes from land
      ⁃ Pictures of waterways completely covered by plastic
      ⁃ Leading mismanagement of plastic is China followed by Indonesia, Philippines Bangladesh
      ⁃ Largest concentration of plastic comes from Asia and Indonesia
      ⁃ Where does the plastic go?
      ⁃ Land. It is swept into the ocean from coastal tides.
      ⁃ Collects in gyres
      ⁃ 300 tons per day on India coast
      ⁃ 20 T yr in Hawaii
      ⁃ Roatan Island seas covered by plastic
      ⁃ Midway Island-Albatross nests here. Eat plastics one-third of chicks die
      ⁃ Great Nike Drift. 6k containers/yr fall off ships
      ⁃ Movie: Robert Redford All is Lost
      ⁃ May 1990 Hansa carrier lost containers that broke open full of Nike products. Washed up on coast from Oregon to Alaska
      ⁃ Curious case of rubber ducks. Evergreen Laurel 1992. Storm. Lost containers of 29,000 rubber duck & toys. Curtis Ebbesmeyer, oceanographer said we could use rubber ducks to track ocean currents. Found 2 yr later in Alaska. By 2000 some were in Bering Sea. Hung in Beaufort gyre in Arctic. Went into Atlantic. Got into Gulf Stream in Cornwall.
      ⁃ What do we do?
      ⁃ Laws are in place. Increased manufacturer liability.
      ⁃ International ocean cleanup
      ⁃ Boyan Slat-
      ⁃ Float barriers, and let the current being the debris. We scoop it up and carry it away. Scaled up in Pacific.
      ⁃ Interceptors in rivers that feed into rivers.
      ⁃ Change manufacturing materials to biogradables.
      ⁃ Reduce our plastic consumption
      ⁃ Recycle
      ⁃ International legal measures
      ⁃ Education

      Nurdles are pieces of plastic that get finally worn down into little pellets.
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Sea of Japan, Japan Sea, Mar del Giappone, Mer du Japon, Nihon-kai, Nippon-kai, Tong-hae, Yaponskoye More, Японское море, Японське море

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