Holiday in Japan (7): Hiroshima
April 12th, 2025 by Roger Darlington
A week ago, we were flying out to Japan. A week ahead, we will be arriving back in London Today (Saturday), we were in Hiroshima.
Actually we spent almost five hours on an island, officially called Itsukushima (Island of the Gods), but popularly known as the Island of Shrines.
Our ferry approached at high tide so that the imposing red O-torii Gate appeared to be floating because the base was under water. The present gate is the ninth version and dates back to 1875.
The island is home to a Shinto shrine and – much more extensive and impressive – a Buddhist temple. The Daishoin Temple has multiple levels, statues and structures including a great bell.
On the hill housing the temple, Jenny and I stopped for a coffee and cake. Then, down among the shops, we had lunch of fried oysters which are a local delicacy.
We were back at our hotel at 3.45 pm and had the rest of the day to ourselves. Jenny and I decided to walk tothe nearby Peace Memorial Park in advance of our ‘official’ visit tomorrow.
The atomic bomb was dropped on the city of Hiroshima at 8.15 am on 6 August 1945 and killed some 200,000. The Peace Memorial Park contains the Peace Museum and many tributes to the dead
I was at the Peace Memorial Park in November 1998 and today renewed my memories of the various commemorative structures, notably the dome, the flame, and monuments to the children and Korean victims.
In the evening, Jenny and I had another authentic Japanese meal. It is called ‘okonomi yaki’ – ‘okonomi’ means literally ‘to one’s liking’ while ‘yaki’ means ‘fried’. The dish is a kind of pancake with basic ingredients of cabbage and bean sprouts and then all sorts of additions (I had cheese and pork).
There are two styles: Hiroshima which is layered and Osaka which is mixed. Obviously we had the former and it was delicious – and filling.
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Holiday in Japan (6): Takayama & Hiroshima
April 11th, 2025 by Roger Darlington
Friday in Takayama started with thick mist but the mist soon burned off to provided a bright morning for our city tour. Meanwhile our luggage went off to Kyoto and we had to content ourselves with an overnight bag for the next two days.
We began the city tour with a visit the Miyagawa morning market by the river, part outside and part inside. The market was predominately food and drink options and lots of souvenir shops but it was a relaxed atmosphere.
Our main visit, though, was to Takayama Jinya. During the Edo period (1692-1868), this was the home and administration of the local governor. Every local area had such a centre of power, but this is the only one of its kind to survive.
It is an extensive complex of rooms with wooden frames, tatami-matted floors and thin sliding walls – in its time, a place of maximum intrigue and minimal privacy.
Afterwards there was a little free time which Jenny and I used to visit a cafe for coffee and cheesecake.
The rest of the day was travelling by train: a limited express from Matsumoto to Nagoya, travelling about 100 miles south and taking two and a half hours, and then a bullet train from Nagoya to Hiroshima, travelling about 300 miles west and taking just over two hours.
The Japanese bullet train system is known locally as the Shinkansen and was first instituted in 1964. Trains travel at up to 186 miles (300 kilometres) an hour.
To most of the world, Hiroshima is simply the city where the first atomic bomb was dropped in 1945. To its citizens, however, it is a city with a long history (it was established in 1589 as a castle town) and a bustling modern metropolis of some 1.2 million.
Once we were checked in at the very large and somewhat impersonal ANA Crowne Plaza Hotel, we were accompanied to the nearby Hondon Shopping Arcade – which is enormous – and then left to our own devices for dinner.
Jenny and I found a tiny restaurant which served us with a set menu of 10 skewers of various foods, many of which we were quite unable to identify. There were no other foreigners in the place and nobody spoke English, so we felt that it was an authentic Japanese experience.
Sadly one couple in our group had a much less enjoyable experience when they became totally lost and took two hours to return to our hotel.
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Holiday in Japan (5): Matsumoto & Takayama
April 10th, 2025 by Roger Darlington
Apparently, during our night in Matsumoto, about 1.15 am there was an earthquake of 2.6 on the Richter scale. For some of the group, the earth moved. I simply slept through it.
At 7.30 am, I had a call from Jenny wondering where I was. To be honest, I wondered where I was as well because I’d been fast asleep. It turned out that the alarm that I thought I’d set for 6.30 am was in fact on 6.30 pm.
I had to move fast to carry out my ablutions, pack my suitcase, and have some breakfast, before the coach left our hotel on the dot of 8.30 am. The sunshine and blue skies of yesterday had given away to a chillier and greyer day with, a bit later, even some rain.
We started out Thursday with a visit to a miso factory called Ishii Miso which was founded in 1868. Miso paste, which is so important to Japanese cooking, is a mixture of fermented soya beans with salt and other umami-based ingredients.
An employee explained the three- year process by which they made their special type of miso and claimed that the stuff had all sorts of proven health benefits, including reduction of the incidence of various cancers. After we had all sampled miso soup, we found that the factory shop sold miso pizza, miso candy, miso tea, miso ice cream – you get the idea.
Then, following the visit in the dark by some of us last evening, we all went to the famed Matsumoto Castle. This five-storey pagoda-style fortress is known as ‘Crow Castle’ due to its unusual black exterior. Built in the 1500s, this is the oldest remaining castle of its kind in Japan and has an impressive moat.
Climbing to the top of the castle was a little tricky. We had to put our shoes in a plastic bag, which we carried around with us, as we climbed in stocking feet up six floors involving seven sets of stairs, all of which were polished wood and both steep and sharply angled.
It was time to leave Matsumoto and travel to Takayama. We took the Mitsuboshi Kaidou Road through high forests with rivers, dams, sulphur fields, remains of snow, and lots of tunnels.
Our route traversed up to 4,600 feet (1400 metres). At this point, we stopped for lunch at a location called Hirayu where there was a bus station and a supermarket in an area of forest and snow. This is a region of Japan where there are very heavy snowfalls in winter.
On the outskirts of Takayama, we visited the open-air Hida Folk Village which has some 30 rustic farm dwellings from the Edo period of Japanese history (1600-1868). Life was tough in those days.
Takayama is the largest city in Japan by geography – even greater than metropolitan Tokyo – but 80% of the city is forest.
Our hotel for the night, the Hotel Associa, was on the outskirts of town and chosen for its facilities. These include what the Japanese call ‘onsen’. This is a hot spring in which everyone is totally naked. This hotel has both indoor and outdoor baths. I thought about it, but decided not to bother – too many rules (eight of them) and segregation.
In the evening, Jenny and I took the hotel’s courtesy bus into downtown Takayama to have an authentic Japanese meal of Hida beef. This beef is a renowned brand of Japanese wagyu, a luxury beef from black-haired Japanese cattle raised in Gifu Prefecture, known for its tender, finely marbled texture and rich flavour.
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Holiday in Japan (4): Mount Fuji
April 9th, 2025 by Roger Darlington
Wednesday was all about Mount Fuji.
This is an active volcano – it last erupted in 1707/8 – that is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Its size, symmetry and prominence have given it almost a spiritual status in Japan. Standing 12,389 feet (3,776 metres) tall and surrounded by picturesque lakes, it is a fabulous site – if the weather is kind.
The bad news was that we could not make the intended visit to Mount Fuji Fifth Station because there was so much snow that the station was closed. The good news – far outweighing the bad news- was that the weather was glorious with clear skies and warm sunshine.
Our first set of views was immediately outside our hotel at Hakone overlooking Lake Ashinoko. In the quiet of the first thing in the morning, with not a cloud in the blue sky and with the cone of the volcano sheathed in heavy snow, we had the perfect picture in front of our very eyes.
The second set of views came when we drove from Hakone to Lake Yamanakako. Mid-morning, the weather was still totally clear and the beautiful location provided some new vistas for us.
After quick calls into the Fujisan World Heritage Center (where we saw an excellent film about the volcano) and a splendid supermarket (where we individually bought sone lunch), our third set of views was at Oishi Park overlooking Kawaguchiko where we sat outside eating our lunch.
White clouds now crowned the top of Mount Fuji for out last observation, but we were excited to have some different photographs.
This evening was spent in the alpine town of Matsumoto. A group of five of us – an Indian couple from Nottingham, an Australian woman from Melbourne, plus Jenny and I – trooped out to Matsumoto Castle, illuminated by night, before finding a local restaurant for local food.
It was one of those places where you have to removeyour shoes and store them in a locker and, since Jenny was not wearing socks, she had to go barefoot. Then the meal was served at a table just a little higher than the floor where we located our legs in a well underneath the table.
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Holiday in Japan (3): Hakone
April 8th, 2025 by Roger Darlington
On our final morning in Tokyo (Tuesday), at breakfast I was excited to see a bowl of fruit with a banana waiting for me, only to find that the whole display was plastic.
Greater success occurred when Jenny & I decided to use the hour between the conclusion of our breakfast and the departure of our group to walk round to the next door Tokyo Metropolitan Government (TMG) Building. We were in the queue for when it opened for the day and we were transported to the 45th floor in 55 seconds. From a height of 663 feet (202 metres), we had spectacular views of the city.
This building is so new and so iconic that it has already appeared in two Godzilla movies only to be destroyed by the giant monster.
This morning, we left Tokyo to travel by train to Odawara on the way to Hakone. A feature of all trains in Japan is that all seats face the direction of travel so, on the platform, we watched with amazement as section by section the seats swivelled from facing one way to facing the other.
The train journey was only just over an hour and presented splendid views of snow-capped Mount Fuji. At Odawara station, Jenny and I bought some food from a cafe to eat as lunch on the coach journey to an embarkation point at Lake Ashinoko.
Here a vessel designed as replica pirate boat took us on the choppy waters up the crater lake to Togenda-ko. The plan had been that we would then take the Hakone Ropeway, a cable car up to the Owakudani hot springs with views of Mount Fuji.
However, it was so windy and so cold that the cable car was closed. Instead we took the coach up to the springs where there are plumes of steam and a smell of sulphur, but the howling bitter wind meant that nobody wanted to stay long.
It was something of a relief to arrive at our accommodation for the night, the modern Hakone hotel where we had a Western dinner.
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Holiday in Japan (2): Tokyo
April 7th, 2025 by Roger Darlington
The journey out was straightforward but l-o-n-g.
When I went to Japan in 1998, it was a direct flight over Russia, especially Siberia, which took about about 12 hours. But now we have the Russian invasion of Ukraine and no flying by the shortest route.
We flew with Emirates: London to Dubai (three hours ahead) in an Airbus A380 for 6.5 hours and Dubai to Tokyo (eight hours ahead) in a Boeing 777 for another 9 hours. The only problem on the flights was that one needed a degree in biochemical engineering to open the tiny pack of butter.
When we reached our hotel, my journey door to door had been 26 hours. The hotel itself, the Keio Plaza Hotel in the Shinjuku is HUGE: two towers with a total of 1,438 rooms. The first culture shock – literally – was the toilet which had a heated seat. Another surprise – at breakfast – was a robot delivering used plates back to the kitchen.
At 10 am on Monday, the Great Rail Journeys group gathered for the first time. There are 38 of us, 22 from the UK and the remainder – who flew here on separate flights – from Australia, South Africa and Canada.
We have a Glaswegian Tour Manager Bill and a local guide Kazoo and it’s difficult to decide who has the stronger accent, but both are immensely knowledgeable and unfailingly helpful.
Tokyo is, of course, the capital of Japan. With a population of over 14 million in the city proper, it is one of the most populous urban areas in the world. The Greater Tokyo Area, which includes Tokyo and parts of six neighbouring prefectures, is the most populous metropolitan area in the world, with an amazing 41 million residents.That’s one-third of the entire population of the country.
We began the city tour with a visit to the Meiji-Jingu Shinto shrine in the Harajuku district.This was constructed in honour of modern Japan’s first emperor. Next stop was to the much more expansive and colourful Buddhist temple of Senso-Ji in Asakusa. This dates from the 7th century and was built to honour Kanin, the Buddhist goddess of mercy.
Our local guide told us that Shintoism and Buddhism co-exist without conflict and that some Japanese follow both traditions. At the temple, we were given time for lunch and Jenny and I found a place to share two dishes of traditional Japanese food and each of us had a bottle of Sapporo beer.
The afternoon started with a visit to the vast, landscaped Hama Rikyu Gardens. We are in Japan at the height of the cherry blossom season which only lasts one week. The final stop was the famed Shibuya crossing where up to 3,000 people at a time make use of the facility coming from all directions. Round the corner is the statue of the Akita dog Hachiko, remembered for his loyalty to his deceased owner.
Back at the hotel, I was able to reconnect with two Japanese friends whom I’ve not seen for around a quarter of a century. I worked with Masako Ano Lynsey in London in 1999 and with Yoko Ogawa in Tokyo in 1998 and an hour with each was enough to keep the flames of friendship burning bright.
Dinner was provided to the group in our hotel. It was European food because – our British guide advised us – Westerners cannot cope with Japanese food. When I was in the country in 1998, that was all I ate and I’ll be sure to eat more of it at times on this trip
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Holiday in Japan (1): introduction
April 5th, 2025 by Roger Darlington
On 3-14 October 1998, I visited Japan as a member of a delegation from three British trade unions, including the Communication Workers Union where I was then Head of Research, to visit colleagues from the five postal and telecommunications trade unions of Japan. The delegation had meetings in Tokyo and we were shown around Tokyo and Kyoto. I stayed on alone for a few days to fly down to Hiroshima.
I never expected then that I would visit Japan again and certainly I would not have imagined that any further visit would occur 27 years later when I am the venerable age of 76. However, I am about to have a two-week holiday in the country.
I will be travelling with the company Great Rail Journeys and our Tour Manage for the entire trip will be Bill MacKintosh. I will be with my travel buddy, Jenny Madden, with whom I have previously travelled in Georgia & Armenia, Pakistan and India & Bhutan.
Japan – known as the Land of the Rising Sun – is a nation of islands. The four largest are (from north to south) Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku and Kyushu. By far, the largest island is Honshu, the location of the capital Tokyo. Outside of these four large islands are 6,848 smaller islands.
The nearest point to the Eurasian land mass is 120 miles which is among the reasons why the country has never been successfully invaded. In the 1300s, the Mongols tried twice to invade Japan but failed on both occasions. In 1945, the Americans obviated the need to invade by dropping two atomic bombs and forcing a surrender.
The territory of the Japanese islands is larger than Germany, but three quarters of the land is not conducive to human habitation, especially in the mountainous regions, and only 13% is suitable for intensive cultivation. So the Japanese live in close proximity to one another, mainly along the coastal plains.
The current population of Japan is 124 million, making it the 11th most populous nation on the planet, but the birth rate has fallen dramatically and there is minimal immigration, so the populations is falling and is expected to shrink to less than 100 million by the middle of the century. Meanwhile the collapse in the birth date and high longevity (one of the highest rates in the world) means that the demographics of the nation are changing rapidly with a growing proportion of older citizens (currently 29%. are over 65).
Politically, the head of state is the emperor, making the country the only one on the globe with such a figure as the constitutional leader (although he is no longer said to be a god). The country is a democracy with free elections, but the same political party has won almost every election since the war.
Although the Japanese economy has been stagnant for decades, the country still has the fourth largest economy in the world. Culturally, the country is renowned for its traditionalism and conformity which fosters good order and little (overt) crime.
The Japanese language is exceptionally challenging: over over 2,200 kanji characters used in everyday life and around 3,000 basic everyday words to memorise – plus three writing systems.
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Ever heard of Father Gapon?
April 4th, 2025 by Roger Darlington
I didn’t know the name at all when it was mentioned in conversation with an American friend who is more familiar than me on Russian history.
Wikipedia states:
“Georgy Apollonovich Gapon[a] (17 February [O.S. 5 February] 1870 –10 April [O.S.28 March] 1906) was a Russian Orthodox priest of Ukrainian descent and a popular working-class leader before the 1905 Russian Revolution. Father Gapon is mainly remembered as the leader of peaceful crowds of protesters on Bloody Sunday, when hundreds of them were killed by firing squads of the Imperial Russian Army.”
You can read more about Georgy Gapon here.
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AI successfully applies to become an art student at a university in Vienna
April 3rd, 2025 by Roger Darlington
Check it out here.
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Ever heard of tall poppy syndrome?
April 3rd, 2025 by Roger Darlington
I’d never heard of the term until today. According to Wikipedia:
Tall poppy syndrome is a term which originated in Australia and New Zealand in the 1980s that refers to people with notable public success, who excessively promote their own achievements and opinions. Intense scrutiny and criticism of such a person is termed as “cutting down the tall poppy”.
I was introduced to the term by a young Canadian woman. Wikipedia states: “In Canada, the term ‘tall poppy syndrome’ is used in particular to refer to successful women being criticised for their success.”
In fact, I think that my companion felt that the term had a wider connotation in Canada where she sees people reluctant to have pride in themselves because they might be subject to this tall poppy syndrome.
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