Posted by Jess
30 October 2010

Another long post today!  The last full day of Kiki-fest arrived on Sunday the 17th.  We checked out of the hotel, headed back to Shin-Osaka station (again by taxi) and took the express train to Kyoto - about a 20 minute ride.  Once we got to Kyoto station, we worked on finding lockers to put our luggage in.  We looked for a long time!  After we finally found a few, we tried to get a taxi.  Because there were 5 of us (if you count Abby), the cabs were not so willing to take us.  Kiki finally found a guy that was willing to take us because he wisely realized that we only needed 4 seats, not 5!

We asked the taxi driver to take us to our first spot - the Kinkaku-ji or Temple of the Golden Pavillion.  This is a Zen Buddhist temple all covered in gold leaf and a pretty famous photo spot for Japan.  Like almost every thing we see in Japan, the original was built in the early 1400's but was burned down and rebuilt.  This version was rebuilt as a replica of the original in 1955, after an arsonist burned the original down in 1950.  The gardens that the pavillion are in is pretty and each item in the area (including the pond) have special meanings.  


Kyoto was bustling with tourists and tour groups and the Golden Pavillion was no exception.  Traffic was routed through the garden areas.   We stopped to take photos and wander around the grounds a bit, plus throw our coins into a wishing area.   We think that if you are able to throw your coin into the little pot in the middle of this area, your wish will be granted.  And I got mine in on the first try!!  Look out Powerball...

Just some notes for any future tourists - you cannot go into the pavillion itself and there are a lot of stairs in this temple area as well.  It cost about 300 Yen per person to enter.   We walked around for about 30 minutes.
At the end there are stalls with local people selling crafts and foods, but we didn't find anything too interesting there.  


Ella with her entrance ticket




Here Fishy Fishy Fishy


The Wish Area. 
Can you  see the little dark gray bowl in the center?


After the Golden Pavillion, we headed back to the taxi area and asked to be taken into town.  Our destination was the area near Kiyomizudera Temple.  We had been told of a walk that we could do that would bring us past a few temples and some local shopping and restaurants all in one.  The streets were much narrower here and our taxi driver had to honk as he went up the road to have people move to the sides.  He got to the end of the street and dropped us off at the bottom stairs of the temple.  And then proceeded to back his way down the street again as we watched in disbelief.  I hope he didn't run over the geisha in training we drove past!  


The Kiyomizudera Temple is again a large area with lots of things to see.  The original temple was built in 750, but this version dates back to 1633.  There were about 30 different buildings/sites as a part of this area.  We walked past all but only stopped at a few.  We walked out onto the wooden veranda, which is held up with 139 very large wooden pillars about 50 feet tall.  We also walked by the waterfall, where people drank the water from metal cups in hopes of good health and success.  We went up to Jishu-jinja shrine, dedicated to the god of good love and matchmaking.  Legend is that if you can walk from one lucky stone to another (about 60 feet apart) with your eyes closed, you would soon have good luck in your love life.  Many people were making this walk with the help of their friends to guide them!  We passed a few areas dedicated to prayers for children and enjoyed the garden areas.  




Wooden Veranda

View of Kyoto from Veranda

View into the Valley - The building is a pagoda under cover for a remodel

Jishu-jinja Shrine
Main Hall

In the Gardens

 From here we walked down the shop filled streets in search of souvenirs and lunch.  Souvenirs were easy to find, lunch was more difficult for us unadventurous eaters of the group!  After much searching, we finally found a place to get some basic Japanese food - noodles, curry and tea.  After lunch we headed back out on our walk through some more shops - we stopped to buy some fun Japanese style items and Jason bought some sticky rice treats.  Jason said "everyone is in line for them, I wonder what they are?  they must be good!"  and that's all he needed to buy some for himself.  After that, up a large hill on our way to the next temple.  This as the entrance to Adashino Nenbutsuji temple which is a famous temple cemetary, but the hill seemed too daunting to us and we just didn't have it in us that afternoon!  So a quick break here, a few photos and on we went.






Back down the hill to the Ryozen Kannon.  This was built in honor of the Japanese that died in WWII.  It cost a few yen to go in, so just Kiki and Ella went and Jason, Abby and I hung out in the parking area.  This temple has a 80ft Kannon Statue on top and 2 million memorial tablets inside in honor of the dead.  There were many different areas inside, including one shrine dedicated to the "world's unknown soldier" of WWII as well.
 





We left this area a little "shrined-out" for the day but still had some time before our 6pm train.  So we headed to Nijo Castle.  Kyoto was the capital of Japan from early times until the mid-1800's so the Ninomaru Palace inside the castle walls was the imperial residence from 1600 when it was built to 1867, when the capital of Japan was moved to Edo/Tokyo.

In the palace you could walk through all the rooms and see the murals on the paper walls which was neat.  The palace was not furnished anymore though so the only way to know what the rooms were used for was through signs.  The wood floors around the outside of the rooms was called a Nightingale floor.  It squeaked with every step (no matter how graceful you are!).  The floor was designed that way so that intruders would always be heard when entering - you couldn't sneak into this place without the floor squeaking!  There were also hidden doors (they looked like walls, but slid open) that the shogun's bodyguards would be behind and could come out in a hurry if needed.

The gardens here were pretty as well and we walked through and noticed some other buildings and tea houses.









I don't understand how she had so much energy still so late in the day!










After this, it was time to taxi it back to the station.  Unfortunately we weren't specific enough with the driver and he dropped us off at the main entrance to the station, but that's not where we got out that morning.  Normally that would be fine, but we needed to find the lockers with our luggage in them!  After much frustrating searching, we found them.  Whew.  We grabbed some McD's for dinner and headed onto the train for the 2 hour trip back to Tokyo.  By the time we got home that night we were all exhausted!  A great weekend of sightseeing outside this city though and lots of culture too!


Anyone need a taxi?
On Monday, Kiki headed back to the airport for her trip home and Ella headed back to school.  We were sad to see Kiki go and Ella kept forgetting she was gone for a few days after.  It took us all a little while to get back in the swing of things and snap out of a post-Kiki funk.  We did though and October has flown by since!  I can't believe Halloween is tomorrow.


Thanks Kiki for coming to visit.  We loved having you here and we miss you!  So glad I get to see you again in just two short weeks as I head back to MN for work.  


And of course, thanks to Kiki for all the fantastic pictures from the 10 days of Kiki-fest!  


Kanpai!
Jess


Posted by Jay
29 October 2010

Last night was the inaugural meeting of the Tokyo Stay at Home Dads group.  There are currently 10 of us from all over the world with at least not working as a common theme, oh and taking care of our children.

Our first meet up was at a restaurant called Gonpachi just a 15 minute walk from our apartment.  I was told that this was a very popular place for expats as it is right in Roppongi which is the expat hub of Tokyo.  They were not kidding, half the people where expats which I am not used to seeing.  The thing I didn't know about this place is that it is where the big fight scene from Kill Bill Vol 1 was filmed, which of course they had memorabilia in the front from the film.
We had an awesome table by the bar and one of the more seasoned expats ordered food for the whole table.  We enjoyed sashimi, eggplant, smoked fish, black cod and edamame.  Oh, I almost forgot we had a few pitchers of beer.

Overall a really fun night out with the guys and we plan on doing more family friendly events soon too.

Kanpai!

Jay
Posted by Jess
28 October 2010


In honor of the upcoming holiday, I thought I would take a break from blogging Kiki-fest and instead write something Kiki-fest related. 

In September, my sister sent me a U.S. magazine article talking about Japanese candy and the strange flavors that they use (you've all see the ice cream flavors!).  The article specifically talked about Kit-Kats and the different flavors they have in Japan.  My sister said, "I'll have to find some to bring back for my friends to try"  and of course, if you know me at all, I was on a mission to find all the different kit-kats I could! 

So while searching for kit-kats and doing my part to help out Willy Wonka, here's what we found.

 

Left: Green Tea
Right: Cherry Blossom
Salt and Caramel

Strawberry Cheesecake

Kobe Pudding

Soy Sauce

Wasabi (of course)

Houjicha Roasted Tea

We've also found dark chocolate kit kats, but didn't think they were that different that they were blog-worthy and of course they were eaten too quickly in this house to take a photo!  The different flavors are regional and seasonal, so there are many more but its harder to get all the flavors around Tokyo.  I've found the best place to find them are in souvenier shops - either at the airport or at main train terminals.  A lot of people have blogged in the past that they have had success at their local conbinis (convenience stores) but I was only ever able to find the salt and caramel flavor. 

The strange varieties aren't what I was expecting though.  I was expecting flavored chocolate, but they aren't.  It's flavored coating on the wafers.  So there is no chocolate on most of these (the salt and caramel one is the exception - that one the chocolate is just flavored).   Most found the wasabi flavor to be understated except for me of course who likes things pretty bland - even medium salsa is hard for me sometimes!

I've taken some home for my co-workers, Jason gave some to his friends while he was in the States, and Kiki has now given some out too.  If you've tried some and you're reading - leave a comment and let us know what you thought. 

Kanpai!
Jess
Posted by Jay
27 October 2010

With the continuation of Kikifest 2010 we took an unplanned Saturday trip to Universal Studios Japan in Osaka.  Again as Jess wrote in the previous blog post, Osaka's subway system was not Gaijin friendly so we took a cab.  Usually cab rides here are uneventful, but our older driver took us along the river through the industrial parts of Osaka.  It was interesting to see a different side of Japan than the busy city that we are used to (we also were hoping he wasn't sizing up our feet for concrete shoes with how long it took us to get there).

We arrived at Universal Studios shortly after it opened and luckily we had purchased tickets the evening before at a hotel as the lines to purchase tickets were really long.  The majority of the rides are meant for older kids/adults, but that didn't stop Ella from riding most of them.


We started the day at the Spider-man ride as the wait time was only posted at 30 minutes (a very short time at Japan parks we have found) and to our surprise we were on the ride in 15 minutes!  So this ride is old-school comic book spidey and in 3D.  Ella would not wear the glasses to make the ride 3D and it was probably a good thing with all the bad guys coming at you and other visual effects.  Jess spent a lot of the ride covering Ella's eyes, but Ella was a trooper and liked the movement of the ride. 

So next we went to the Back to the Future ride thinking that it would not be as scary.  Well after another shorter than posted wait we were in a DeLorean and chasing after Biff through time.  Part of our time travel was through a volcano with a T-rex, and Ella can tell you all about that...


While Jess, Ella and I were riding rides Kiki and Abby were exploring some other parts of the park.  They watched a Hello Kitty concert, did some shopping and saw some other characters.


 

When we first talked to Ella about the Jurassic Park water ride she was all for it...then we started walking past it and she got hesitant so it was a no go.  She did want to get her picture taken by the T-rex head so we did that on our way through.  More on Jurassic Park later.

Universal Studios did have some areas for little kids like the Peanut's area and The Wizard of Oz.  We next headed to Peppermint Patty's water rafting slide, which Ella and I went down, with no bathing suits on.  We rode on a raft and both got our shorts a little wet.  Then on to the Wizard of Oz carousel with Abby and Jess.  Abby loved the carousel and probably wanted to go again.  With a brief stop for a lunch of chicken nuggets, burgers and fries we hurried through so we could catch the Toto show.  This was a cute Wizard of Oz show similar to the pet shows at Sea World with lots of trained animals (dogs, cats, birds, pigs, ducks etc.).  The girls loved seeing the animals, but of course all the speaking parts were in Japanese  so we were slightly lost on the whole plot.


By this time Ella was sad that she didn't get to go on the dinosaur ride, and after a lot of explaining that there were scary parts of the ride she still wanted to go.  So, since it was a water ride I volunteered to go with her.  This was the longest wait we had for a ride, but it was well worth it.  Even though I covered her eyes for the scary parts she was very proud that she went on the ride, and barely got wet.  We also had to take another picture with the T-rex since she went on the ride.




Ella thought that since she went on such a big girl ride that she deserved a churro.  One of the fun things about Japan is that they sometimes have different and sometimes very interesting flavors of what we would call normal food at home.  The two churro flavors we tried were a caramel chocolate and a purple one with green frosting.  The green frosting turned out to be green tea and overall was quite tasty.  Jess described the caramel chocolate churro as tasting like dry frosting out of a can, I thought it tasted pretty good.


After the churro Ella had to get her picture taken with Jaws and Kiki even though we didn't do the ride. 

Then onto the Peanut's play area with roller-coaster.  While Jess and Ella waited in line for the ride, the rest of us played in the indoor play area that mirrored the world of the Peanut's gang.  Abby had a blast climbing and running around since she had spent most of the day in the stroller.  Ella and Jess had lots of fun on the coaster.


We then set off to do some shopping and take some pictures.  Luckily right outside of the park is the Universal City Walk (a small outdoor shopping area) and a Hard Rock Cafe.  We were all ready for some greasy burgers and fries (and a beer for me).  We also found some cool gear in the shop.  The Osaka Hard Rock logo had a sweet Samurai on it.




Very busy and fun day!  After that, it was back to the hotel for sleep - on Sunday Kikifest continued!

Kanpai!
Jay