Photos Here Day 3 started rather late. We slept well and met up with Masaki in the afternoon. We took the train to Yokohama and went to a store "Uniqlo" to get Wayne some thermals, in preparation for our trip to Sapporo, as we will probably be outside for long periods of time and it's very cold there. The "Heattech" is Japanese technology and is very warm. They had a lot of it. They even had slacks with the technology. I'm wondering is Sapporo will be super crowded this year, since the winter olympics are taking place so nearby in South Korea. After the store, we met Masaki's friend Koji. He works in an office for studying and reducing environmental impact during construction. He works a typical 12 hour Japanese work day. Not even joking. 12 hours is the minimum people work. Because of this, they don't eat supper until after 9PM. That's the usual dinner time. Koji likes his job a lot, he said, so it doesn't bother him. Masaki talks a ...
Photos Here! Where to begin? There was a lot going on at the Winter Festival. Snow sculptures. Ice sculptures. High jump ski and snowboard competitions. Cheerleaders for the Nippon Fighters Baseball team. Yeah, the pro baseball teams have cheerleaders. Do American baseball teams have cheerleaders? I honestly can't remember. I haven't been to a pro baseball game since I went to the Atlanta Braves game with my brother and sister-in-law. That was... almost 10 years ago. I don't remember. Anyway, moving on... Art in snow and ice, food. Food. and more food stalls. Including grills scallops, grilled in the shell, which I haven't seen before. An automaton singer. Her voice is not prerecorded: it is actually entirely computer generated, and her sold-out performance is animated. She's called Snow-Miku. We didn't get to see it's show, as it was sold out. As was nearly all of the merchandise. Extremely popular. There was a live radio performance of musicians, ...
Photos Here! We didn't get a lot of sleep. On Day 5, by the time we made it back to Yokohama and everything from eating Kaigan curry, it was already past 10PM. On Day 6, we got up extra early. It was very kind and understanding of Masaki and Wayne, that I requested to leave extra early in order to try and dodge the insane morning rush around Tokyo. Because pretty much any train line that passes through the hub of Tokyo on a weekday is going to be crammed to the limit with daily commuters. You can see many videos online of train workers literally shoving people on the train. No, thank you. It ended up working out. We had a more leisurely time travelling, since we weren't in a hurry and gave ourselves plenty of time. Even at 6:30 in the morning, it was still pretty crowded. But after we got to the hub and starting moving away from entering Tokyo, it eased up. Narita airport is pretty far out in the country, actually, so it took a while to get there. We landed in Sappor...
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