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The personal log of Peter Payne, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Friday, August 28, 2009

Aomori and Hokkaido Update

My son and I are enjoying our trip to northern Japan. We had fun exploring Aomori, visiting the windswept beauty of the Tsugaru Peninsula on the western side of the prefecture, birthplace of enka singer Yoshi Ikuzo, who has belted out many songs about drinking sake while lamenting lost love, and one really famous song about how rural the village he came from is ("we have no traffic lights because...we have no electricity there"). Then we took in the city of Hirosaki, a beautiful castle town from the Edo Period, which was great fun to explore. While we were here, we got to experience one of the most unintelligle dialects of nihongo there is, Tsugaru-ben, which is said to be closer to French than Japanese, and I believe it. Then it was off to the ferry terminal to take a boat to Hokkaido...

Now we're in Hakodate (hah-ko-DAH-tay), a beautiful city on the southern tip of Hokkaido. While northern Honshu has been inhabited continuously since the stone age, Hokkaido itself was sparsely populated when the Meiji Era began. Japan's new government realized the island might be in danger of being seized by Russia, so in the 1870s they opened the land up to mass settlement. Perhaps as a result, many cities here such as Hakodate and Otaru have a San Francisco-esque feel to them, complete with pleasant streetcars that have been running for over a century by now. Hakodate was one of the cities visited by Admiral Perry and his famous "Black Ships" (this year is the 150th anniversary of the opening of the city's port), and the first American to be buried in Japan lies in the city's gaijin bochi (foreigners' grave yard). The city lies at the foot of Mt. Hakodate, and is famous for having one of the most beautiful night views of the world, up there with Hong Kong and Naples, according to a list someone made up. We'll be sure and check it out.

We took the ferry to Hokkaido, the home of diary products and potatoes in Japan.

5 Comments:

Blogger Tori said...

I'm wishing I was in northern Japan right now. I just arrived in Tsukuba three days ago and I'm sweating so much I want to just melt. How do you manage to last through Japanese summers?

11:20 AM

 
Blogger simplegirl said...

Hey! Am also in Tsukuba! Don't worry, Tori, it's gonna start to cool down soon. Just sit tight. But yeah, this post makes me want to go to Hokkaido too!

12:10 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Yes, it's nice up here, now that the rain ended. Was wearing shorts and was feeling a little cold, in August. Imagine that. I'll put my long pants on for Hakodate-san tonight.

3:09 PM

 
Blogger seiray said...

This post has been removed by the author.

3:22 AM

 
Blogger Chettochan's special place said...

can someone help me understand how long does it take from Tokyo to hakodate?

12:49 PM

 

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