Results 1 to 10 of 10

Thread: Japan - all the information!

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1
    Join Date
    29th Dec 2007
    Location
    Dunedin, New Zealand
    Posts
    3,412

    Default Japan - all the information!

    Booked a ticket to Japan in September (rest of the bookings to come, made this one first to secure a sale).

    Because I am lazy, and do not want to do my own searching, who can link me to all the good places to a) get toys and b) what to see and do while in Tokyo, Osaka, Hiroshima, Kyoto

    Your help is appreciated ..

  2. #2
    Join Date
    7th Feb 2013
    Location
    2164
    Posts
    8,925

  3. #3
    Join Date
    12th Jun 2011
    Location
    Gladstone
    Posts
    6,479

    Default

    I'm interested in making a trip to Japan in the future. I wouldn't be going so much for toys because I don't normally buy older toys anymore and just focus on TT's current releases so what is some great stuff to see other than Akihabara, Denden town and the Bullet Train?

  4. #4
    Join Date
    30th Dec 2007
    Location
    Japanicus Minimus
    Posts
    7,677

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by DELTAprime View Post
    Akihabara, Denden town and the Bullet Train?
    There's oh, I don't know, all the hundred plus year old shrines, Hiroshima Atomic Bomb dome. That's all I will list for now, because I'm assuming your post is a joke

  5. #5
    Join Date
    29th Dec 2007
    Location
    Dunedin, New Zealand
    Posts
    3,412

    Default

    Thanks for the link to HD's thread. It will be a good start

    Keen for any other information anyone can share - though I do have 8 months of planning/waiting to go

  6. #6
    Join Date
    12th Jun 2011
    Location
    Gladstone
    Posts
    6,479

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Tetsuwan Convoy View Post
    There's oh, I don't know, all the hundred plus year old shrines, Hiroshima Atomic Bomb dome. That's all I will list for now, because I'm assuming your post is a joke
    No not a joke. I wouldn't go near a shrine just like I wouldn't go near a church. I just googled the Atomic Bomb Dome, crumbling ruins are not what I think of when I think of Japan. Surely there are places to go that are more... modern?

  7. #7
    Join Date
    27th Dec 2007
    Location
    Sydney NSW
    Posts
    37,659

    Default

    Crumbling ruins was a reality for Japan during and shortly after WWII. The entire country was essentially levelled by Allied bombing, and conventional firebombing caused more death and destruction than the atomic bombings. People see Japan as this thriving modern country now, but when you speak to people who grew up in post-war Japan, even people of our parents' generation... they remember when Japan was a ruined craphole. I once spoke to a friend's mother who recently visited a third world country. I asked her what it was like and she said that it reminded her of Japan during her childhood. So yeah, post-war Japan was literally like a messed up third world country. Sorry if this doesn't match your personal vision of what Japan is, but this is the reality that people had to actually live through.

    You better stay away from the Touhoku region if you don't want to look at currently devastated parts of Japan.

    Quote Originally Posted by DELTAprime View Post
    I'm interested in making a trip to Japan in the future. I wouldn't be going so much for toys because I don't normally buy older toys anymore and just focus on TT's current releases so what is some great stuff to see other than Akihabara, Denden town and the Bullet Train?
    Dude, Japan is usually GREAT for shopping for current TakaraTOMY releases! And if you're lucky, you can get them at cheaper prices than you would find online, especially if you shop in a place that exempts tax when you show a foreign passport and/or if you go with a local friend who has a discount card and you stack that discount! Or you go to Hero Gangu and haggle with the manager and continue that discount stack!
    Quote Originally Posted by DELTAprime View Post
    No not a joke. I wouldn't go near a shrine just like I wouldn't go near a church. I just googled the Atomic Bomb Dome, crumbling ruins are not what I think of when I think of Japan. Surely there are places to go that are more... modern?
    * Tokyo Disneyland
    * Osaka Kaiyukan (it has captive whale sharks!)
    * Tokyo Tower
    * Kyoto Movie Theatre Theme Park
    * Akihabara Gundam Café
    * Universal Studios
    * Hakone (Mt Fuji, Lake Ashi etc.)
    * Arashiyama, Kyoto - has the Monkey Mountain and Sagano Bamboo Forest
    * Nijo Castle in Kyoto and Imperial Palace in Tokyo
    * Osaka Castle
    * Studio Ghibli Museum, Tokyo

    I would also recommend visiting at least 3 temples for reasons that have nothing to do with religion:
    + Kinkakuji
    + Todaiji
    + Kiyomizudera
    First of all, the architecture on these structures is amazing. Kinkakuji is a temple plated in gold and Todaiji is the largest ancient wooden structure in the world. Kiyomizudera is worth visiting purely for the magnificent view that you get of Kyoto from that position. Plus you'll lose 5kg walking up there.

    Although I find my most memorable experiences are necessarily places that I've visited, but the people that I've met. Nothing beats socially interacting with locals - either meeting up with friends when I'm there, or even striking up conversations with complete strangers. It's interesting seeing what kind of things you end up doing that you didn't necessarily plan, like...

    Volunteering as a staff member at a festival


    Getting into a verbal stoush with a publicly ranting racist


    Making friends with a random lady and her family and then meeting up with them again in a completely different Prefecture!


    etc. etc. etc. And I understand that the language barrier thing can be an issue - most people in Japan don't speak English. But part of the fun in going there is immersing yourself in the language and culture and just having a go! I could barely speak any Japanese when I first went there (I thought I could, but soon discovered to my horror that I couldn't ). And during our 10 day school trip, I also saw a lot of my students quickly improving in their communication ability by throwing themselves into the deep end. Some didn't improve as much as others because they were too hesitant and reserved, but like many things in life, you only get what you put in and fortune favours the bold. One of my Year 9 students surprisingly picked up a lot of Japanese just be eavesdropping on other people's conversations. After about a week of doing this he insisted on following me when I went to book bullet train tickets instead of waiting with the group. He stood next to me as I communicated with the the rail staff member and was repeating words and picking up what they meant!
    e.g.
    Staff> 「禁煙車または喫煙車どちらがよろしいですか。」
    Me> 「禁煙車お願いします。」
    Student> "Yeah, good. We should get a non-smoking carriage."
    We haven't learnt anything like that in the school course curriculum! He just picked it up by osmosis through eavesdropping and deducing the meaning, well... basically by code-breaking. It's little wonder that multilingual people are traditionally sought after as code-breakers (Alan Turing was unusual as a monolingual code-breaker, although his code-breaker was based on mathematics - at least, he was portrayed that way in The Imitation Game which admittedly isn't completely historically accurate).

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •