Monthly Archive for March, 2008

Photos from Kaga City and Environs

As I mentioned previously I went to an onsen hotel in Kaga city last weekend, which I chose simply because it was cheap. This isn’t always the best criterion. “What’s in Ishikawa prefecture then?” I asked. “Mountains,” said the travel agent. “They have mountains, I think.” They do have mountains. But they are very far away. Kaga city sits in the middle of a flat plain (fringed with mountains) and is basically a bit of a dump. It consists of various box-like buildings, chain restaurants, convenience stores and featureless shopping malls and overlooking it all is a massive statue of Kannon-sama which is the essence of pure kitsch. The statue is gold in color (not real gold mind you) and has a red light on the forehead that comes on at night. I was expecting a quaint little onsen town but what I discovered was sprawling scene of urban desolation, haunted by very dodgy looking kids in tracksuits and (most excellently) sporting mullet haircuts. Well, the hotel was fine. Nice hot spring baths and good food. Just not much of a view from the veranda.

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From Kaga, you can take a tourist bus to various sites of dubious value. Natadera (那谷寺) was probably the best of the pick - a large wooded complex that takes a good couple of hours to get around. The garden there was (as Buddhist gardens tend to be) good value and worth the extra ¥200 on top of the temple entrance fee.

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Zourokuen (蔵六園) was basically a house full of old stuff, most impressive being the hina doll collection. They also had a nice garden. And then there was a bit of seaside and a walk among the pines before heading back to haunt the shopping malls of Kaga (with those kids in tracksuits I felt like I was back on Teeside) till my train arrived.

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Now I’m back in Kyoto and the cherry blossom is blooming… but no word from Kageyama about this year’s hanami party. The man has completely vanished from our lives! Here are some more pictures of a drinking party I had with my students at NEC in Osaka. It was the last class on Thursday so we went out for a few and I missed my last train and Hiroshi and Yasu were good enough to stay out with me till dawn. Needless to say I was feeling a bit rough yesterday. All’s well now though.

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Now I just have time for a couple of links. Here’s something Kumar Sivabramanian sent me on a landmark case in comics history. Kumar writes: For those who don’t know, Jerry Siegel died almost penniless, and was a mail courier for much of his later career, as I recall. Siegels Awarded Superman Rights

And here’s a very special message from a very special person to the people of Tibet. LINK

Saturday Night’s Party @ Joao

I got back from Ishikawa yesterday, but haven’t had a chance to sort out my pics yet. Be prepared tomorrow for a full accounting of my trip north to beautiful Kaga City (Hokuriku’s answer to Middlesbrough perhaps). Well, maybe not a full accounting. That might not be wise. Here however, are some pictures from Saturday night at Joao (or at least the ones I can show). I can’t claim credit for all of them but I think I took the one on the left here, and I’m quite pleased with it. Actually my consistent (some would say incessant) picture taking and blogging of said pictures does have some uses; it actually persuaded the chap below to put his shirt back on for example. Let that be a deterrent to you all.
Anyway, it was a great night and everyone was on top form. But where was Kageyama. What he up to, hmmm? There is some fairly pointless commentary on the first few pictures below if you hover your mouse over them, but after a while I got bored so it petres out towards the end. Kind of like this post….

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Happy Easter

Tonight is party time at Joao for Nana and Eri (AKA: Janet Jackson) ’s birthdays. Then I’m off to Ishikawa for the next two days to soak in outdoor hotsprings and eat crab. Lovely.

Before I go, there’s a fresh post up on Deep Kyoto of an old favorite Hiraganakan. Good value for your yen there, and tasty too. And here’s the latest meditation from Hozouji.

Nature sustains me

Here it is in kanji and then romaji:

大自然や
多くの人に
支えられて
生きる私

daishizen ya
ooku no hito ni
sasaerarete
ikiru watashi

And here’s a rough translation:

The world of nature
And a host of people
Sustain me
And I live

Isn’t that a nice message now for Easter: the ancient spring festival of Eostre, goddess of the dawn? Let us give thanks and praise, now that winter is over, for the continuing bounty of Mother Earth, and for those people near and dear, who help us to celebrate the continuing renewal of life. Happy Easter to you! Now somebody pass me an egg!

Related Article: Cadbury’s Cream Egg Day (Easter 2006)

A New Baby, Beer and Other Sundries

Baby Rowan

Congratulations to old pal Rik Abel and Adrienne Copithorne on the birth of their new baby Rowan Alexander on March 19th, which coincidentally also happens to be Rik’s birthday. Hurrah!

Deep Kyoto is back!

It’s spring and time to bring Deep Kyoto out of hibernation with a new article on Cafe Proverbs [15:17], the new vegan phoenix that has risen from the ashes of Cafe Peace. I went down there at the end of last month and having mentioned my blog, was introduced to the owner, one Marre, a charming fellow and quite a Rennaisance man (that’s him on the right with his wife). While talking to Marre I was overheard by another customer, who was courteous enough to introduce himself as a reader of Deep Kyoto by the name of Thomas Bertrand. As it happens, Thomas also writes a blog on Kyoto by the name of la riviere aux canards (Kamogawa sounds awfully romantic in French, don’t it?) which he has been writing for a good three years now and as a result he has been employed by a French publisher to write a travel guide to the city. It just goes to show what’s possible if you stick at something… Anyway, his blog is worth a look if your French is up to it. Or like me, you could just look at the pretty pictures. LINK

The 12th Japanese Beer Tasting 2008

Paul Sparks held his twelfth and final (?) Japanese beer tasting at Chez Sparks in Ichigaya, Tokyo last Saturday evening, thus ending a long run of enjoyably exhausting parties that first began in Fukushima-ken back in 1995. 48 beers were tasted, blind taste-testings held, quizzes quizzed, buzzers buzzed and a heck of a lot of cheese was consumed. I love cheese with beer! As usual, my old friends Chris Cotter and Graham Chave were also present as well as a host of other regulars : drool-worthy Mayumi of Beer Bar Bitter, big Mark of the massive leather jacket, some newer good-characters such as Henry and Sean who I hadn’t met before and my team-mate Rei who was a total star in the quiz. And my team won! Amazing. I forgot to claim a prize in the end but I don’t really care, it was so much fun. And I got two taste tests right too (!) - correctly identifying four beers each time in a blind tasting. As Paul took pains to point out I’ve always been utter crap at these in the past so I was super pleased with myself on this occasion. I shall miss the annual beer tastings, they were a great event and a good opportunity to catch up with old friends, and I shall miss Paul too, one of my oldest friends in Japan (I first met him in a Tengu izakaya in Koriyama city back in 1997), he has gradually gained status over the years as one of my bestest (and most supportive) mates. He and his wife are moving back to Australia later this year so I think I a wee Lambe-tour of Australia may be on the cards in 2009! Anyway, a big お疲れ様 to Paul and Kaori, they obviously worked super hard to make the beer-tasting a really great night. Here’s some piccies (the one of big Mark making team-mates Rei and I look like hobbits is worth waiting for), there’s some commentary on most of the pics if you hover your mouse over them, or you can click on them for a closer look.

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UPDATE (March 21st): Just got a mail from Paul today which reads: Absolutely poptastic having you stay for a couple of nights. Sunday night was very natsukashii. Baeren’s winter ale Ursus, which is a weizen bock won with 14.2 points and Sankt Gallen’s barley wine came second with 14.1. Those points are out of 20. Paul told us on the night that Baeren’s future is in doubt however as there was an explosion at the factory recently during which the owner was killed, and prompting me upon tasting the beer to declare it “dead good”.

Holy Crap

I saw this video on the imminent collapse of the U.S. dollar today and thought “Holy Crap!”. “U.S. balance of payments deficits is so strong and irreversible, that we must accept that at some future date there will be a run against the dollar. Probably the kind of disorderly run that precipitates a global financial crisis.” Dr. Paul A Samuelson (Nobel Prize winner in economics) said that in 2005. Obviously some big changes lie ahead…

GOOD.

Ume 2008

Well, I’m afraid I still can’t be bothered blogging for proper, as I’m tired and sleepy and I already wrote this once and then half-way-thru the server went down and I lost most of what I’d written and you know things I want to blog for proper about, I want to blog for proper about - proper like… So, tomorrow, ok? There’s so much I have to tell you! In the meantime, here are some pictures from Gosho (the “Imperial Palace Park”) yesterday (day before yesterday now…). It’s the tale-end of the ume-blossom season so I went and strolled around and took some pictures until the worst hayfever I’ve had so far this year drove me indoors. If you double-click on the pictures you can see them bigger (and perchance better).

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Also here are some links for ya:

From Boingboing - I really want these “6 Stages of the Drunken Salaryman” cellphone charms. I think I have been or seen every one of these guys.

Also found on Boingboing, are these marvellous quotes from the most charming member of the “British” royal family; Phil the Greek.

And finally, last year I remember reading about Arthur C. Clarke’s 90th birthday and thinking “Golly-gee!” (or words to that effect) “Is he still going?”. And then also being amazed that my dad is the same age. Well, though happily, my dad is still with us (and still sprightly) the old Grand-daddy of Science Fiction has passed on. He had a bloody good innings though. I first encountered A. C. Clarke under a parasol on a beach in Shri Lanka debunking mysteries for his marvellous “Mysterious World” T.V. series when I was a kid. And then I read his novels and found them - thrilling. Mr. Neil Gaiman put a link up today to a super short story by Mr. Clarke (it’ll take you five minutes) that although, not really Science Fiction, is a super, simple and superb sample of the short story form - enjoy: The Nine Billion Names of God.

Tibet

お久しぶり。I’ve been somewhat tied up with this and then but will write a proper blog post soon. In the meantime, this seemed important, so up it goes - the recent campaign from avaaz.org.

After decades of repression under Chinese rule, the Tibetan people’s frustrations have burst onto the streets in protests and riots. With the spotlight of the upcoming Olympic Games now on China, Tibetans are crying out to the world for change.

The Chinese government has said that the protesters who have not yet surrendered “will be punished”. Its leaders are right now considering a crucial choice between escalating brutality or dialogue that could determine the future of Tibet, and China.

We can affect this historic choice–China does care about its international reputation. China’s President Hu Jintao needs to hear that the ‘Made in China’ brand and the upcoming Olympics in Beijing can succeed only if he makes the right choice. But it will take an avalanche of global people power to get his attention–and we need it in the next 48 hours.

The Tibetan Nobel peace prize winner and spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama has called for restraint and dialogue: he needs the world’s people to support him. Click below now to sign the petition–and tell absolutely everyone you can right away–our goal is 1 million voices united for Tibet:

http://www.avaaz.org/en/tibet_end_the_violence/2.php

China’s economy is totally dependent on “Made in China” exports that we all buy, and the government is keen to make the Olympics in Beijing this summer a celebration of a new China, respected as a leading world power. China is also a very diverse country with a brutal past and has reason to be concerned about its stability — some of Tibet’s rioters killed innocent people. But President Hu must recognize that the greatest danger to Chinese stability and development comes from hardliners who advocate escalating repression, not from Tibetans who seek dialogue and reform.

We will deliver our petition directly to Chinese officials in London, New York, and Beijing, but it must be a massive number before we deliver the petition. Please forward this email to your address book with a note explaining to your friends why this is important, or use our tell-a-friend tool to email your address book–it will come up after you sign the petition.

The Tibetan people have suffered quietly for decades. It is finally their moment to speak–we must help them be heard.

Here are some links with more information on the Tibetan protests and the Chinese response:
BBC News: UN Calls for Restraint in Tibet
Human Right Watch: China Restrain from Violently Attacking Protestors
Associated Press: Tibet Unrest Sparks Global Reaction
New York Times: China Takes Steps to Thwart Reporting on Tibet Protests

Morpheus for President

Somebody has put up the text of a classic Sandman sequence to dramatize the ongoing struggle for power between Obama and Clinton ~ and it so works!

LINK