Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Nagoya: City Science Museum

After the Toyota Museum we went to visit the City Science Museum. From a few blocks away we could already see the giant planetarium! Outside of the museum there is a large park, I can't wait to go back on a sunny day for a picnic!
I can't wait to go back on a sunny day!
 While shopping in the Sakae district of Nagoya we bumped into this gorgeous girl. I hope I have the opportunity to try on a kimono before I leave Japan.
 I spy the Nagoya tv tower! I took more photos close up but they're on my phone. The tower looks like the Eiffel Tower except without the flashing lights and romance :) This tv tower in Nagoya has been a major part of a couple Godzilla movies... Godzilla is always either climbing it or tearing it down!
If you can't tell: Dior is holding an Old Navy bag! I needed new jeans :-p

Nagoya: Toyota Museum

Dior and I took the train to Nagoya, a city about an hour from where we live. Nagoya is much different from our town. I joke that our town is the Hollister of Japan and Nagoya is the San Jose! Our first stop was the Toyota Commemorative Museum. We got to see how the company Toyota made its way from a looming factory to a giant car manufacturer. We have never seen how cotton is made into string... I really think every middle school should take a field trip of some sort to see how its done.
The first example of how cotton is made into string!

Dior wanted to help out haha

Moving on up!

The first Toyota forklift... looks better than my dads!

Time to make me a new car!

Monday, February 24, 2014

Konnichiwa from JAPAN!

Dior and I are now in Japan! We live in a small city near Nagoya and are loving the easy access to delicious Japanese food! Dior's team is Hamamatsu Phoenix and he's played in six games and they won five of those :)
We've done a bit of sightseeing already... We took the local train and visited Toyokawa-Inari temple last week and had a nice time seeing traditional Japanese buildings.
The trains reminded us of BART

Strolling the shops outside the temple


The Temple gate was built in 1884

The main shrine is made of whole zelkova trees. I had to google the tree since I had never heard of it.

Prayer banners you can make at the temple, they were hanging along most of the pathways

Behind the temple there was a shrine for Toyokawa Dakinishinten, who is depicted in Japanese Buddhism as a female deity riding on a white fox. People who come to this temple bring little fox statutes and leave them behind.

There were so many little foxes but I am not sure what the red fabric symbolized.

Okuno-in temple was built in 1814 and was surrounded by these incredible trees! the couple on the bottom right were writing their prayers on small pieces of fabric that are then tied on to a surrounding fence. I didn't want to bother their prayer so I didn't take any photos but it was very moving to see.

After spending the day at these temples we completed the day with a train ride to Toyohashi, a nearby city. In Toyohashi I found...... STARBUCKS! Grande caramel machiatto please... arrigato!

CHEERS!