Tokyo Day 2
Sep. 13th, 2009 04:08 pmAt left, a vending machine right near out hotel. Very busy-looking, but at heart just a pop machine. 150 yen ($1.80 CAD) for a tiny Coke, and several other drinks we didn't recognize.
There was also a pet shop just beside our hotel, with many excessively-cute cats and dogs stored in excessvely-small glass cages. They were very happy looking, but I wanted to rescue them all. 108,000 yen (or more) for a pet that we couldn't get home easily was a bit much though. We brought home a ceramic cat instead.
Vin and I were awake long before Tyler & Kristopher, so we went out and got some food across the street first. There was a cute little ramen noodle place, and we just gathered our courage and walked in. They had pictures on the menu, so we managed to do just fine. More on this place later.
Time to begin our walk. It was nothing too exciting, but we did see a nice little park, lots of regular locals just going about their day, and lots of little convenience stores. We stopped at one and Vin bought Protein Water. It tasted like really sweet water, but it looked like milk. At the train station earlier, he had purchased something called Pocari Sweat, which (SPOILER, hghlight to read) is just like gatorade.
In Japan, they drive on the left, not on the right, and they also walk on the left. This was constantly messing us up when walking on the sidewalk, partly because we'd forget and partly because there were so many people who didn't care. Kind like here I guess. But that was fun too.
Also along our walk, we spotted lots of banners and signs for various things. Lots of rules in Japan! In Shinjuku, there's no smoking on the sidewalk for example. You can smoke indoors basically anywhere, but not outside except in specially designated areas. We eventually figured out how to find them: look for the cloud of blue smoke where people's heads would normally be. :)
"No, Absolutely No!"
to Drug Abuse
to Drug Abuse
We of course saw all sorts of examples of Engrish, bad translations, and awkward phrasings, but I decided pretty early that the memories of those would stay with us without too much photographic evidence. But you'll see a few in our photos.
Once we reached Shibuya Crossing -- the famous billboard-covered intersection featured in Lost In Translation (which I recommend, btw) -- it wasn't quite dark yet, so supper came first. At right, the vending machine inside the restaurant we went to. You put money in, hit the buttons to get little vouchers, then turned around and handed them to the staff. No chance of dine-and-dash here!
We headed back to our hotel's neighbourhood by metro - our first time on it! We had a guidebook with a subway map so it was pretty simple, but still a little tricky. Mostly it seems to be tricky because even though there's tons of signs explaining (in English) how to get places and where the exits are, there's also a flood of people walking by and making you feel like you can't stop anywhere. Like Union Station at rush hour, for those who've had the pleasure. We couldn't find the right exit from the station this time - owing to the fact it was subway, not regional train - and we ended up walking around the station outdoors to get back to somewhere we recognized. Much easier once we'd done it once though.
We also ended up at Arty Farty next this night, a little more inebriated than the previous night, but this time no cops followed us. The first night, a couple cops were a little worried about our drunkest group member, and just watched to ensure we got where we were going.
Facebook album for day two, with many more photos: http://www.facebook.com/album.
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Date: 2009-09-14 02:19 pm (UTC)