Saturday, December 3, 2016

Vacation Day 6, the End of the Line

One homework assignment down, a 2000 word paper and a test left to study for for tomorrow.  Taking a break to write another blog post seemed like a good idea to me.  The paper is at least over something I find interesting, and it doesn't have to be much more than a reflection paper, so it should be easy enough to knock out.

Anyway, the 6th day on break was a very busy one.  We started off the day in Hiroshima.  We visited the Peace Memorial, where I didn't feel comfortable taking a lot of pictures of the interior, but there are some to share from the rest of the site.  After that, we went to Hiroshima Castle, which wasn't far away.  It was more of a museum than the others, and I have a few pictures where I was allowed to take them I think.  It was also the only castle I've been to that has an exterior walkway around the main keep, so that's pretty cool, and allowed for some great pictures!  After the castle, we went to Miyajima, which is an island renowned for one of it's shrines, Itsukushima Jinja.  It's a very beautiful place!  There was also a cable car up to the top of the mountain, which we took and had time for a few quick pictures before having to rush back down.

As stated, we started off at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial, which is situated near the epicenter of the nuclear bomb that was dropped there at the end of World War Two by the U.S.  It was a very moving site.  The museum has a lot of artifacts from the blast, and includes very graphic details of the resulting injuries and deaths, as well as the fall out that occurred after.

 
Some exterior shots of the Hiroshima Peace
Memorial and the park around it.  It was very
beautiful, and somber.
 
These are the only pictures I took of the interior
of the Memorial's museum.  The one on the left
represents the blast of the atomic bomb 1 second
after the initial explosion.  The rest of the model
shows what was destroyed by the blast, including
marking out some of the significant landmarks of
the area.  There were a lot of before and after
pictures of some of the surrounding buildings to
highlight the destruction.

 
This is Hiroshima Dome.  It was directly under the
blast of the bomb, and somehow the forces of the
explosion didn't level it.  It has been left mostly in
its original state after the bomb, and a park put up
around it to make it a part of the memorial.
After the Hiroshima Memorial, we headed towards Hiroshima Castle.  This castle was much more a museum than a historical site, since the original was leveled during the bombing, but that made it a pretty unique and cool experience.  There were tons of artifacts from the Edo period on display, including swords, armor, and various daily items of the time.  It was fantastic, and I really enjoyed getting to see all of it.  Sadly, most of the museum didn't allow for pictures, but I did get a few.

 
The outermost gate of Hiroshima Castle is fully restored.
It includes the Tycho drum used to signal the time, as well
as pending attacks.  The place had a lot of models of the
surrounding country side and descriptions of the various
types of castles that were built in Japan.  It was pretty neat!
Hiroshima Castle is gorgeous and the surrounding
area has been made into a park, since all of the
surrounding buildings and most of the wall were
also leveled in the atomic bomb blast.  The rebuilt
castle is pretty faithful to the original though.
 
Some of the views from the top floor's exterior walk
way!  The view of the city and the surrounding park
was excellent!  Of course, the whole area was pretty
crowded, so we didn't get to spend much time up there.
 
At the end of the castle, they had part of the proper
O-yoroi to try on and take pictures in!  I couldn't resist.
Sara's is worn more properly, on the chest, since she tied
mine and it didn't stay in place very well.  The armor
itself is shockingly light, while the kabuto (helmet)
weighs a ton, as expected!  The whole thing is lacquered
metal and wood strips bound together with heavy silk
cord.  It makes for very heavy, very resilient armor that
was easy to maintain and clean in the Japanese humidity.
After leaving the castle, we headed for the trains again.  The ride to Miyajima wasn't too long, but it was already getting late in the afternoon and we were a bit worried about catching some of the stuff opened.  We had to skip having a proper lunch, instead grabbing convenience store food along the way.  I'm sure I've mentioned it before, but if not, I will here, but convenience stores here are on a whole different level from back in the U.S.  The food is pretty good, and much more fresh than at home.  It's sort of part of the culture here, but I'll have to get into that deeper in another post.

Miyajima was pretty spectacular!  The island is home to one of the most famous O-Tori gates in the country, the Great Tori Gate in the water.  It's part of a big shrine complex called Itsukushima, and it's beautiful.  The rest of the island is home to a little tourist town, with lots of shops, hotels, and a few museums.  We went to a folk museum that was cool.  It was a lot like the pioneer villages at home, really.  There were displays of all of the tools used in the production of various goods.  A lot of hand tools and fishing and farming implements.  The shrine itself was very pretty, but hard to get a read on, from a spiritual perspective.  There were a lot of people, but it still had a good energy.

 
We had to take a ferry out to the island, which was kinda
cool.  It was the first time I've been on something like
that in a very long time.
 
The view from the ferry was beautiful, as expected,
and the ferry pilot did a nice job of passing near
enough to the O-Tori to get some good pictures of it.
 
Some random pictures from around the
island on the way to the shrine.  There was
so much cool stuff here it was hard to get
pictures of all of it!
 
I'm very proud of this picture.  I think it does a good job
to convey the feeling of the O-Tori and what the area
around it is like.  This is probably my favorite picture
I've taken of Japan in general.  Anyway, at low tide,
the area around the gate is dry, and you can walk out to it.
Tori gates such as this one are meant to mark the
boundaries of divine from the rest of the world.  The
entire island is said to be a holy site, especially the
area around the shrine itself.
 
I love the way these old shrines are built.  The foo dogs
as guardians, the stone lanterns around them, the buildings
themselves.  It is all amazing to me.  The second shot here
is of the interior of the shrine itself.  I'm not sure what was
going on, but the family and Shinto Priests there were all
in prayer in front of the actual shrine at the heart of the
grounds.
 
A few parting shots back towards Itsukushima Jinja
as we were headed off to explore the rest of the island.
the sun was going down and tide was headed out, so
we knew we didn't have a lot of time left.
 
One of my favorite things about the less
developed areas like this here in Japan is
that everywhere you turn, there's a shrine.
This was a random one we passed on our
way to the cable cars to head up the mountain.
 
A few shots of the first leg cable car ride up the mountain.
 
The view from the second car was much more
interesting!
 
Of course, that didn't have anything on the view
of the sunset from the top of the mountain!  We
were on one of the secondary peaks, but didn't
have time to actually go to the highest peak on
the island, since the cable cars stop running at
sundown.  We had to rush a little to catch it after
this as it was.
That was pretty well the last thing we saw.  After that, we caught the ferry back to the train, then the train back to the shinkansen, and from there headed back to Nagoya.  By the end of the trip, we were both worn out, exhausted, and ready to get back to the dorms.  We stopped for dinner in the train station and tried a local food that was recommended to us by one of my Japanese friends.  I'll write about that later, I suppose, when I do a food post.  That may be a day or two.

The trip was amazing!  There were a few places along the way I'd love to spend  more time, and could've spent an entire day on Miyajima alone.  Kyoto also could've taken the whole trip, but we rushed through things so we could see more in the time we had.  It was so much fun!  I hope to get to travel more over winter break, but we'll see how things pan out.  The next post will probably be a lot more boring.  Please forgive me!

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