On Saturday I left Hamamatsu to go to my apartment in Izu. There is one other ALT in Izu, so he and I took the train together to meet our IC. An IC is a Japanese who speaks English who helps us set things up.
We took the Shinkansen (Bullet Train) from Hamamatsu to Mishima. When I took the Shinkansen before it was dark so I couldn't see much. This time I could see much more and could tell more how fast we were moving. When we would pass by another Shinkansen it would only take a couple seconds and it was gone... and those trains are long! The other train was only a blur. Super cool. :)
The picture above is one I took from inside the Shinkansen.
We met our IC. First we went to the other ALT's apartment and then headed for my apartment. The road wound through the mountains and there were a lot of great views!
After checking out my apartment and waiting for the gas man to arrive and turn on the gas, we headed back to the main part of Izu and went shopping for our apartments. The picture below was taken somewhere during that trip.
After a long day of shopping I got back to my apartment. I have things set up differently now and will do another post with a video of my apartment, but this is how it looked that night.
The kitchen isn't so beautiful, but luckily the rest of the apartment is awesome. :)
This is one of the bedrooms upstairs. My futon is now in this room. In this picture you can see the traditional tatami flooring.
It's really great because there is no central heat and besides this table all I have right now is one little space heater. I sit at this table when I eat, when I watch TV, when I'm on the computer... pretty much when I do everything! Once it warms up I can remove the blanket and just use it as a regular table.
Oh, and that rug is heated too! :)
I really like the sliding paper screens above the doors in the bedrooms because I can turn on the hallway light and it shines through the paper. :)
The apartment is old but it's great because it has a lot of traditional Japanese stuff like tatami flooring and shoji sliding screens. Here are a couple articles to explain them:
Tatami
Shoji
The next morning when I got up I had a very traditional Japanese breakfast...
I watched cute cartoons on TV. Kawaii!!!!!! That means "Cute!!!!!!" in Japanese. I see a lot of kawaii stuff here!
On the way home it started to rain more. It was cold! So when I got home I sat at my kotatsu and worked on a puzzle I bought while in Hamamatsu. It's super tiny! You can see the size compared to my chapstick.
I took advantage of the sunny day and walked around some more. I went to the beach again. This time I could see mountains across the bay! :)
Pretty Sakura!!!!!!Here is a view from the walk back to my apartment:
Why are there so many different flavors of Kit Kats in Japan? Here's how wikipedia explains it: "In recent years, Kit Kats have also become very popular in Japan, a phenomenon attributed to the coincidental similarity between the bar's name and the Japanese phrase kitto katsu, which roughly translates to "You will surely win!" This has reportedly led to parents and children buying them for school examination days as a sort of good luck charm."
Well, that's it for now! :)
The gate in the picture called "TORI I 鳥居" which leads you to the TOI Shrine(神社). And congraduation,there is Onsen(hot springs) according to the flower clock(Toi onsen)
ReplyDeleteTry Onsen, and feel great under cold weather these 3 days!
Thanks! I was able to read the kanji for "Toi" on the gate but not the kanji for shrine. Now I learned some new kanji! :)
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