11
Jan

Monkey Business

By: muttler

So content

Those of you who know me know that I had a few key thigns for this trip to Japan: celebrating new Year with Masato and his folks… seeing my favourite Japanese band, Boris… going to see Sumo… visiting Ghibli and seeing the Totoro exhibition… and visiting Snow Monkeys. Well, the day had come to check the snow monkeys off the list.

I was pretty excited I must say. First thing I did when I arrived in Nagano was get the info on getting to the park. Seemed easy enough… jump on a bus then a 40 minute walk. So at 10am this morning I did just that.

Monkey Park!

The bus ride was nothing spectacular. We got out of the city and in to the mountains and I was dropped off at what seemed like some outpost with not much happening. The friendly bus driver pointed in a direction, so off I walked, following the odd sign.

The road to monkey business

After about 10 minutes of walking on roads I entered a small track that led into the snow covered mountain, and for the next 30 minutes walked along a gorgeous path in the woods, being careful not to slip. Every twist and turn on the path was another snow covered gem. Every now and then I would hear a noise thinking it would be some animal, but it was only ever snow falling from the trees.

Konnichiwa! I’m a Snow Monkey!

It was then I reached the monkey park proper. Paying my 500 yen I wandered in and up another path. My jaw dropped… snow monkey! Right on the path! Just staring at me as if to say “yeah, I’m a snow monkey… what about it?”. Of course I starting crazily snapping photos. I was giddy. Any fear this would turn out to be disappointing disappeared.

Monkey Heaven

Following the short path I came to the famed hot pool and yep, about 20 monkeys in there just chilling out. Others were hanging about. It was just what I wanted.

Too cute

Truth be told the monkey park is hardly a park… it is a pretty small area with only one hot spring. But there seemed to be a lot of monkeys about. When a park dude spread some food out it seemed as if 200 monkeys were there having a bite to eat.

Oh man this is so warm

I could see how someone might be a little disappointed. The park is relatively tiny. Me, I was enthralled. I spent an hour and a half watching them play and eat and soak.

The boss

There was a clear hierarchy going on, with the odd scream of one monkey to another followed by one getting out of the pool, or being chased. They seemed oblivious to us watching.

Too cute part 2

Although there was hardly anyone there. At one point it was just be and one other. At times more would turn up, stay for 10 minutes, and then leave. Not sure why… that is a big trek to stay for 10 minutes!

Too cute part 3

So I snapped away. The photos I will post in here are my very quick first pass at what I think are some of the better ones. I will wait until I am home to really sort them out.

Insert “spot the monkey” joke here

Oh, of course there was a self portrait.

And another monkey joke

And some kind folk snapped a pic too.

The whole family hanging out

So after hanging out for a while it was time to wander back down the path to get a bus back. I met 3 other Aussies as I wandered back and we headed to Nagano together. A nice bunch who were skiiing. They confirmed that Nozawa Onsen was indeed a place to visit, so that might be on the cards tomorrow.

I have so many pictures of monkeys

Otherwise I was back into Nagano about 3:30pm or so. I did some wandering, got some food (more gyoza… mmm…) and chilled out for the night.

Sorry… only monkey pictures this blog post

I was very content… I had hung out with the snow monkeys. Oh yeah.

10
Jan

From the Gardens to the Sea to the Mountains

By: muttler

Nagano Bound

Hi everyone. Thanks for all the comments. Quite a few Kit Kat requests… don’t worry… you shall all be looked after 🙂

Will be a pretty brief one today since it was mostly travel. I left you last night after a busy day in Kanazawa. Today I said goodbye to my lovely host and jumped on a train bound for Nagano. Well, it was two trains… a 2 hour journey to Naoetsu, then switch trains for another couple of hours to Nagano. My stop was an hour in Naoetsu, which I thought would be fine given the proliferation of shopping centres and good eating places at train stations. Well, we’ll get to that.

You can never get a truly representative picture from a train window

What I completely forgot was how close I was to the Sea of Japan. Kanazawa is close to the coast and I didn’t even think which way I would be going. Within no time at all I had the sea on my left and snow covered mountains on my right. It was amazing.

In fact the whole journey was great. I expected to be head in a book (or Kindle as it were) but I was transfixed by the journey. Which gets me to Naoetsu. Unlike every other train station I had visited, Naoetsu was not much really. A kiosk and some seats to wait on. And that was it. However, every cloud has a silver lining. What was it? C’mon… you can guess.

Naoetsu Kit Kat!

Yep, Kit Kats! I was in a new prefecture which meant new Kit Kat! And this was the only place I would see them on my travels. Pear flavour. I think I had had it before, but had to buy them. And how are they? Peary. Not my favourite, but not the worst.

The next leg was more gorgeous scenery, although this was an old school local train that did a lot of stopping, so this dragged a little. But by about 3pm I was in Nagano. After a visit to the Tourist Info centre it was off to my lodgings.

Nice digs huh?

Now I knew it was a Ryokan (traditional japanese lodgings) I was staying in, but I also knew that I found it on Hostelworld and that it was on one of the main streets. So I didn’t expect it to be a proper one. Now it is not a formal Ryokan, but boy is it great! I was greeted by the old owners who showed me to my room and served me tea. The building itself is gorgeous inside… lots of old creaky wooden stairs leading every which way. And my room was old school with tatami mats and sliding doors… quintessentially Japanese.

Zenkoji

It was a bit after 4pm by the time I had settled in, so not much time for things, but I decided to wander up to nearby Zenkoji Temple, which is highly regarded. I was thinking, oh OK, another temple. But this was great.

This would be a cool place to stay

Unfortunately it was getting dark by the time I got there and things were closing up, but what I loved was all the little shrines around it, including some ryokans that were part of the complex. Now that would be a place to stay.

That’s some icy temple water

Like the castle in Kanazawa, the snow added a different vibe to the place too that Kyoto didn’t have.

So cold even the statues wear hats

Lots of little statues around too making it quite gorgeous. The snow didn’t hurt either.

Nagano Kit Kat!

So with that it was a wander to eat and back to the ryokan. On the way I found some Nagano specialty… Apple. Now I have had apple Kit Kats before and wasn’t sold on them, but got some anyway. Chili Kit Kats are also plentiful here. As it turns out the ones I got from Tokyo are indeed Nagano specialties. Well you learn something new everyday.

First impressions of Nagano are interesting. It seems like a nice place actually… feels like you are near the snow. But it also is lacking people strangely. I thought the place might be busy with tourists and snow folk, but the streets were quite quiet, and even all the shops seemed to be closing up about 5 or 6pm. Maybe everyone moves on to stay on the actual mountains.

Anyway, for me I wanted a base to do day trips. All going to plan tomorrow’s post should be pretty awesome…

08
Jan

You Win Some, You Lose Some

By: muttler

The locals are so friendly here in Kanazawa

Brrrrrr… boy it’s cold out there. I’m in Kanazawa now, which is up close to the coast of the Sea of Japan. I arrived late morning coming from Kyoto and although Kyoto was cold (8 to 10 degrees) we are now entering new territory. The sign said 2 degrees when I arrived about 11am. Yep.

But the upside? Snow! And lots of it. Not that nice drizzle we got in Kyoto that didn’t last, but a foot of snow everywhere. But it has its upsides and downsides which I will get to.

So the train was uneventful in the best way, but that is what Japanese trains seem to be… nice and reliable (touch wood). What was great about this trip was that only about 15 minutes out of Kyoto the snow arrived, and didn’t let up the whole 2 or so hours to Kanazawa. So cool (it better be… I am settling in for a week and a half of snow).

The trip to Kanazawa was about a few things. One was getting a little more off the beaten track, although Kanazawa is hardly off the track. It is a city (200,000 people or so) and is world renowned for its main gardens which draws lots of tourists. So I am hardly the first. But it takes a little effort so is not on the radar for most. Secondly obviously to go somewhere new. Thirdly, it is a roundabout way to Nagano. And fourth, the gardens I speak of.

First things though was to drop my bag off. I met my lovely host at Guesthouse Namaste. This was a guesthouse in the true sense… nice and small and run by a charming man who could not be more helpful from the first second. Within half an hour my next 6 hours were planned.

Konnichiwa!

So armed with my map and helpful instructions, I headed off to see the sights of Kanazawa. First of all was a swing by the local Fish Market. Kind of like a smaller version of Tokyo Fish Market, I think by the time I was there a lot of the action had disappeared. But it allowed be to get some octopus on a stick to munch on for lunch (I seem to be eating a lot of octopus). Nothing too wacky out there, but a LOT of crabs.

Sapporo Beer... favoured by Geishas

From there is was a meander to the old Geisha district which now operates mainly as a quaint alley for teahouses. Although I did spy the above advert on the way. Maybe the geishas were beer drinkers too?

Not a Geisha to be seen. Lots of tea houses though.

So I arrived at the Higashi Chayagai district to have a look. Quite a small area, but some quaint lanes with old teahouses, each advertising their wares outside.

Not sure what they are selling but it looks nice!

Apparently this is the area for gold leaf as well, but none that I could spy. One tea house even serves it up for you to drink I hear.

Castle!

My advised path then took me toward the famed gardens. But as I approached something pretty impressive got my attention. Castle! How I love Japanese castles. I know I didn’t worry with the Kyoto one the other day (I think I was just building-ed out by that point) but this looked amazing.

The main problem when attacking the castle is cold, wet, feet

The snow added to the dramatic effect. What was great is that it was free to just wander in the grounds and soak it all up.

Snow shenanigans

Given all the snow, I couldn’t help but get into some snow hijinks. I am sure this time in two weeks I will be cursing the cold and wet, but right now I am loving it.

Japanese castles are too cool

So a wander around the castle grounds bought great images at every turn. Makes me want to visit more castles now (which I read just today one of the big 4 in Japan is just under an hour away from Nagano… hhmmm…).

Protecting the trees from winter

Next up, the famed Kenrokuen Gardens. I was pretty excited for these as they are considered the primo gardens in all of Japan.

Wintery Gardens

This is where unfortunately things get a little disappointing. I am guessing the depths of winter is probably not the best time to see the Kenrokuen Gardens. It makes complete sense, but as a result while the trees were still fairly green, everything else was quite barren.

Wintery Gardens 2

The snow made for some amazing parkland, however without the colour everything just blended a bit in to each other.

Wintery Gardens 3

I have it on good authority that the gardens are quite spectacular in season. Oh well, you win some you lose some, but it was hardly a big loss as I still spent a lot of time just wandering and soaking it all up.

More fancy self-portrait

Always time for self portraits too.

From there I wandered past the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art. Only a little pop in as I wanted to get to the samurai building district before the sun went down.

No samurai either... maybe they are out with the geishas

This district is where the samurai used to live and the mud brick walls are evidence of that. It is mainly peoples residences now, but like the geisha district, the charm of the old is still there.

Then it was back to the hostel, seeing the odd thing on my travels…

I don't know what it means either

Local gangster and his ladies

And with that, 5 or 6 hours of wandering came to a close. Grabbing some food I have spent the evening at the Guesthouse typing away. Tomorrow is 4-5 hours of train to Nagano where I will set up camp for 4 days. That will be the base for a few things… snowboarding, maybe a castle, and snow monkeys! Until Nagano…

07
Jan

So long and thanks for all the deer

By: muttler

Too cute

Last time I came to Japan I wrote a post called “Farewell Kyoto”. I guess at the time I had no idea if I would be back. Well, turns out I came back and am leaving again.

As mentioned in the last post, today was just a spare day, and like I thought I might, I decided to have a lazy day, strolling the parks of Nara. Those that read my blog last time know it was one of my favourite places, so to come back was very cool. This time I didn’t feel compelled to need to see everything hidden in every nook and cranny. Really I just strolled and went to my favourite temple, Todai-Ji, the one with the big buddah.

So in many ways I will keep this blog entry pretty light on too, because if you really want to know about Nara, you can check out my older post… much more detail.

Everyone knows who runs this place

As usual, the deer were out in force. My favourite thing is seeing naive folk buy the deer biscuits and then get mobbed by deer. Ha ha… traps for young players.

That's a big temple

And needless to say Todai-Ji is still breathtaking. The amazingly huge all wooden structure takes the breath away…

... and that's a big Buddah

… as does the big buddah inside. Bigger than the one I visited on my first day in Kamakura.

Scary...

This time I decided I was enlightened enough and declined the opportunity to crawl through the nostril. Maybe another day.

Wave goodbye

As I wandered the parks it was interesting to note two things I didn’t know about Nara…

Lucky I decided it was too cold for a swim

First is the piranha problem.

What do they have against Pacman?

Second is their prejudice against Pacman. How odd.

You are getting sleepy...

So after about 4 or 5 hours of wandering I headed back to Kyoto. Before heading back to the hostel I decided to pay a visit to the bamboo forest I visited last trip too.

Another obligatory self-portrait

It is not huge, but it is gorgeous to be in amongst the swaying bamboo. Clears the mind better than any zen garden I think.

From there it was some okonomyaki for dinner and back to camp. Need to get my bag sorted for in the morning I jump on a train to Kanazawa, home of the most amazing Japanese gardens apparently. So assuming I have wi-fi again will let you know my verdict tomorrow.

Sayonara Kyoto!

06
Jan

Tour de Kyoto

By: muttler

My Trusty Steed

I packed a bit into yesterday, bouncing around from temples in Kyoto to pocky men in Osaka, so today was a bit more chilled. I still had some things I wanted to see, but now that I have spent a bit of time here over this trip and last there was really only a handful of things left on the list.

Most these things were a bit out of the way so how to get there? Bike! In Kyoto there are bikes riding around everywhere, so why not act like a local. So I grabbed a bike from the hostel and off I went.

A few things… firstly, it is so liberating to ride without a helmet. Not that I wouldn’t at home if given the opportunity (I don’t trust cars back home) but here it was awesome to just jump on the bike and ride. Secondly, most road rules seem out the window on the bike. I mean a red light is still a red light, but you can ride on the road, the footpath, the wrong way, whatever gets you from A to B. Soooo much fun!

So off I went. Now all these photos today are taken with my little crappy pocket Powershot (and testing out the timer function in a few snaps). I decided to just pop that in my pocket and take random snaps along the way rather than get the trusty SLR out of the bag all the time.

First off was a visit to the International Manga Museum. This houses a massive collection of manga as well as some exhibits of various associated things. This was OK, although there weren’t too many exhibits, and without being able to read them, the vast collection was a bit wasted on me. Happy to have gone, but not to great. Did get a super cool Mighty Atom (aka Astro Boy) mug though. Hope it doesn’t get broken in transit (touch wood).

Konnichiwa from the Imperial Palace!

Next was heading north to the Kyoto Imperial Palace gardens. You can’t get into the Imperial Palace, so it was a cruise around the grounds. Like some of the gardens I have been to in the past few days, they are suffering from being winter, but it was still fun to be on the bike.

Parking the horse out front of the temple

Next stop was further north to Daitoku-ji and the surrounding grounds.

A man and his companion out front of Daitoku-Ji

Another temple area like many others. Probably not much to separate this one from others but there were heaps more little shrines dotted around the grounds which I was checking out. Although at one point though I think I ended up in someone’s back yard with my bike. Whoops.

Hypnotising

Came across part of a nice bamboo forest too, but couldn’t get in.

From there it was across to Kyoto Castle. In the end I didn’t go in… I think the reality was that I was happier just cruising out on the bike than checking out more things. Plus, I have seen a few other Japanese castles (including the king of all of them in Himeji) so was happy enough to pass.

By the time I got back to the hostel about 5 hours had passed. Oh man it was great fun to be out on the bike. Just cool having a rough idea of direction and then riding and seeing where I ended up.

My other plan for the day was to visit the Nishiki Market. This is an undercover market with stalls of varying types, but mainly food, including lots of fresh weird stuff.

Mmmm... odd vegies

Odd Vegies… check.

Mmmm... benito

Benito… check

Mmmm... crab

Crab… check.

Ummm... eyeballs

Eyeballs… check.

Mmmm... winter pocky

While cruising through there (always on the hunt for Kit Kats too) I came across “Winter Pocky”. Not really sure what makes it a winter version, but it was certainly different. The chocolate on the outside was very different, tasted way more european in its flavour. Was good though (I have just polished off the last as I type this).

The only Geisha I could find

Since I was nearby I wandered through the streets of Gion, keeping an eye out for any Geisha rushing around. As it turns out, none to be spotted.

"Love Mermaid"? Only in Japan.

The area is also what I think is the “entertainment” district. Before you get any ideas it certainly doesn’t seem very seedy or anything but seems to be the place for shenanigans. Although I can’t work out if “Love Mermaid Girl’s Bar” is a bar full of girls or for girls. Sorry lads, didn’t go into find out.

Cruising for something to eat

From there it was some meandering through the small streets with their places to eat. I can’t tell if it is traditional or touristy, but these small streets are certainly cool.

A temple around every corner

So bypassing some temples on my way I arrived back at the hostel, fairly early for a change. So given I was a little weary from my riding and walking, I decided to nude up and join the old dudes in the nearby public bath house. Ah nuding up in public… still an odd experience. But way less odd here (is there even a legitimate and/or legal reason to nude up in public back home?!).

And that brings me to now, just chilling in the common room in the hostel. Tomorrow is really a free day. Given I had planned to go to Ise and abandoned that idea (some more advice from fellow travels here suggest it is cool but not really worth the effort from here), I am not sure what to do. I have checked the things off my list I had on there. Maybe I will head to Nara. It would be the first place I really visit that I have been to before. A little loathe to go back to places twice, but I have my rail pass and if it is a nice day again it will be magic to hang out with the deer in the parks. Oh, and visit Todai-Ji, my favourite temple (where I crawled through the nostril of buddha). I shall decide after brekky in the morning I think.

Now maybe you are thinking. No Kit Kats today? Well, I did come across one. Glen e-mailed me to say he found a specially branded Kit Kat in Mos Burger. not a burger flavoured one, but specially packaged. So walking past a Mos Burger, what did I buy?

Mos Kat

Yep.