Japan Section

of Year 2000 Trip

Travel and Tourism, Vacation Guide
 
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From Vancouver, Canada I took a morning bus trip to the Seattle airport. I left Seattle, Washington on March 9th at 12:50 PM. Due to the International Date Line crossing, my 9 1/2 hour flight arrived at Narita Airport on March 10.
After a couple nights in Tokyo - as seen on my Tokyo 2000 page -- I was off for some long-range train travel. I had forgotten just how many stairs there are in Japan! I got very good at attaching and un-attaching my bags together at each stairway. This usually happened more than once in each train transfer. In between stairways, I clipped everything back together and rely on my luggage wheels to get to the next obstacle.
My previous Japanese travels were in the summer. I was constantly impressed with the calm non-perspiring nature of the Japanese people. In the summer heat and humidity I would be bathed in moisture as I sat in a train car full of tie-wearing salary men. I seemed to be the only one bothered by the heat.
During this March visit I continued my admiration. While the outside temperatures are late-winter mild, the trains and buildings are often heated to a higher than comfortable level. I again seemed to be the only person shedding coat and sweater as I struggled with my luggage. The local population was still calmly buttoned up in their winter clothing including scarves and gloves.
They remain far cooler than I did.
I travelled from March 12 to 18 on an unlimited travel distance Japan Rail Pass. This is an excellent deal considering the very high price of transportation in Japan. I did almost 5000 KM of railway travel in Japan!
I stayed in Youth Hostels, business hotels and a Japanese-style Minshuku. The secret seems to be ignoring the guide book information and instead relying on the always-helpful local tourist information office ladies. (Of course that also means arriving before the local office closes. This is sometimes difficult).
My Japan Rail experience started with a Sunday morning Shinkansen train from Tokyo station to the south. Eight hours and more than a thousand kilometres later I was in Kumamoto. It is the third largest city on the southern island of Kyushu. There is a fine old castle. As in many Japanese cities there are several arcade-style shopping streets.
Kumamoto Castle Kumamoto Shopping area
I took a Limited Express train from Kumamoto to Kagoshima.
Kagoshima is famous for its Satsuma warriors who were largely responsible for the mid-19th century Meiji restoration that opened Japan to the West.
It is also famous for its Sakurajima volcano that dominates its harbour. This volcano was active in the nineties and produced considerable death and destruction. Smoke could be seen and smelled during my brief ferryboat visit.
Inland Sea Japan Kagoshima
In the late afternoon, I headed to the South-East Coast of Kyushu to spend a night in Myazaki. It is a major beach destination but I simply made an overnight stop and then moved on.
I took another "Limited Express" for a lazy 4 1/2 hour trip 340 km to Kokura station. Then I hopped on the brand-new "Hikari RailStar" for the 623 km trip to Osaka in just 2 hours 20 min. This Shinkansen train reached speeds of nearly 300 km/hour.
During my week of travel on 26 trains I took a lot of train and station photos. Here is a sample:
Komachi Shinkansen Ariake limited express Shinkansen Kumamoto Japan local train Hakiri Shinkansen Nagano Shinkansen MAX Double Decker Shinkansen

The next night was in the city of Nara.
Nara remains my favourite Japanese tourist destination. I stayed the night at the youth hostel and got out the door early. (I remain a big fan of the off-season and early-morning method of visiting tourist destinations). The first photo shows a peek through a gateway on my walk to the temple complex.
I dragged my bags to the Todaiji Temple gates -- which are shown in the second photo. Inside the gates is the Todaiji Temple building. It is the world's largest wooden building. While the current building is several hundred years old an older version was 50% larger!
The final photo in this group shows the great Buddha inside that is made from 437 tonnes of bronze.
Nara Temple Nara Temple Nara Todaiji Nara Daibatsu
From Nara it was a long day taking five different trains to the northern Honshu coastal city of Niigata. Pictures were taken through train windows but it is hard to get a good photo at those speeds. The mountains were beckoning for a return ski vacation.
Thursday was spent travelling up the back coast of Japan. Many cute fishing villages amid some rain and cloud. After a change of trains and another short Shinkansen trip I was in Kakunodate for the afternoon and night. This was an excellent location choice. There are scenic modern and ancient Japanese homes. Add a couple feet of falling snow though and the scenery is especially photogenic.
I spent an hour eating soba noodles and getting Japanese lessons and then another business hotel sleep.
Kakunodate snow scene Kakunodate snow scene Kakunodate snow scene

Next big stop was Nikko. It is the site of a major temple complex dedicated to the Tokugawa family that ruled Japan for so many years. The buildings are in brighter Shinto colours than the plainer -- but just as beautiful -- Nara colours that I photographed earlier.
Nikko is relatively close to Tokyo and therefore attracts more foreign tourists than my other stops. I arrived late in the afternoon and only had 90 minutes to see all the sights. You can see that this involved a lot of stair climbing.
There are also some samples of my fellow Nikko tourists.
Gregory at Nikko Nikko Temple Nikko Temple scene Nikko Temple scene Nikko Temple scene
Some Nikko sights are more subtle.
Nikko Temple buildings Nikko Temple garden
This final Nikko view is from my morning walk to the train station. It looks back to the Temple complex in the hillside forest.
Nikko Temple garden

That was the start of my last Japan Rail Pass day. The weather was clear and the trains were fast and on-time as always. So I passed through Tokyo to Shin-Fuji station. On my third trip to Japan it was finally time to see Mt. Fuji.
After my station photography I turned around and headed back to Tokyo. (That part of the trip is on my Tokyo 2000 page).
Mount Fujiyama
On March 23, I flew to Shanghai on Japan Airlines. I took several good photos during the flight.
The attendants were friendly and I got a great view of Mt. Fuji.
JAL service Fujiyama from JAL

 
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