Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Girls Gone Wild...

So we had a house guest for five nights, although I wish it was for longer...my friend Leigh stayed with us since her apartment was broken into and she didn`t want to stay there until the locks were changed. So, we did some rearranging and squeezed her in, literally. It was so much fun, like a slumber party for five days. On Saturday we put my hair in curlers and then we went out to the local hang out (I with a scarf on my head to cover the curlers but it was still cute), and when we took the curlers out the next day it was soo cute...on Sunday night since we couldn't go out drinking as we had almost every other night, we decided to perm my hair so that it would look as cute as the curlers had made it...BIG MISTAKE. If you ever find yourself in a drug store considering a home perm, STOP...look away, do not get sucked in...needless to say I looked like a poodle, and not just any poodle, a poodle from the trailer park and my hair was dead. So I have cut it all off! I like it, its a nice change.

Take Care

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

SEPTEMBER

Well, so far September is creeping along and it feels like the last two weeks have taken forever, which isn't a bad thing but usually we look back and think "my god, where did the last month, two months, six months go?"

So far in September we climbed Mt Fuji, for the second time and thank god we made it to the top. It was much easier this time and much more rewarding. We started at the fifth station, 12km up from where we started the first time, and since it was the first weekend after the season officially closed there were only two busses going up and after luck smiling in us, we got onto a bus and after a traffic jam we were at the fifth station around 2:30pm. Now most people who made the night hike leave the 5th at 7-9pm so that they don't freeze at the top. Knowing this, we waited at the fifth station but got bored and decided we would start to climb at 4:30 and just go 'really slow'. We went really slow taking lots of breaks and enjoying the view. We saw Mt. Fuji's shadow as the sun was setting cast on the thick clouds that had enveloped the bottom of the mountain and that was amazing. We continued up and marveled at the stars, since it was raining and storming the whole way up last time we didn't get a chance to see the stars, but they were clearer and closer than we've ever seen them before and they were EVERYWHERE. The path was not nearly as crowded as it had been last time and we were ahead of the snake of people we could see below us, we sat down a lot partly to waste time and partly to take it all in, it was amazing. The best part of the trip and the part I will never forget was running into a Japanese guy, about our age, dressed as a giant bowling pin and climbing Mt. Fuji. It put the biggest smile on my face and everytime we would see them I would smile. It was the greatest site, many people can say they've climbed Fuji, but not many can say they saw a walking bowling pin while they did it. We arrive to the top at 2 am, THREE hours before the sun was suppose to rise, and as we expected we would, we FROZE. Not that we weren't prepared, wearing our Canadian tried and true long underwear and layers upon layers, we froze, sitting we froze, standing we froze, doing jumping jacks we froze. Lets just say it is freezing up there, it was around 1 degree above zero but the wind would blow and cut right through every layer we had on, but the sun rose and everything warmed up immediately. The sunrise was truly amazing and can only be witnessed, but we took a lot of pictures. The hike down is as tortorous as the way up and after being awake for over 24 hours we were exhausted. But we made it down and had to wait for three hours for the bus back down. It is amazing that getting off the most famous mountain in Japan and one of the most famous in the world is so difficult, although this time we new what we were doing and what to expect I was still flabbergasted.

The next weekend we went to a friends apartment, hers is WAY bigger than ours, for a wine party and that was fun, we played cherades, and lets just say that some people have enough imagination to make the game fun! Denis was hurting the next day so I ventured out on a girls night with my friend Leigh...it was SOO much fun. We went to this bar that plays live music and they had a rockibiliy concert, it was great.

We also went to Kamakura for our long weekend and saw the archery festival which was pretty amazing, and saw a traditional Japanese lantern festival which was also really cool. The next day we walked around Kamakura and saw many temples, the beach, and the Great Buddha. It was a good day all in all, but I think we are in temple overload. Kamakura was very beautiful and thankfully the weather cooperated for the most part although another typhoon was passing by.

So that's it, that is September so far. I'll post some pictures soon - check out sarahanddenis.toadfire.com for the pics!

Take Care
Sarah and Denis

Monday, September 11, 2006

Just an Update

Hello!

So it is the middle of September and not much new has happened, we are taking it easy as August was a very busy, and expensive, month. We have plans to go to Kamakura to see the Daibutsu (the Great Buddha) and the Hachiman-gu Matsuri, where they display horseback archery as samurai warriors used to. School has started again after summer break for most schools, although preschool and conversation classes went as usual but Denis' schedule is much more hectic now. All of our friends have returned from summer vacation, except one - Dave if you read this we miss you, drop us a line - and life is returning to normal. We went to a friend's house for a wine tasting party on Friday and it was the third time since I have been in Japan that we drank wine and it tasted REALLY good, Saturday Denis was recouperating and I went to a local club where they have live music and it was Rockabilly night, I have never seen so many mohawks and skinny jeans in one room. But it was great and I had so much fun. Sunday we chilled at home since it was killer hot and went for Indian food with friends for dinner.

We are approaching the six month mark, I can't believe it has been six months already it has gone so fast. We, especially me, are missing our family and friends. I miss girls nights, and Sunday brunch and BBQ's and patio dinners, or just going for coffee. I miss strolling along 17th Avenue or Stephen Ave and getting virgin mango martinis...I miss inside jokes and backyard gatherings. I really miss you guys, we really miss everyone - so write us, send us a picture, or just send a thought. But you are all in our thoughts.

Take care and we'll talk to you soon.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

AUGUST

The first weekend in August was the big fireworks (hanabi) festival in Ashikaga, the city we live in. Ashikaga is famous for its hanabi festival and we are told 200,000 - 300,000 people come every year (the city's population is about 120,000), people line the river bank, you can sit on the ground for free, people set out their tarps to reserve their spots days in advance, or you can pay to sit on the 'stage', an elevated platform. Our students, Kimiko (my student) and her grand daughter Sakura (Denis' student) invited us to join them on the platform. So we watched the fireworks from the elevated platform with their family and they were so kind, they fed us until we thought we were going to burst especially since I was wearing an obi that was holding my yukata on but squeezing the life out of me. The fireworks were great, two hours of pretty amazing fireworks, good company and good food. (check out Ashikaga festivals for the pictures).

The next weekend we left for Hachijojima. Island paradise, except a typhoon was heading straight for it and we were planning on camping...but the typhoon turned and headed away from us although we got quite a bit of rain and made for some awesome clouds and waves, and the second typhoon that was right behind it fizzled out before it got to us. The campground was great, far better than we expected for a free campground and ten steps from the ocean, with the nicest beach in Hachijojima right there...hachijojima isn't a great beach place most of the swimming spots are in harbour like areas where large cement tetras break the waves enough so you can swim but it was great all the same. The second night we were there baby sea turtles hatched, although no one was there to see them - they snuck out at 2 or 3 am although a few early birds saw the last few slowpokes at 5 am, we were still sleeping, but it was pretty cool none the less. That day we hooked up with an Australian tour guide (and pub owner) and he took us on a tour of the WWII tunnels and a waterfall. It was great, the tunnels were amazing and it was hard to believe they were dug by hand, some of the spaces were huge and supported with cement. The waterfall was quite a hike up but it was very nice and you could swim in the little pool below it which was great to cool us off and clean us up after messing about in dirty tunnels. That night we went on a glowing mushroom tour, and we got to see glowing mushrooms which grow all over Hachijo, but the pictures didn't turn out. It was really dark and I couldn't see what setting we were on - it was one time I wished we had a simple point and click camera...but we got a cool poster. We rented a car for two days and toured all around the island, checking out some more cool waterfalls and onsens (public baths - like hot springs that are segregated and no bathing suits) we also saw the traditional housing and the wall built by exiles to protect themselves from the crashing waves. We also drove up as high as we could to one of the two mountains, Hachijo Fuji, and climbed the 1277 stairs to the top. Although the top was in a cloud and we couldn't see the crater, or anything else for that matter, it was really fun. It was so humid that raindrops were forming on our eyelashes and arm hairs and sometimes Denis got too far ahead and I couldn't see him...it was that foggy. After we gave up the car we just relaxed on our beach, the weather had gotten much better and we were dying of heat now. It was SOO hot and SOOO humid, but we stayed near the ocean breeze and in the ocean and took a lot of cold showers, I wouldn't have taken a hot one even if we could. We got a great tan and then a sunburn and then a sunburn on top of our sunburn even with sunscreen on, we just didn't have anywhere to escape since we were camping and all. But we were all right. Our last day there we found a place where we could make Kihachijo, a traditional fabric made old school with a loom from silk died with plants found only on Hachijo, it was way harder than it looked but very rewarding when I was done. Well it was back to work after, but it was a much needed, very relaxing break.

The next weekend, Aug 26 -27 we went to the Dai Chochin Matsuri in Isshiki City, Aichi prefecture. We left Friday night to drive halfway there, we stopped driving around midnight and couldn't find a hotel that wasn't booked so we decided to try a love hotel. A love hotel, for those of you who don't know, can be rented for a few hours or for the night and is where Japanese people go to make love...since they live with their parents and/or grand parents and/or children in tiny apartments, they go to a love hotel when they need some privacy. The whole idea behind a love hotel is PRIVACY...you do not see or speak to anyone, you press a button or open a door which promptly locks behind you and then you are stuck until you pay and the door unlocks. Unlike regular hotels you pay after, but these hotels are awesome. They have huge beds, nice bathrooms usually with sweet jacuzzi tubs, all sorts of extras, toothbrush, hairbrush, bath stuff, condoms...a big TV with Japanese porn - which is hilarious at best...we saw a girl getting it on with some outdoor patio furniture...anyways it is a great deal, way cheaper than regular hotels. We got up the next morning and drove the rest of the way to Isshiki to see the giant paper lanterns. The lanterns were giant, 10 - 12 meters high and about 5m in diameter. And there were huge candles that they put in them at night to light them up. There were carnival games and carnival food, and traditional dancing and drumming...it was very cool. After the festival we drove towards Nagoya, Japan's fourth largest city, and stayed in another love hotel. The next day we went to Nagoya castle and walked around Nagoya. I have to say I think Nagoya is my favourite big city in Japan, it has everything you want but doesn't feel too big and has a very young vibe to it. There was a festival going on downtown so we walked around there and then went for dinner at a Moroccan restaurant - it was great. We then drove back to the same love hotel we stayed in the first night, neither of us had to work until Monday afternoon and since we now knew the drill we took our time before driving back to Ashikaga.

On August 31 our company had a BBQ for the preschool students and their parents, it was a lot of fun. It was in Ashikaga near the dam in the mountains. We played games and played in a little river that was much stronger than it was before, all the kids fell down and got soaked, and ate a ton of food.

That was August, super busy...lots to see...