Showing posts with label Japan (Osaka). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan (Osaka). Show all posts

Feb 28, 2014

MEMENTOS: The Sights of Osaka

Chanting outside a Zen temple.

As worshippers approached the mossy statue, they poured water over it.

(zooming in) The knife and the fiery halo make me suspect this is Fudo Myō, the angry-faced Buddhist deity of relinquishing your attachments.

Osaka Castle amid the park-wide "illumination." In Japanese, this word means what Americans would consider "Christmas lights."

View of Osaka from the Floating Garden Observatory.

Olivia got a cute passport of all the major skyscrapers in Japan, with a space to put a stamp once you've visited them.

Adorbs. I loved the blue tennis shoes.

Osaka-jo

The iconic Osaka Castle.

View from the top of Osaka Castle, with a golden "dolphin" in view.

Inside the castle museum, you could dress up like a samurai. From the horns, this guy was going for the deer deity look (deers are sacred symbols in the Shinto religion).

A pet hawk entertaining passersbys outside Osaka Castle.

Is it time to go already?? After one last bite of takoyaki, we packed our bags and took the bus back to the Noto.



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And so our vacation came to an end.

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Feb 26, 2014

FOOD FARE: Osaka Style

Each wooden plank is a different menu item at this sit-at-the-counter restaurant.

Tonkatsu - pork cutlet served with shredded cabbage. Most of Osaka's "famous foods" are deep-fried.

Kagami mochi, literally "mirrored rice cake" - this is a popular New Years decoration of two rice cakes piled on top of each other.

Fish egg udon with gold flakes.

Olivia, Mr. C, and I had less than an hour before our bus was coming to take us home. What should we do with the time? Go get one last takoyaki (fried octopus), of course! This is a special Osaka-style takoyaki with a soup filling.




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Feb 21, 2014

New Years in Osaka

Happy New Year!
It's the Year of the Horse.

After a harrowing escape from the Chinese Guangzhou airport - in which we were made to enter the country against our wishes, had our passports taken from us, and driven an hour away in a van before reaching a hotel - we made it back to Japan on New Years Eve. (Imagine what Chinese transit authorities would have done if they had seen me when I was eating a rice ball and shouted "FREEDOM RICE!")

After a week walking out in the sun, we donned our winter coats and walked through Osaka's streets to meet up with more friends from Ishikawa who had come down for the holiday.

Downtown Osaka on New Years Eve.

The dragon ramen chain restaurant.

"Illuminations"

2014 was nearly here. We had a choice: celebrate the midnight countdown at a high-rise observatory, or a traditional Japanese temple. The group split up, and Olivia, Mr. C, and I went to the high-rise. When we got there, the place was so packed that they weren't letting anyone into building until after midnight. So we turned on our heels and made our way back to the subway to get to the temple in time.

When we arrived, the area was also full of people to the point that they had stopped admitting visitors passed the bridge just before the temple grounds. We waited in line to see if they would let us through, but no dice. Mr. C disappeared into the food stands around the crowd, and reappeared with three single-serving cups of warm sake.

"Let's have our own countdown!" We got out our phones and watched the second hand slip closer and closer to 2014. We shouted the final countdown, in English, and the whole crowd of Japanese people counted down with us! "3...2...1... Happy New Year!!" People cheered, we hugged and drank sake, and the police let us through over the bridge.

Climbing over the temple bridge into the new year.

People lining up to throw coins and pray.

After paying our respects at the temple, we reunited with our friends (dodging a few policeman who were trying to enforce an orderly path by sneaking around the trees behind them to get where we wanted to go). Together we wandered the surrounding food and game stalls until our tired legs couldn't go a step further.

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A morning visit to a new temple for hatsumode (the first temple visit of the new year).

Lining up to ring the bells.

You throw coins with a hole in them, which symbolize a holy deity, into the temple's donation box before you pray. You can buy your new year's omikuji (fortune) and burn the one you received the year before.

Korean Town was closed for the holidays.

More New Years "illuminations."



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