Donnerstag, 6. Oktober 2016

There is no place like JoHOMEmon

I have spend the last 2 days with my host family. Yesterday, I braved another Taifun (which ended up passing us by for the most part) and drove all the way from Beppu to Fukuyoshi. I met up with my host family, and we had as quiet of a day as it can be with 3 small children in the house. We also went grocery shopping. The amount of determination and persistence it takes to keep 2 small children in one toy shinkansen grocery cart is astounding. I don't know how my two host sisters do it daily. Also, I have through determination created a better relationship with the baby. Before, she would cry whenever she saw me. However, Okaasan assured me, that she does that with any stranger, not just the "foreign" kind. Now she even laughed at me, and can be in a room alone with me without crying. Unless she is hungry.

Today, we visit to the Jômon open air park, that doubles as one of the oldest excavation sites in Japan. The weather is brilliant, as you can probably see in the pictures. We wander around the premises for 3 hours. We could have spend 10 hours and still not seen it all. It is amazing. From the replicated houses, to the old burial grounds and walk ways, all of it's a joy to experience.

After this, we stop at a famous ceramics shop in Akita.

For dinner we visit Sushi place that I have been to 10 years ago, back then with mum and dad. We have great conversations and even greater sushi. To end the day, we visit to the local Onsen one last time. I can't believe my time in Kyushu is almost over.

Pictures Fukuyoshi

Tomorrow and the following day will be spend shopping in Fukuoka before I have to go back. :)

Dienstag, 4. Oktober 2016

Lonely roller coasters

Today is my last day in Beppu. And I have really done all the normal touristy things. So instead, I travel to an amusement park. There are no school holidays, and it's Tuesday, so I am nearly alone in the gigantic park. I ride the roller coasters sometimes on my own, but in all cases as many times as I possibly can without waiting times. I love it!

Back in Beppu, I spend 1 hour in a cat cafe with cute cats and kittens, who don't know that I usually prefer dogs.

Last in the day, I take a mud bath in Hoyoland Onsen. The setup is... adventurous. There is next to no signage, so you wander around naked. The outside bath is mixed, which means you have to somehow get in and out of the bath with modesty. 2 other ladies and myself take 3 tries to time it right, before we are sufficiently submerged to face the "men" in the bath. I even get a ride from a few ladies back into the city, which saves me the wait for the bus.

Montag, 3. Oktober 2016

Mountain in the clouds

Kyushu is preparing for another Taifun the day after tomorrow. The day that I want to go back to Fukuoka. Well, we will see what happens.

The weather seems better today, so I take the rope-way up the highest mountain in the area Tsurumi San. Sadly, a few minutes after I arrive on top, clouds completely surround the mountain. This means there is no view at all. But the air is refreshingly cool, and there  are a few nice statures and walkways, so I am not to bothered. After this, I take a bus back to the sea, where I have a hot sand steam bath. Very relaxing and warming. After wandering around some more, I find a great family owned Kimono business, who have easy to wear Yukata, which accommodate all sizes and can be put on in less than 5 minutes. I have great fun at the store and leave with a beautiful Yukata. This is really all for today, I am still a bit tired from yesterday.

Pictures Beppu

Sonntag, 2. Oktober 2016

Kunisaki- a beautiful secret in the mountains


Today, I am undertaking a traditional Japanese bus tour through Kunisaki. Usually, I would never go for a pre-arranged bus tour. However, the places I want to go, they are quite far off the public transport grid. The bus tour includes only 4 people, so at least we are not a horde of tourists following a tiny flag around like confused ducklings.

First, we stop at Usa Jingu. It's a gigantic shrine complex in a picturesque pine forest. One major standout here, is the fact that Shinto Shrine and Buddhist Temple exist in the same place, fitting together almost seamlessly in a blend of black and red. I could have spend hours wandering around and dreaming of the past. However, as with all guided tours, the time frames are very tight. This is an overarching theme throughout the day. Any of the places we visit would require at least double the time to experience fully. But without the tour, I would have not been able to visit any of the places at all.

Next is Fukiji, the oldest wooden structure of Kyushu, including mural cavings from the Heian times (9-11th century). Sadly, no pictures are allowed in the temple. However, we have a monk explain the history of the place (which I am struggling to follow, as mosquitoes try to eat me alive again.)

Maki Odo also does not allow pictures, with grand buddha statures to match.

The following stop nearly kills me. Kumano Magaibutsu are buddha statures carved in gigantic rock surfaces.  However, to get to those statues, you have to climb up mountain "paths" that are simply insane. Please see the pictures for further explanation. However, I make it safely up and down.

The last stop on our tour is Futagoji, a temple complex with a gigantic pair of Niouzu statures. Usually, those type of stone monuments are fenced in and warded off, but these just stand around in the great scenery. Really, the Kunisaki area is beautiful.

In the evening, I relax in the Hyotan onsen. :)

Pictures Kunisaki

Samstag, 1. Oktober 2016

A Game called: Allergy or just really hot Onsen

Today is packed with natural hot springs, or "jigoku" as they are called in Beppu. I manage to hit them all in one day, and I am also able to try a few onsen out myself. The first jigoku is gray and bubbles within muddy waters. They place is called Oniishibozu, because apparently the gray bubbles remind Japanese people of shaved monk heads. I also enter the Oniisibozu Onsen. It leaves me bright red and again worried about a possible allergy against the water.

Next it's the Umi-Jigoku natural hot spring, with bright blue water and a green house powered by the steam . I also enter the Yama Jigoku, where they raise a lots of animals as well, including a hippopotamus and rabbits.

I follow the road further south towards Kamado Jigoku. The steam of these natural hot springs was used for cooking in older times. I eat an egg boiled in the steam, which tastes like German Soleier.
However, not all of the Jigoku are as... pleasant. The Oniyama Jigoku decided to bread crocodiles. Who in the 7 hells thinks: Hot spring... definitely needs more crocodiles. The Shiraike Jigoku breeds piranhas.

The last two hells are Chinoike, a red boiling hot spring, and Tatsumaki, a natural geyser.
For lunch, I eat some of the best Omuraisu ever. The chef has worked in the Intercontinental Hotel in Hamburg and Düsseldorf. In the 70s. He is very happy to talk and tells me about the time he was allowed to make a Bento for the Tenno, who had visited Germany for the Olympics. He also introduces me to his friend, who studied classical opera singing in Lüneburg in the 90s.
I also enter the Kannawa Mushiyu Onsen, where people volunteer to bake themselves in a gigantic oven. You wear a Yukata, and lay down on herb straw in a tiny oven while hot steam is pouring in. It is insane. But of course I had to try it.

For dinner, I went to a great sushi place, where the chef challenged me to eat his house special. We had a great time talking about the history of "coexisting" Buddhism and Shinto in Japan. And I did my best to eat the octopus leg without pulling a face. I succeeded.

Pictures Beppu