Monday 28 January 2008

Jetlag or jetset?

Well it has been an adventure already. We arrived in Tokyo two very tired travellers and our every sense was immediately assaulted. Everything is SO efficient here - the streets are clean, the people helpful and all so compact. Arriving at our hotel we thought a quick nap was in order (an hour should do it!) but a cool 6 hours later we woke again - first mistake for jet lag.

Dinner was also an challenge as we knew only the words for 'hello', 'goodbye' and 'this please' (used in conjunction with pointing at a menu) we found a bustling market street and hundreds upon hundreds of restaurants. All are small and simple, but they welcome you with lots of bowing and 'ko-ni-ch-wa' you can only feel like you are royalty! We had a lovely dinner - staring at each other bleary-eyed from too much sleep. Lots of free cups of green tea and an instruction that they closed at 9pm (so hurry-up and eat! in other words) The area is called Asakusa and at night it is like everything I expected from Tokyo - bustling, bright, friendly and full of strange new sounds and smells. We walked and walked and wandered and strolled through the evening streets and found our way back to our hotel. At one street crossing Simon was a little cold so started jumping (up and down twice) to warm up. A group of locals stared at him for about a minute, giggled and then all started jumping themselves. Stopped, waited for Simon to do it again and giggled. Too funny - we all just laughed together.

Sunday was totally different. Met at the hotel by Shiro Shiguchi (a 63 year old volunteer guide) who took us on a tour of the city in exchange for lunch and a box of Fortnum & Masons biscuits (they don't take money, but the guide book said to tip them with gifts from your country and the biscuits were all I could find in our final packing) His English was broken at best, but we soon found out much about each other within the limits. He has two sons, one granddaughter, retired 3 years ago, was born and lived in Tokyo all his life and once visited London (stayed in the Paddington hotel and didn't like it!!) He took us all over, Ginza street (famous shopping) Imperial Palace, Parliament, Meiji Shrine (where we bought talisman for safe travels), Harijuku (famous for dressing up in crazy gear and amazing shopping) to the top of the Tokyo Government Tower (amazing views) and then off to the fish market via the Kabuki theatre.







It was such fun to see Tokyo through his eyes and he was so determined we saw it all in one day! - he set quite a pace. The goodbyes were full of more bowing and an exchange of gifts. Another evening nap (2 hours this time) saw us through to dinner which was foraged from the local station food stall.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Hi, So lovely to get your emails and theses fantastic updates not that I should have expected anything less from a very organised pair. It all looks fantastic and we are so glad you are having such a wonderful time just about keeping up with sleep by the sound of it. Take care Love to both. Mum