Wendy Sidetracked

Just another WordPress site

Kyoto Day 3

July20

Today was our final day in Kyoto, and we decided to visit two of it’s most famous sites: Fushimi Inari Shrine and Nijo Castle. I had been raving about my last visit to the shrine for years, and was very excited to share the experience with Lindsay. The shrine is immensely popular with the Japanese: It draws almost 3 million visitors over Japanese New Year’s, and has spawned over 30,000 ‘imitation’ shrines. It also inspired the ‘Gates’ exhibit by Christo and Jeanne-Claude in Central Park in 2005. The shrine is the head shrine of Inari, the patron of business, closely associated with rice, and pilgrims visit the site to pray for wealth. We arrived at the shrine early on Thursday morning, and were struck by the number of elderly Japanese visitors, climbing the 4km path on their own.

Gates at Fushimi Inari Shrine

Bamboo at Fushimi Inari Shrine

Gorgeous bamboo forests


Bamboo at Fushimi Inari Shrine

Bamboo out of focus


Me in Gates at Fushimi Inari Shrine

Linds at the foot of the gates


Statue at Fushimi Inari Shrine

The fox, or Kitsune in Japanese, are closely associated with Inari

Statue at Fushimi Inari Shrine

Layers upon layers of gates

We took the train to Kyoto station, which is actually worth some photos in and of itself. It was designed by the Japanese architect Hara HIroshi, and completed in 1997.


Kyoto Train Station


Kyoto Train Station

We walked to the Higashi-Honganji temple, an enormous complex in the middle of Kyoto – the highlight (for us anyway), was some of the beautiful woodwork:


Higashi-Honganji Temple


Woodwork at Higashi-Honganji Temple


Woodwork at Higashi-Honganji Temple

We headed to our final destination before departing Kyoto. Along the way, we passed this totally baffling and somewhat frightening public service poster. This country continues to fascinate us!


Bizarre Police Recruiting Sign?

Nijo Castle was built in 1601 as the Imperial residence of the Tokugawa Shoguns (though various buildings have burnt down and been replaced in subsequent years). Nanomaro Palace, on the grounds, is built almost entirely of Hinoki Cypress, and is decorated with wall paintings by artists from the Hano School. The palace contained a series of rooms, with the innermost reserved for the most important guests (the lowly guests were relegated to the outermost rooms). Here are some highlights of the grounds (photographs weren’t allowed in the castle:


Wall at Nijo Castle

Nijo Castle

Garden at Nijo Castle


Woodwork at Nijo Castle

Maple tree at Nijo Castle

And with this final visit, we departed on the Shinkansen to Tokyo – off to Hong Kong!

Shinkanzen Sign



posted under Japan, Kyoto | View Comments

Kyoto Day 2

July15

Today was our only full day in Kyoto (yesterday and tomorrow will be travel days), so we resolved to see as much of this culturally rich city as possible. The rain was back – which put a bit of a damper on things (no pun intended, seriously). The Kamo river, which runs through Kyoto, was raging.


Raging kamo river

We made our way to the southeast part of the city, to visit temples, shrines and the historical district of Kyoto. We began our day at the Sanjusangen Temple, where the Japanese tradition of archery competitions, generically referred to as Toh-shiya, was thought to have started. The most exciting contest was to see how many times you could hit the target in 24 hours. Incredibly, one contestant successfully fired 8,000 arrows on target (out of 13,000) during this time period. Here are some images of the temple:
Gate at Sanjusangen-do Temple

Sanjusangen-do Temple (fuzzy on purpose, we’re playing around with the effects on our camera)


Temple at Sanjusangen-do Temple

Fuzzy again

Woodwork at Sanjusangen-do Temple

Woodwork


Pond at Sanjusangen-do Temple


Lantern

A lantern and some flowers, fuzzy style

We continued towards Kiyomizudera, a neighbouring temple, and happened upon this graveyard on the way.

Kyoto graveyard

Here are some shots of Kiyomizudera:

Bonzai garden at Kiyomizudera Temple

Bonsai Garden


Pagoda at Kiyomizudera Temple

Pagoda


Kiyomizudera Temple

Temple


Rope at Kiyomizudera Temple  


Catching water at Kiyomizudera Temple


For lunch (and a reprieve from the monsoon like winds and rain), Lindsay enjoyed Yaki Soba (pictured below);

Yaki soba


And I enjoyed Octopus Balls …

Octopus balls


Wendy eating balls. Octopus balls


The rain subsided, and we wandered the historical streets of Eastern Kyoto, which is full of gorgeous shops, teahouses, and cobblestone alleyways – it’s really pretty magical. Here are some highlights:


Car reflected in mirror


Sannenzaka steps

Sannanzaka Steps


Many porcelain happy cats

Welcome, Welcome …


Old Kyoto alleyway

Old Kyoto Alleyway


Bamboo and reeds


Sign in Kyoto

And here are some shots from the Yasaka Shrine, our next destination:

Yasaka Shrine


Yasaka Shrine


Maple keys at Yasaka Shrine


Here are some shots from Chi-on Temple:

Pond and bridge at Chion-in Temple


Chion-in Temple


And Nanzenji Temple (we visited a lot of temples)

Gate at Nanzenji Temple


Roof at Nanzenji Temple


Roots at Nanzenji Temple

(These roots reminded me of our Knorr print ad in Canada about 8 years ago!)

Tree at Nanzenji Temple

A tree grows in Nanzenji


After about 8 hours of exploration, we walked home along the riverbed, peppered with granite bridges.

Teenage girl crossing granite bridge


posted under Japan, Kyoto | View Comments

Kyoto Day 1

July15

Kyoto Day 1 was really more like a rainy travel day. After a whirlwind five days in Tokyo, Linds and I boarded the Shinkansen, bound for Kyoto. The entire 500km (check) journey took just over 2 hours, and was so fast that I actually got a bit of motion sickness, which I haven’t had since I was about six! We arrived in Kyoto in the pouring rain … it has been raining here quite a bit, and based on some quick internet research, we learned that Japan has a rainy season. And it is now. On the bright side, it means that it’s not quite as hot, but the humidity is still doing wonderful things to my hair. We bought some convenience store umbrellas (a bargain here compared to NY … high quality clear plastic for only $4) and headed over to Nijo castle, which had come highly recommended to us by Lindsay’s Mom. We headed to what can only be described as a Japanese diner for lunch. It was awesome. After purchasing a $5 meal ticket (we are becoming experts in this capacity), we were served miso soup, salad and beef teriyaki … and an egg (we weren’t sure what to do with the egg, so added it to the beef teriyaki …). Excellent value.

Japanese Diner's Ticket Machine

Meal Selection


Beef dish at diner

Japanese Diner Food

The rain became so strong that we cut our trip short and visited the Kyoto Manga Museum instead. Yes, that’s right – there’s a museum dedicated to manga. It was a bit of a misnomer really – the ‘museum’ was basically a glorified library with a small exhibit outlining the history of manga in Japan and abroad. We learned, through an interactive map, that manga came to Canada via Germany (?).


Ad for manag museum

An Ad for the Manga Museum

For dinner, we decided to expand our horizons and check out the latest food craze sweeping the nation – Italian food. Seriously. A bit of history. The last time that I was here, in 2005, the country was obsessed with French food. You couldn’t walk a block without encountering a Creperie or Boulangerie. Walking around in 2010, you would never know. Trends die hard here – despite the stubborn resilience of the croissant as a breakfast food of choice, French is apparently passe. Which carved the way for the latest national food obsession – Italian. Even the hipster Japanese restaurant we ate at in Shibuya was serving Spaghetti Marinara, and the Kyoto Hyatt has an Italian restaurant inside. Our Italian dining experience was actually really good – the Japanese share the Italian obsession with high quality ingredients, and the pizza we ordered was delectable. Interestingly, the wine list had pictures of the labels on it – I had never seen that before, but it was all class. Lindsay and I are placing our bets on Spanish food (tapas in particular), as the next cuisine to seize the imagination of a nation.


Visual wine list

posted under Japan, Kyoto | View Comments