Originally, it's April the 5th. then moved to March the 25th. Yesterday, Japan Meteorological Bureau (JMB) declared, "It's tomorrow, March the 23rd!"
It's the full bloom date for cherry trees in Tokyo. Every year, JMB forecasts the full bloom date for every district in Japan; so people can shuffle their plans and choose a date for "cherry blossom viewing" or "a cherry blossom appreication party."
My choice of viewing area was Kanda-gawa (Kanda River or "神田川"). I hopped on a Tokyo Metro Yurakucho line train and got off at the Edogawa-bashi station in the late morning.
Truly, it was super beautiful.
Cherry Blossom viewing is "the ultimate" flower viewing or "hanami (花見)". When people say "hanami," it means "cherry blossom viewing." There's a walkway on both sides of the river with several bridges over it. Very convenient for appreciating cherry blossoms and making a trip back to the starting point.
Many people enjoy picnic with sake under a cherry tree. Many more walk along Kanda River to enjoy cherry blossom from different angles.
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Along Kanda River and next to "Basho-an" and famous "Chinzan-so," there's "Eisei Bunko" museum or "永青文庫", some of its collection such as Japanese armors and swords were shown at Asian Art Museum in San Francisco a couple of years ago.
Kanda River's cherry tree type is "Somei Yoshino (染井吉野), representative of a cherry tree. Flowers of this kind bloom in globular, and flowers in one ball bloom all together this year.
Carps and turtles live in swiftly flowing Kanda River. which used to overrun. Today, overflows will be led to a huge underground duct system to prevent flood.
Hanami will span only a week at most. If there's a windy day, cherry trees shed their flowers at once, leaving naked stems and twigs...
P.S. 3/30/13
Cherry flowers have been holding amazingly well.
Temperature has dropped since the 23rd, and we had no major rains or windy days in Tokyo.
Today, people are enjoying "sakura fubuki, or cherry flower storm" in which petals are falling softly like a rain, even though there's no slightest breeze. Cherry petal falling reminds me of Gilda's song of cry in Rigoletto's quartet. Pathways underneath have become as if they were lined with pink carpet. Cheery blossom is beautiful from beginning to the end...
Hey, I'm in Tokyo after SF and from a new comer's point of view, it's about the city and beyond!
2013年3月25日月曜日
2013年3月6日水曜日
Japanese Plum is in full bloom in Tokyo
Flower viewing is a national pastime. From mid-February to mid-March, it's a blossom season for ume or Japanese plums. People go to see them in droves.
This year (2013), weather was cold and the blooming of Japanese plums (early blooming types) was delayed for two weeks but today, due to warm weather, early blooming types are in full bloom together with those in late blooming types.
There are several places famous for Japanese plum blossom viewing in Tokyo. I went to Ikegami Japanese Plum Garden (池上梅園). It has about 30 kinds of Japanese plums, of which 150 trees bear "hakubai (白梅)" or white plum flowers and 220 trees, "kobai (紅梅)," or pink plum flowers. During flower season, it announces flowering status via web.
In Tokyo, Japanese plum flowers and fragrance can be enjoyed for the next two weeks.
Tokyo Metro Asakusa line's Nishi-magome is the nearest subway station. It's about 7-minute walk to Ikegami Baien (Ikegami Japanese Plum Garden). You'll soon see flowers on your left.
This year (2013), weather was cold and the blooming of Japanese plums (early blooming types) was delayed for two weeks but today, due to warm weather, early blooming types are in full bloom together with those in late blooming types.
There are several places famous for Japanese plum blossom viewing in Tokyo. I went to Ikegami Japanese Plum Garden (池上梅園). It has about 30 kinds of Japanese plums, of which 150 trees bear "hakubai (白梅)" or white plum flowers and 220 trees, "kobai (紅梅)," or pink plum flowers. During flower season, it announces flowering status via web.
In Tokyo, Japanese plum flowers and fragrance can be enjoyed for the next two weeks.
Tokyo Metro Asakusa line's Nishi-magome is the nearest subway station. It's about 7-minute walk to Ikegami Baien (Ikegami Japanese Plum Garden). You'll soon see flowers on your left.
2013年2月10日日曜日
Foxy Sasuke Inari Shrine in Kamakura
Kamakura has lots of points of interest such sa Tsuruoka Hachiman-gu but here, I focus on "Sasuke Inari Jinja (佐助稲荷神社)" or Sasuke Inari Shrine.
Sasuke Shrine is located kind of near "Zeniarai Benten," although you need to walk through "Keshouzaka Kiritoshi" from Zeniarai Benten, which is, by the way, also an interesting place.
What makes Sasuke Inari interesting is its foxes. "Inari" is one type of the gods in Japan. As fox is the Inari god's messenger, a pair of foxes or two always sits in the premises of the Inari shrine. At Sasuke Inari, you see not just a pair, but you'll soon notice many sitting here and there in the shrine!
This pair is located just below the right-side fox of the main stone pair. White ceramic foxes are those offered by people to make their wishes come true.
Sasuke Inari is supposed to have a supernatural power to bring romance between two people. If you want to marry with someone in your mind, you may come here, purchase a white ceramic fox and offer it to the Inari, asking for the god's help. It's like donation because the shrine uses money acquired to maintain their premises.
You'll notice a bib around a fox neck. Why is it? One theory is that parents who lost their babies tied a red bib around the fox to appease the baby's soul and allow them peacefully to become a budda in heaven. There's another thing about Sasuke Inari Jinja. Though you tend to see Inari jinja less in your neighborhood nowadays, you have chances to see several while growing up in Japan. Most fox statues in Inari, however, don't have facial expressions as severe as Sasuke Inari's. See above pics. The foxes have unfriendly and beastly look and even have fangs protruding from their half-opened mouth. Those I've seen since my childhood have more comical or expression-less look. I wonder that people in the 13th century (that's when Sasuke Inari was constructed) regarded foxes as dangerous animals inconveniently living in their proximity but at the same time believed in their supernatural power and awed them.
You take "Shonan Shinjuku Liner"to visit Kamakura. It's about one hour ride from Ikebukuro.
Sasuke Shrine is located kind of near "Zeniarai Benten," although you need to walk through "Keshouzaka Kiritoshi" from Zeniarai Benten, which is, by the way, also an interesting place.
What makes Sasuke Inari interesting is its foxes. "Inari" is one type of the gods in Japan. As fox is the Inari god's messenger, a pair of foxes or two always sits in the premises of the Inari shrine. At Sasuke Inari, you see not just a pair, but you'll soon notice many sitting here and there in the shrine!
This pair is located just below the right-side fox of the main stone pair. White ceramic foxes are those offered by people to make their wishes come true.
Sasuke Inari is supposed to have a supernatural power to bring romance between two people. If you want to marry with someone in your mind, you may come here, purchase a white ceramic fox and offer it to the Inari, asking for the god's help. It's like donation because the shrine uses money acquired to maintain their premises.
You'll notice a bib around a fox neck. Why is it? One theory is that parents who lost their babies tied a red bib around the fox to appease the baby's soul and allow them peacefully to become a budda in heaven. There's another thing about Sasuke Inari Jinja. Though you tend to see Inari jinja less in your neighborhood nowadays, you have chances to see several while growing up in Japan. Most fox statues in Inari, however, don't have facial expressions as severe as Sasuke Inari's. See above pics. The foxes have unfriendly and beastly look and even have fangs protruding from their half-opened mouth. Those I've seen since my childhood have more comical or expression-less look. I wonder that people in the 13th century (that's when Sasuke Inari was constructed) regarded foxes as dangerous animals inconveniently living in their proximity but at the same time believed in their supernatural power and awed them.
You take "Shonan Shinjuku Liner"to visit Kamakura. It's about one hour ride from Ikebukuro.
2013年2月3日日曜日
Sakaguchi's "Resume" at Tokyo Watarium
The Kyohei Sakaguchi exhibit, which was over a couple of days ago, made me laugh a good laugh. I agree with Kyohei Sakaguchi 80 percent, which is in fact quite high.
His work, "Resume," warmed my heart. I've been agonized by the Japanese resume form quite a while.
Japanese resume (see pic below) is the perfect representation of "life on the track": You are expected to go to a high school after a junior high, then proceed to a college and then straight to a company. No nonsense between schools and between schools and the so-called real world. "The" Japanese resume form predicates on life on the track. In a sense, it's even a minimalistic tour de force of conceptual arts.
After graduating from a college in the US, I continued my education via enrolling in a number of courses at different community colleges, part of the adult education system that USA should be very proud of. I also changed my employers several times to expand my knowledge and experience. My education and work life therefore totally run off from the Japanese form. I feel I'm "crucified" on the criss-crossing lines of the Japanese resume form. I feel I'm out of question from "their" viewpoint because my life does not fit to life on the track.
Roland Berthas, one of my favorite writers, says, "Scratch the surface, and there's a history." I tried it when I was fumed with the resume form, and somehow a Chinese term,「科挙」、pronounced "Kakyo," emerged on the surface of my brain. "Kakyo" is an infamous examination system created in China circa B.C. 200. Is Japanese resume might be one of the vestige of Kakyo and incredibly still surviving?
Pic: Watarium Museum. It goes well with yellow.
While I was away from Japan、a cream ban has evolved、a telephone box almost completely disappeared in Tokyo, and subway lines changed its name to "Metro" and multiplied in the underground world of Tokyo, the form of Japanese resume has not changed even a bit (and the design of the 10 yen coin hasn't changed at all). Isn't it weirdly stagnant?
So Mr. Sakamoto's "Resume" warmed my heart and I feel love toward the artist.
If I write Sakamoto style resume, I'll include playing with my brothers (cooping up a cat in an empty wooden apple box and trying to observe the cat's behavior when pouring a water from the above etc) going for a long walk with neighboring kids after school. Those were important matters definitely involved in shaping my inner space called mind. I especially liked going for a long walk (sometimes by myself), which was quite an adventure for me at that time. We just walked to a far away place to make a return trip to home. I often picked up a rusted bottle opener etc. on the way and kept it as a treasure in my tin box. Sakamoto's resume didn't include those staff. My guess is that he didn't have siblings. Also, when he was a kid, it might have been too dangerous for a kid to go for a walk by themselves.
I feel I'm forced to fit myself to that form of cross, which is "resume."
His work, "Resume," warmed my heart. I've been agonized by the Japanese resume form quite a while.
Japanese resume (see pic below) is the perfect representation of "life on the track": You are expected to go to a high school after a junior high, then proceed to a college and then straight to a company. No nonsense between schools and between schools and the so-called real world. "The" Japanese resume form predicates on life on the track. In a sense, it's even a minimalistic tour de force of conceptual arts.
After graduating from a college in the US, I continued my education via enrolling in a number of courses at different community colleges, part of the adult education system that USA should be very proud of. I also changed my employers several times to expand my knowledge and experience. My education and work life therefore totally run off from the Japanese form. I feel I'm "crucified" on the criss-crossing lines of the Japanese resume form. I feel I'm out of question from "their" viewpoint because my life does not fit to life on the track.
Roland Berthas, one of my favorite writers, says, "Scratch the surface, and there's a history." I tried it when I was fumed with the resume form, and somehow a Chinese term,「科挙」、pronounced "Kakyo," emerged on the surface of my brain. "Kakyo" is an infamous examination system created in China circa B.C. 200. Is Japanese resume might be one of the vestige of Kakyo and incredibly still surviving?
Pic: Watarium Museum. It goes well with yellow.
While I was away from Japan、a cream ban has evolved、a telephone box almost completely disappeared in Tokyo, and subway lines changed its name to "Metro" and multiplied in the underground world of Tokyo, the form of Japanese resume has not changed even a bit (and the design of the 10 yen coin hasn't changed at all). Isn't it weirdly stagnant?
So Mr. Sakamoto's "Resume" warmed my heart and I feel love toward the artist.
If I write Sakamoto style resume, I'll include playing with my brothers (cooping up a cat in an empty wooden apple box and trying to observe the cat's behavior when pouring a water from the above etc) going for a long walk with neighboring kids after school. Those were important matters definitely involved in shaping my inner space called mind. I especially liked going for a long walk (sometimes by myself), which was quite an adventure for me at that time. We just walked to a far away place to make a return trip to home. I often picked up a rusted bottle opener etc. on the way and kept it as a treasure in my tin box. Sakamoto's resume didn't include those staff. My guess is that he didn't have siblings. Also, when he was a kid, it might have been too dangerous for a kid to go for a walk by themselves.
I feel I'm forced to fit myself to that form of cross, which is "resume."
2013年1月18日金曜日
Missing Japanese people in Algeria
Fourteen Japanese people are still missing at the In Amenas gas field, which was attacked by terrorists a couple of days ago. The natural gas plant is located 1,300 kilometers away from Algiers, the capital of Algeria. It's a tiny, lonely corner of the vast Sahara desert.
When dispatching employees to such a desolate place in an extreme hinterland with political uncertainty, why doesn't the company train them how to use Twitter from their mobile device before dispatching?
It may be that the company doesn't like the idea that their employees freely communicate their observations and ideas to the outside world. Or is it because there's no way to use Twitter in the middle of the Sahara? That's very possible. Hope things will work out fine. The snapshot is from here.
When dispatching employees to such a desolate place in an extreme hinterland with political uncertainty, why doesn't the company train them how to use Twitter from their mobile device before dispatching?
It may be that the company doesn't like the idea that their employees freely communicate their observations and ideas to the outside world. Or is it because there's no way to use Twitter in the middle of the Sahara? That's very possible. Hope things will work out fine. The snapshot is from here.
2013年1月14日月曜日
Tokyo's snowing!
"Oh my god!" my friend exclaims and I look out through a window...
This is the first snow in Tokyo in 2013.
It's only once a year if there's snow in Tokyo. Usually none.
2013年1月10日木曜日
Kadomatsu decoration to welcome New Year
"Kadomatsu" is one of "the" new year decorations placed at the entrance of a house, company building, store etc. Pic below is kadomatsu placed at the entrance of shopping mall right underneath Tokyo Skytree. It's always placed in pairs to frank the entrance.
People put "kadomatsu" to let a New Year god take notice of their house and cajole him in. If he comes in, the family will have a good year. A New year god likes to perch on a tree branch with a bunch of green leaves; hence kadomatsu. I think there are a multiple number of New Year god (if not, how come he can walk in or fly in many houses on the same day?). He's definitely so small and light-weighted as to be able to perch on a tree branch without breaking it.
Basic components of modern kadomatsu are bamboos, pine needle leaves and a rope(s) made from rice straws.
Kadomatsu pair placed at the entrance of a shrine. Notice bamboos have full height and leaves intact, while Skytree's bamboo tops are truncated. The shrine's pair is an old style mostly seen, say, many decades ago.
This pair is a simplified form of the modern kadomatsu at another shrine. Most people put kadomatsu of this style at their houses because it's less costly.
Above is a simplified decoration of another type being suspended from the center of the beam of the entrance.
People put "kadomatsu" to let a New Year god take notice of their house and cajole him in. If he comes in, the family will have a good year. A New year god likes to perch on a tree branch with a bunch of green leaves; hence kadomatsu. I think there are a multiple number of New Year god (if not, how come he can walk in or fly in many houses on the same day?). He's definitely so small and light-weighted as to be able to perch on a tree branch without breaking it.
Basic components of modern kadomatsu are bamboos, pine needle leaves and a rope(s) made from rice straws.
Kadomatsu pair placed at the entrance of a shrine. Notice bamboos have full height and leaves intact, while Skytree's bamboo tops are truncated. The shrine's pair is an old style mostly seen, say, many decades ago.
This pair is a simplified form of the modern kadomatsu at another shrine. Most people put kadomatsu of this style at their houses because it's less costly.
Above is a simplified decoration of another type being suspended from the center of the beam of the entrance.
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