Saturday, June 30, 2012

Field Trip to an Elementary School (and Other Stuff...)

Hey! Yesterday we took a field trip to a local elementary school! I talk about that and what happened after in the videos. I know they are long, but...um...I think they are interesting...I hope they are...





Mary

Location: my bed
Mood: Mixed...hm... (ーー;) 
Listening to: Primadonna - Marina and the Diamonds
Japanese for the day: 英語が話せますか えいごがはなせますか Eigo ga hanasemasu ka - Can you speak English?***
Most effective after following a "sumimasen...". Other possible languages include: Supeingo (Spanish), Doitsugo (German), Furansugo (French), Itariago (Italian), Roshiago (Russian), Chuugokugo (Chinese), Kankokugo (Korean).

***Whoopsadasies, I already made the video and I'm waiting for them to load to this post, and I realized instead of wo, since I chose to use the potential form, it should be ga. Bleh, it takes so long for those videos to load, I don't feel like making a new one :( Sorry for my poor speaking skills >_< No wonder people never understand me when I try to speak Japanese :'(

Thursday, June 28, 2012

合気道 (Aikido)

 Our cultural activity for Tuesday was the Japanese martial art Aikido. Unfortunately I can't really tell you much about my experience, since I mostly stood at the side and watched and when I attempted the moves, I failed utterly.
I can however, attempt to explain about Aikido. I feel like it's one of the lesser known martial arts in the US. I had never heard of it until college. There are lots of different kinds of martial arts out there, and the traditional Japanese ones are all called Budou (武道), which is the Japanese word for martial arts. This includes all sorts of "dou" martial arts, like judo, kendo, taekwando (which is actually Korean, but it uses the Chinese reading of characters, so it still works in Japanese), along with non...dou kinds, like karate. Aikido is relatively new in terms of martial arts- I believe it was created early in the 20th century. Aikido is a self defense type of martial arts, the most "self-defense" type, I believe. Most of Aikido involves evading your attacker or flipping his attack around using his momentum and forcing him to the ground, giving you a chance to get away. It looks very graceful, but it's hard to demonstrate, because it's like "grab my wrist and half heartedly attack me". You usually then twist around and push the other person to the ground. And that's it, in a nut shell. Even their competitions consist of just doing this "grab my wrist and half heartedly attack me" thing, and whoever subdues their opponent in the prettiest way wins.
Obviously I'm explaining this in a very concise manner. Aikido is a type of martial arts, and there is a great deal of skill to it and much practice needed to get good at it. It's one of the more popular martial arts for women to learn, since it's such a good self defense method. I took only maybe 2 pictures that day, so you'll have to wait to see that. I did just find a 50 second video if you want to see some Aikido. It's a lot more intense than what we saw, but mind you our demonstration was done by college kids who had all been doing this sport for 2 years or less. This is done by a...6th Dan, I believe. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aicHsMC6rxM
Since this was so short, I will upload a few pictures and things I never had a chance to upload. Tomorrow we have another field trip, so I'll be going to bed now! :) Oh, one more thing: today Alex and I found a family of cats living at the bike parking lot! I KNEW I heard meowing there the other day... it was adorable! One little kitten was climbing someone's bike ^_^ I want to keep theeeeem!


Mary


A short clip of the not-so-severe typhoon

We had a curry party with Japanese people. We made curry.

300 level Japanese T__T
learnin' stuff










Itadakimasu! Ramen, coffe, and peaches.

Gyoza party

Eatin' right at the dorms. Potato soup, Cafe au Lait, and dango!

Dango, dango, dango, dango...

Swimming in Lake Biwa

I asked some girls in the archery club if I could take a picture from across the train station XD

Location: The kitchen table (**le gasp**)
Mood: Secret giggliness is secret (#^.^#) 
Listening to: A concert on tv that Okaasan is listening to
Japanese for the day: ホテル・駅・ATMはどこですか。hoteru/eki/ATM wa doko desu ka? - Where is the hotel/station/ATM? (obviously you can insert other words. Are there any you want to know?)

Monday, June 25, 2012

Exploring Nagahama

Since yesterday was Sunday, Alex and I had plans to meet up with some friends Manny and Joe and explore some things in the immediate area. Alex and I should have gotten to the station on time to meet them, but apparently there was a jazz festival happening right through where we commute to get to the station. The streets were closed off to cars and stores were having sales, there were people selling foods from stands on the streets, and there were chairs lined along the road in front of a stage where various performers took their turns. There were even plushy mascot characters roaming the streets.
One of such mascot characters, Ne-ne chan
We tried to get through the crowd as quickly as possible, and made it to the station. Manny had brought his (new, I guess?) girlfriend, so although they followed us everywhere, they were basically in their own little world. So basically everything from here on out applies to Alex, Joe, and myself (while Manny and his girlfriend passively followed).
We went back to the hub of the festivities, Nagahama Ootemon Street. For you kanji enthusiasts, this is a pretty easy one, 長浜大手門通り. Nagahama big hand gate street, I guess would be the translation XD. Actually, what it is is a street lined with shop after shop and a roof over the top of it. The joining streets have lots of shops as well, but the main drag is this street, and it seems like a fun place to shop. We unfortunately didn't get to do much of that though.
^Nagahama Ootemon Toori                  ^Kaiyodo Figure Museum 
 ^The street is covered by a roof                 ^Kuro Kabe, a famous glass wares shop


^My ramune ice cream and Alex's kurogoma ice cream

The group of us wanted to go through the Figure Museum. It looks so cool- there are dragons and video game characters and samurai and dinosaurs all around the outside and it just looks so awesome. It was so crowded though, that we could hardly do more than shop in the gift shop for a few minutes before giving up on that idea. We then went and got ice cream from one of the many stands on the road. Mine, this blue one above, is Ramune flavored- Ramune being a Japanese soda. You may have seen copies around, it's the glass bottle with the marble in the top. It kind of reminds me of bubble gum flavor, but there is still an extra something. Alex got Kurogoma, Kuro meaning black and Goma meaning sesame seeds.
We then explored a temple near my home. It was really big and there was a play ground on the temple grounds. It was very pretty- stones and flowers and lanterns and gates. 







After that, we walked back downtown and enjoyed more of the festivities, taking pictures with more mascots, watching the musicians. A bunch of guys our age were working selling desserts and because we talked with them and took a picture with them, they gave us two of everything on the plate for the price of the one ^_^. As we ate, they then performed card magic tricks for us (yeah, remember how I said in the very beginning there would be magic? Mhm.). It seemed that things were winding down, so we headed towards the station. Along the way, we stopped at a well known shrine dedicated to the founder of Nagahama. Now, there is a difference between a temple and a shrine. To me they seem quite similar in appearance, the same gates, the same bells and clapping and bowing and praying. Temples, though, are called お寺, Otera, and they are for Buddhists. A shrine on the other hand, is a 神社, Jinja, and it is for this Shinto religion. This shrine was an Inari shrine, a shrine dedicated to the Shinto God Inari. Inari is the God for many agricultural related things, fertility, and foxes, which is how I new this was an Inari shrine. There were Kitsune, Japanese foxes, guarding the whole place. Inari's Kitsune are supposed to be white and are messengers for the Gods.
 
             ^Can you see the Kitsune statue next to the shrine?          ^Alex ringing the prayers bell
If any of that information is wrong and you know for sure, please tell me. I never claimed to be an expert on the subject, just a fan of Japanese culture :)
Afterwards, Alex and I left our fellow explorers at the station while we went into Heiwado, our version here of AL Plaza in Hikone, and we did another purikura before going home. We had an interesting visitor that evening, but I will save that for later so I can devote an entry to it.
On an entirely random note, I noticed that my viewings for my blog jumped from an average 3 (yes, 3...come on, people) page views a day to over 9,000 in one day. I thought it was maybe a fluke, but I looked at the traffic flow, and apparently, something called the Society News wrote an article about my Onsen entry! XD. I could read some of it, but I had Okaasan translate the rest of it, and they make me sound like such a sweet enthusiastic American who learns the magic of the Onsen and appreciation of the Japanese culture. In case you're interested at attempting to read the Japanese (or make fun of how bad google translate translates it), have a look: http://news.searchina.ne.jp/disp.cgi?y=2012&d=0625&f=national_0625_015.shtml. I'm not complaining. It got me more views. No comments, oddly enough. So please, please read and comment. And don't comment to tell me "we're all reading", because as you can see, I can see how many people are reading and where they are from, and I know we are all reading is not true -__-. I know I can't expect appreciation all the time, but I was asked to make this blog, so I don't quite get why those people who asked me to write it refuse to even read it. Whatever, there isn't much I can do about it I guess. Now though, it's time to get ready for bed, since I just spent three hours on this. Tomorrow we have another cultural activity at school, so look forward to that. Ja mata ne!

Mary

Location: Bed
Mood: Still sick **cough cough**
Listening to: In your Eyes - Kalafina
Japanese for the day: これをひとつおねがいします kore o hitotsu onegaishimasu - I'll have one of these, please (point the the thing you want! This is good when you have a menu in front of you that you can't read ^_^)

And here is some purikura, in case you were wondering ^_^


Sunday, June 24, 2012

東映映画村/嵐山 (Toei Eigamura/Arashi Yama)

In case you see those Japanese words in the title and think this entry isn't about anything exciting, I will quickly dispel those doubts. First off, lets do a mini game. I will tell you that Eiga means movie, and Mura is means village. The kanji for Toei are those for east and for reflection, so that doesn't mean much. Some people my age may realize that Toei is a company. A company that makes movies and tv shows- popular things like the Power Rangers and Sailor Moon. So if you put all those clues together, you should be able to figure out where we went...
We went to the Toei Studio Park in Kyoto Japan, where the entire park can be used as various movie sets for period movies and shows. Most of the town looks like a historic Edo period city, something out of the feudal days of Japan. Other parts of the park look like they are a town in Meiji period (Victorian era) Japan, cobble stone streets, a court house, restaurants...there are also plenty of other tourist things to do, like see performances, tour museums, a haunted house, and more.
Alex and I took our usual 7:55 train to Hikone, and we got on the bus that was waiting for us right outside the station. I had packed in a rush, so I forgot to bring anything to occupy myself with for the 1 1/2 hour bus ride, so I just made the back of the bus turn into the craziest/coolest place to be, if I do say so myself, by just being silly and having fun with friends.
 We arrived there quite early in the morning, so there were hardly any people in the park at first, despite it being one of the warmest, sunniest days of this rainy season. We headed through the sparsely occupied 17th century village whose house fronts were laden with overpriced souvenirs. Along the way, we saw things like this: 

 
Finally we reached our destination- the theater. We were just in time for the 10:20 showing of the ninja show. I have a video. I know I seem to have excuses as to why I can't subtitle things, but anyone who is studying Japanese will agree with me about this. Samurai/Old Japanese is very hard to translate. They use a whole different set of vocabulary, so you may be able to understand none of it, but I couldn't understand that much of it either. But the show opened like this:
Sorry it stops so suddenly XD my camera died. At that point the good ninja does this trick where he splits in two and defeats that guy. It turns out there are actually two ninjas who were (I think) father and son. This villain here was not their main villain. They had a much bigger foe the needed to find: this guy: 
 Once he came down from his balcony, giving his menacing speech, and stalking through the crowd. He approached the group of Americans with his arm stretched towards us...and...
 **zing** goes the sound effects
 "Irasshaimase!" he shouted in welcome as the lights went up and happy music went on. He laughed and did a bit of audience chit chat and took pictures with anyone who wanted to. I would have, but I was sitting behind the rope that blocked us off from the aisle and it would have been awkward to get out there. These nice pictures I stole from my friend's camera, by the way...
^Villain-san and my friend Helen
After that, he went back to being evil and he used a clone jutsu to make himself look like the father and attack the son, and then more fighting ensued, and eventually the real father showed up and he was mortally wounded, but somehow...the good guys won...yeah, like I said, I hardly understood anything XD










Sorry I could lay that out in a more convenient way. It is impossible to deal with the picture layout on this blog. :/
In the park we did various other fun things. I didn't want to pay to go in the haunted house since it was 500 yen, but I hear it was really really scary. There were lots of other fun things to do there, and as a souvenir I did buy myself a little cell phone charm. :)
This weird old man's head popped out of the mountain and started playing music

In the recording booth! It's hard for me to read Japanese that fast, so I sorta failed


I can lift one side by myself...

...but it takes 6 people to lift me up... T__T

The Happy Ninja Family


wow, that last picture made me realize how tall I am compared to Japanese people...I tower above my host family...aw...I guess we should take an awkward family picture at some time so I can show you that...but I diverge.
Dinooo
The 19th century part of the park


Red Rangers!



Power Ranger Villains



Toei makes One Piece, so it was everywhere

fountain!
So that there was the park! And that's not all though. We got back on the bus by 1:20, but we weren't going home. Remember how the title of this entry had a / in it? Yeah, we were on our way to that place I named after that back slash,  Arashiyama Monkey Park.
Now, I was aware there was going to be a little bit of climbing to get to this park. It's name has yama in it after all, and that means mountain. But the way we were told, it was supposed to be hardly anything, just like how it is to climb up to Hikone Castle maybe. But no. This was a hike. This was a hike that was long and steep and in the middle of a humid jungle. After climbing for ten minutes and seeing the "You are here" sign that put me hardly a fourth of the way up, I just plopped onto a bench. I was joined by several other lagers who also were deterred by this sign, until we eventually decided we had enough strength to get to the top. Once we made it, we were greeted by smelly, red faced, stumpy tailed Japanese macaques, which the Japanese just call Saru, which means monkey. They do not distinguish monkey species, obviously. The monkeys just walk around, but you aren't supposed to touch them or look at them in the eye in case they take it as a challenge. To give them food, you go in a little hut and buy some fruit or nuts or something and the monkeys hang to the caging on the outside and reach their hands in and you can hand them food.













Kyoto



The monkeys are scared of the wild pig XD




After spending a good long time up there with the monkeys, we headed down and back to the bus. So I didn't really get to experience Kyoto, and I was allowed to stay behind if I wanted to, but it's not like the shops are open forever, so I wouldn't get to do much. I really want to go back and experience the city itself.
But on the bus, everyone was just so tuckered out, I think my friend Franny and I were the only ones awake practically. After the trip home, us famished home stay kids went to McDonalds and got stuff from the 100 yen menu- I got an AMAZINGLY delicious crispy chicken sandwich and then something called "shaka shaka chicken". You get a flavoring powder and you put that together with your chicken in a bag and you shake it so your chicken is covered in the flavoring. I swear, Japanese McDonalds has ruined fast food for me forever, because now I'll go to fast food places in America and expect it to taste good. 
So that was the day! We just came home and ate actual dinner and just chilled in our room until going to bed. Speaking of bed, I think I should hit the hay now. This blog is the new record for longest taking blog since I started it before 7 and it's now 10:30. So good night!


Mary


Location: Let's say it all together now: My Bed!
Mood: Giggly (^v^)
Listening to: Cut Me Free - Olivia Lufkin
Japanese for the day: 写真を取ってもいいですか。しゃしんをとってもいいですか。shashin o totte mo ii desu ka? - May I take a picture? (We say this soooo often here to random people! XD)