Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Japan and New York

I love Japanese food and presentation

Japan

I certainly was not expecting to be in Japan this trip. I also thought I was going to turn around in the Middle East, instead of moving continually east. My original thoughts were Canary Islands, Morocco, Tunisia, Egypt, Israel, Jordan. Ended up being Canary Islands, Spain, Portugla, Turkey, Ukraine, Krygystan, Mongolia and Japan.

I picked Japan because it was a 1st World country and one that I knew, so I could relax a bit after a few not 1st World countries. Was only in the country a few days, enough to see Kyoto and Nara and stop a few days in the spa town of Ito, Izu Peninsula. I stay at K's House Ryokan Hostel, a very fancy place on the river that happens to have a dorm space, which keeps the price at hostel rates. I love being here. They have an onsen (bath house), plus a few private ones and the house is truly beautiful and relaxing. Easily my favorite non-city hostel.

The food and service and people and trains and bathrooms in this country are simply amazing. I love being here and would gladly stay here a year if my pension was say, a LOT bigger.

60th Birthday

Ah, 60 years old. This makes me very happy. Not everyone I knew in my 50's made it this far. Friends disappear and I gather this will be an ongoing trend.

I wanted to turn 60 in a yurt in Mongolia, but circumstances change and here I am in Ito, Japan, a town I really enjoy. I travel alone (the most social way to travel) and therefore spend my birthday alone, connected to family and friends by the internet. I have spent a few birthdays in other countries, so this is yet another. I am happy to be where I am, who I am.

I am 60! Yeah!!! I retired a few years back so I could travel while still relatively young and healthy. I have done that. I realize just how fortunate I am and count my blessings each and everyday. So lucky just to have been born in Canada, which is why I proudly display the Canadian Flag wherever I go, eh!

I love getting haircuts on the road. Normally, a #2 menas the same thing everywhere in the world...not so in Japan. It took 20 minutes and 3 people to get my point across...to use a #2 spacer on my buzz cut. Lot of fun

My first meal in Ulaan Bator was Japanese food...go figure. In Japan, first meal was Indian food. I am a global foodie

I like waht big, congested cities do to architecture and design. The stairwell is bigger than the apartment

Typical side-street house in Kyoto. No very many big apartment buildings here, so the sense of space is very cool

Why would anyone build these ugly thing, much less buy it???

If you travel in Asia, you usually put your toilet paper in the bucket, as the flushing infrastructure cannot handle paper waste. Great until you hit Japan and people try to stuff their soiled paper into this little bin...hence the note

Kyoto is beautiful. I walk around big cities, looking for alleyways and little spaces like this

Can you come up with a caption for this piece??? My brain quits just trying to think of one

So pretty and peaceful

Geishas can't walk too far in their getups

A little teahouse, just off a shrine. Kyoto is very walkable. I did not use bus or train while there.

Notice the toilet paper fold. I have since learned how to do this...altho it is odd...it may be polite, but it means that the un-washed hands of the person before me have been manipulating my paper. As well, notice the double lift toilet seat for big/small people.

How many shrines have I been to in China, Korea, Japan, SE Asia. Obligatory photo

This neighbourhood just behind my hostel. Your spaces are small, and your neighbours are close

The deer in Nara are a tad tame

Bruce< I will ask you one more time...Did you eat the last biscuit????

I have dozens of photos of flowers. since I walk so much, I see many and it is easy to stop and smell them.

I saw a lot of baseball in Kyoto and Nara. They take it serious. The chatter in Japanese is too funny

Panty raid?

I would love to own this vehicle, all of one person wide

My favorite place to eat in Kyoto. I sat right up by the grill and watched these people make dishes I have never seen. I tried quite a few of them.

I gave them each a little Canadian flag pin, they gave me a little sushi pin

Everything is so well-done and defined, so of course the manhole covers are no exception

I am at the end of a 3 month trip, I'm beat up and my time in Tokyo is for relaxing a bit before flying 1/2 way around the planet to New York to see my daughters

Every city has street people, Tokyo is definitely no exception. Notice how neat and clean, plus the fact that people accumulate things that others don't steal. Cultural codes extend to the bottom of the social classes

It is early May in Japan, shorts and t-shirt weather and flowers abound

My pack takes me around the world for months at a time. It is the the little red-top one in the middle. Buddy on the far left has the big pack on his back, and the smaller one slung off his front. I like my style better. It has it's limitations, but the flexibility is well worth it. My pack has a little hostel sleeping bag and inflatable mattress stored in the bottom section

I do love New York. I have been coming here a few times a year, every year, since 1977. Yikes!

First thing i do is find a new brekkie diner...you alaways have to be looking, as restaurants come and go pretty quickly in this town. This one is near the basketball courts down by 6th Ave and 4th St., close to the Waverley Theatre, where the Rocky Horror hoopla started in 1976.

It is the annual 5 Boro Bike Tour today. I did this ride 2 years ago, the first time on a bike in NYC since I was a bike messenger here back in the 70's and 80's. Again, Yikes!

There is so much talent in this city, as well as so much good music.

The Central Park Zoo, a place I like to visit every few years. Sophie came with me this time.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Bishkek, Krygystan and Mongolia

Hello from the actual middle of nowhere

Bishkek, Krygystan

Up till now, I thought Jakarta was the a city with no flavor or soul...now i have been to Bishkek, Krygystan and Ulaan Bator, Mongolia, I know better. I was in Bishkek because it is the middle of nowhere and the cheapest flight options put me in on an overnight flight and out on another. I am getting too old for this.

Bishkek is old-style Soviet Bloc planning and execution. Big, utilitarian gov't buildings about 1/2 kilometers apart and nothing in between. No town center, no old quarter, just mucho dreary walking along huge boulevards. Bishkek has a few statues, an ex-pat bar (Metro) and the bazaar.

I bet KFC has no idea even where Krygystan really is

Sam and i run into a bridal party, the bride has to convince us to buy trinkets to complete whatever game they are playing. It was too funny

The snow outside the hostel fell just so, like little fluffy flowers

Bishkek Bazaar. Just after this shot, 3 police pick me up, take me to a trailer with 3 more police and go thru me, my clothes and gear, looking for 'contraband' all the while pantomiming how much money I might have. As it turns out< aim too cheap to even give any of them as much as bus fare. Welcome to Bishkek, eh! No...&*ck you, Bishkek

Saturday night at the ex-pat bar, Metro. I had to say hello to the owner, Richard, as he is a good buddy with Adam, the hostel owner from Odessa

Mongolia

I seriously enjoyed Mongolia, the tour, the people I met, the steppes, desert and mountains. That being said, Ulaan Bator sucked big time. Dirty, smelly (burning coal), smoggy, tons of crazy traffic. 1.3 million people crammed into a now very ugly space. Disappointed in the city...not sure what i was expecting, but not what I saw.

Outside the city was pure magic. Just mountains of every variety and size that shaped steppes that went on seemingly forever...5-10 kms wide by 30-40 kms. Hard to take in even as you pass thru. Not a lot going on in these spaces, so the tour was a lot of driving.

Got to stay in a few yurts (gers) which made me extremely happy, as I have learned how to make them from Little Foot Yurts..Alex and Selene back in Nova Scotia and did a little writeup for their site

To be in this space on the panet is just awesome. Can you see the yurt

Can't tell you how happy this makes me

1.3 millions Mongols, maybe 30 million sheep

Can you see buddy herding with the motorcycle. That or a horse...once, even a jeep

This herd moved in a line, nibbling all the way, cool to watch

Dogs everywhere, sheep everywhere, horses everywhere. This is buddy at the first sleepover in a ger

My first Mongolian ger. Me so happy. That is the driver, Tovshoo napping

Been wanting to be here for a long time. Bucket List item

After a nice evening swapping tales with another tour group in the other ger, we woke up to snow! Unfortunately, it meant i don't get to my waterfall.

Orkhon Valley Waterfall...I did NOT make it here...the hilight of the tour, due to a snowstorm. When I am travelling, I don't usually keep track of what I miss, as long as I am happy with what I saw. I was very happy with the experiences on the tour, but this one hurt. I love waterfalls

My new FB buddy, Gaya, who works very hard to keep her family going, renting out gers and making great meals. A real sweetheart. I have agreed to make business cards for her when I get back

Tovshoo. No English but a really happy guy. We got along well.

All these herd animals are out there 24/7, year-round, till they become food. The spaces between herds and yurt compounds is mind-blowing

Home, sweet home for another night, here in the top of the Gobi Desert

p style="font-size: 12px; color: rgb(0, 137, 125);">All those animals, all that dung...does not go to waste. Maybe if I came here as a Wwoofer, I would end up on dung brick detail

Went out for a little hike and this happened, about 25 horses rolled by and thru where I was , skimming water from the stream. They were curious of me, but leery

So many types of bathrooms in the world. This was new for me, just a triangle...not everyone's aim is good enough, eh?

Another ger. I need to make me one of these

Bactrian camel. Yeah!


My buddy, Sawa. I gave him a tip and a wind-up flashlight


No puppies in the ger, they chew up everything

Sawa's daughter, who took great pleasure in looking at you, then sticking out her tongue.

Sawa and daughter go out for water..think about that

Back in Ulaan Bator, the big city. Whirling Dervishes in this culture, as well as Turkey. Cool

It is a Buddhist country, there are shrines and I like to try arty photos

I saw only 2 flowers in the country, and in the same place. It is a hard place