21.8.08

Clouds

Tokyo Skyline (I)
Tokyo Skyline (II)
Ghost City

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20.8.08

Yukata

Two nice japanese with the traditional yukata (summer kimono) posing for the gaijin photographer.

Traditional Couple in Yukata


It's really common in summer to see women wearing these beautiful dresses, especially during the weekends. Also men wear their yukatas in the weekends, but in a quite lower number.

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19.8.08

Fukagawa Hachiman Matsuri

Fukagawa Hachiman Matsuri (I)


One of the most important festivals in Tokyo take place around 15th August. One of the main attractions is this parade were people carry these statues and the rest throw water to them. The pity of this year's festival was the weather. It rained the whole weekend, so throwing water when it's raining it's not that funny.

Fukagawa Hachiman Matsuri (II)


By the way, don't ask me what all this event is really about, because I have no idea... For me it was like the Semana Santa, but in summer and a bit more abstract...

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18.8.08

Churros

In the same market as in a previous post, I also found a stand where they sell since 1988...

Churros

Churros!! The same shape, the same ingredients... the same name!

Churros

It's a pity that he did not speak anything but Japanese. It would have been interesting to ask where the name came from.

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17.8.08

Popular Market

When I went to the fireworks, I found out some kind of market where you could find many things to eat while looking at the fireworks. Here you have some of the things you could buy there:

...yakisoba...
Pasta con verdura


...corn...
Panocha de maiz


...squid...
Calamares


...and the dessert, bananas covered with chocolate with different colours...
Platanos con chocolate

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16.8.08

Morning

I live this everyday and I still do not get used to the silence in the morning and everything in order: no race, no shout, no one speaking by phone, talking... not even praying... Nothing. Just calm, order and introspection: newspapers, books, nap, english course,... And, of course: one after the other.

Perfect Queue

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Akihabara: 1st Edition

Where would you start a visit to Tokyo? Exactly, anywhere but in the electronic quarter... Where did I start? Yes, you are right... Akihabara, the area where you can find all kind of shops with all kind of electronic devices. You can find there:

...sirens... (quite a niche market)
Akihabara Sirens


...a pink stand with a pink laptop... (and probably they do sell it)
Pink Stand
Pink Computer


...and of course, a superhero...
Who is he?


...and friends...
Why do they take a picture with him?

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14.8.08

Metro

One of the fears I had at the beginning was the infography in the metro. Someone told me everything was written with Japanese characters...
Japanese Labels


Fortunately, the situation has changed, and now you can always read names of stations you can understand...
English Labels


I love the flash on the labels... ;(

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Tokyo does not sleep

Night in Roppongi

Last friday was my first night out in Tokyo. It started with a dinner of a new dish I had not tried before: okonomiyaki, which is something similar to a tortilla (ok, this similarity might not be clear for other eyes...), with different vegetables in it.

After that, we went to a karaoke, Japan's national entertainment. This was quite fun, but I will elaborate more on the karaoke concept some other time, because the idea we have in Europe of a karaoke is quite different from the japanese style.

After karaoke (around 4.00 am), my party colleagues went to a disco, but I preferred waiting for the first train (5.00) to go home. So, what could I do? I went to a place called Don Quijote (I might be wrong with the spelling, but it's how it sounds, and it is a well known brand in Tokyo), which is a sort of department store where you can find almost everything at a good price, and bought a futon for my forecast guests. Yes, after 4.00 am.

I think we can include without problems Tokyo in the list of cities in the world who do not sleep, together with New York and Benidorm. :P Tell me in which other place you can buy a mattress at 4.30 am without moving from the pub area.

By the way, just imagine me carrying the mattrasse back home in the metro... I was even photographed...

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12.8.08

Sushi

Many people think, Japanese eat sushi every day, but it is not like that, and it is even difficult to find places with good sushi. Today, I found one on my way home, and I decided to buy some for dinner...

Sushi


... and just for 9 euros. Not expensive at all, right?

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Afterwork

Last week, we had an afterwork dinner some of the people who are in the project. It was in the japanese way: a place close to the office, with lots of food and drinks, and a way to talk with your colleagues in a different environment.

According to what I had read, people in this kind of events normally speak more about work, but in an informal way. But, in this case, we talked about work (of course), but also about other stuff, like similarities and differences about cultures, languages, companies, etc.

Very interesting experience, apart from being an excellent teambuilding activity, always needed when starting, and a new oportunity to taste exquisite food and try the famous sake.

By the way, in the restaurant we went, I faced something a colleague from Spain told me.., Going to the toilet, and find these two doors:
Male / Female? (II)
Male / Female? (I)


Which one would you choose? My colleague told me: "you'll have to wait until someone else enters, so you know which is for you"... He was right: I didn't wait and I chose wrongly the first time.

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6.8.08

Summer Festival

Summer Festival


Or at least, that's what I think it was what I found last thursday when I arrived to my station. The "main square" full of people dancing like this:



After 10 minutes of looking and listening to this music, I came back home whistling this... I will try to get the MP3. ;)

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5.8.08

Fuji-san

Landscape from Mt.Fuji

Interesting experience. I had heard about it, as a must for long-term stays in Japan/Tokyo including summer: climb Mount Fuji and observe the sunrise from there... together with 10000 more people. What??? I thought we were climbing a mountain... 10000 people hiking up? Two ideas came to my mind at this point: either the figure is an exageration or it is not that hard... I was completely wrong. 10000 people is a good figure for that kilometric queue hiking towards the summit during the night... and it was not that easy.
Night Climbing

We had to climb from 2305 m to 3776 m. So, around 1500 m, quite a lot. At the beginning, everything is ok, not many people, wide paths, and softer slopes... But, after a while, the paths are thinner, the people who were waiting in the different stations join the way up, the oxygen reduces (and you do notice the difference), and the sunrise is closer. Not everybody reaches the summit before the sunrise, but it is quite ok if you are already around 3500 m as we were.
Sunrise (I)
Sunrise (II)
Sunrise (III)
Sunrise (IV)
Sunrise (V)

The worst part was after the sunrise, when everybody who had stopped decided to go up at the same time. It took us a couple of hours to reach the summit, but we did it. And, after eating something up there (good business) and taking a look to the crater of the volcan, time to go down, which was even harder than ascending... At the end, 30 hours without sleeping, and the proud to have reached the ceiling of Japan... and this is just the beginning. I still have more than 5 months left here. :-)
The long queue


Any way, I agree with the japanese. It's a once-in-a-life experience. There will be no second time, that's for sure. ;)

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27.7.08

First day in Tokyo

First full-day in Tokyo, completely free for walking around and trying to realize where I am. :)

Before coming, I collected some useful information about Japan from some friends. I remember Inda told me that in Tokyo all life is focused around the train stations, and when you are far from them, they are normally peaceful residential areas... and he was completely right. :)

I live in that part of the neighbourhood, the peaceful residential area (apart from the big avenue behind my building)... and then when you start walking to the station, you start finding more and more people, as well as shops... until you get to the station. (see pictures as follows, all taken in the same street)
Jiyugaoka
Jiyugaoka
Jiyugaoka
Jiyugaoka
Jiyugaoka Station


Close to the station, I found our friend Mc (my first visitors will love it :D), and Café Sands. Maybe they are my relatives and I had no clue about that. :)
Mc also in Tokyo
Cafe Sands

But finally I decided to try some real stuff. :)
First japanese meal


Today I liked what I saw quite more than yesterday. But I still think it's quite chaotic, without any order... But that mess looks nice... apart from the cables. I see cables all around the place. Is it just me?
More cables


Tomorrow it's time to start working again... I am even eager to that. O_o

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Daily Japanese

I promised you some daily life japanese... Ok, here it goes.

Imagine you arrive to your new apartment, and you start moving around checking everything. You go to the kitchen and you find this:

Kitchen


Then, you take a look to the washing machine...
Washing Machine


... you find this in the door of the bathroom ...
Bathroom


... and this next to the bath.
Bath



And last, but not least, this is the controller of the WC!!!
WC


I am on my way to study the different user guides I found under the TV. That is something I could ask to be removed. I have 12 channels, and all of them are in perfect Japanese. =) I hope the Olympics can be watched using the original infography. :)

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26.7.08

Konichi wa!

I am in Tokyo!! :) I only had time to arrive to my apartment, unpack everything, buying some stuff for the apartment and going to have dinner in my same street, and now back "home" to write a few lines and early to bed to profit tomorrow's day. :)

* The trip went pretty well. I flew through Frankfurt so I could practice some German in the first flight. The flight from Frankfurt to Tokyo has been really long. Fortunately, I could sleep a little bit, not as much as I would have desired, as I did not have the chance to take an aisle seat, so I was pressed between the window and my seat neighbour. But three films, the dinner and the breakfast entertained sufficiently.
Wing

* I flew in a 747 today (yes, today this kind of aircraft is on the news), and I am really surprised that someone even imagined to make that enormity could ever fly (and I am looking forward to be able to "try" the A380.

* I wrote in a company blog some time ago, that I think border control as we understand it today should have future. We need a visa (which you apply with a lot of papers, later on, in the plane, you need to fill in a couple of forms justifying why you are going to Japan, and so on, then you go and explain what you have written to an immigration officer, and later on to a customs officer. At the end, almost 30 minutes of queuing.

* In total, it took me about 4 hours since the aircraft landed until I got to my apartment. It's true it's quite far from the city, and that I took a bus instead of trains, but it is still a lot. Oh, sorry, it was not a bus, it was a limousine. :)
Limousine


* What's your impression about Tokyo? Two things come to my mind: first, the humidity. It's really tough to be outside (or inside with open windows). The image I have seen from the bus, and after a short walk in my neighbourhood, it is a bit chaotic. Old and new, small and big, colourful and grey houses together, small streets that look like the entrance to a house, lots of cable everywhere, streets and railways cross at different heights, etc.
Cables


* I like globalization. I like being able to find olive oil in the closest supermarket to my place. I just did not like the price. (1000 yen = 6 euros)
Olive Oil


* Language is a real problem. I still don't know how I managed to know the time the supermarket closes (23.00), because no one spoke English there. The same happened with the taxi driver, or in the restaurant. The worst thing is that I say some times to them "tack" or "hej"... Hehe.

* By the way... Tomorrow, I will show you some Japanese in the daily life...

* Ohhh! And Carlos Sastre just won Tour de France!! Perfect timing. :)

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24.7.08

Breaking News

One day to take a flight to the capital of Japan...

Powerful quake hits north Japan


... using a well-known and reliable airline as Lufthansa...

Lufthansa cancels more than 500 flights as pilot strike at subsidiaries continues


And I was not checking news at all! My brother told me about the first one, and a friend commented me the other one in a casual e-mail...

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26.5.08

Lost in Translation

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