We woke up and looked out our little balcony:
Passageways for pedestrians that went underneath the road (we found them to be much more common in the bigger cities):
A close-up of a shrine (we saw these things everywhere, country or city):
The pink thing is a sugar packet. The bottle all the way on the left: soy sauce, the 'Restaurant Sauce': is 'bulldog' sauce which is like soy sauce but tastes slightly different. The food is also different (it should be noted that it is not popular in Japan to 'go out' to breakfast, they eat that more at home, also smoking inside is OK):
After eating, we decided to try to find one of the main attractions of Aizu-Wakamatsu: Tsurugajo Castle. We ended up circling around for quite a bit, but when we found it we couldn't believe it took us so long as it was right in the middle of the town and it was big! We found parking immediately and were proud to be the oldest car in the parking lot. Here's the map of the grounds:
There was an outer moat:
and an inner moat:
With the biggest fish ever known to man. We walked down that red bridge:
There were several shinto shrines on the grounds.
The castle:
The legend of Tsurugajo Castle is that there was a big battle in 1634 at the grounds of the castle. A group of teenage Samurai warriors saw the castle from the distance, saw the fires, believed the castle to be on fire, and all of them committed seppuku (suicide by disembowlment (yikes)). In reality, the grounds around the castle were on fire, but not the castle itself. The act of the Samurai caused the battle to be lost within a couple weeks.
The castle itself was renovated in the 1880s, and the inside was a museum. They didn't allow pictures on most of the floors, but each floor (I think there were about 7 floors) offered different historical artifacts such as Samurai masks, swords, rifles, and ancient crafts like theses hand painted candles:
Of course, everything was in Japanese, but we got quite a bit out of the (unguided) tour. Especially the views from the top:
The bottom picture was taken with my camera zoomed as far in as it would possible go - that statue was barely a blip!
Our tickets (which were 500 yen each) also allowed us to go into the Chasitsu Rinkaku tea house on the grounds. Apparently one of the leaders who lived in the castle was a tea master and had the whole thing built.
We saw an interesting monolithic tombstone which looked like it had handcarved kanji in the surface:
On our way to Tokyo, my camera started dying and in a frantic sort of frenzy, this is the last picture it would take until the next day:
There were two tunnels next to each other, and there were two swans facing each other.
We arrived in Tokyo on crazy high-rise freeways. The drivers were more aggressive than the country folk, and the freeway views were blocked on both sides by walls that went up and curved towards each other at the top. We could only see the very tops of sky scrapers, some rivers, and some unhelpful signs in kanji. I now understand the video game F-Zero as that is exactly what their freeways are like.
It was dark and raining and we still needed to find parking and a hotel. We ended up in the Ginza district of Tokyo, which is also the 'business' district (business as in offices). The first garage we tried was across the street from the Emperor's Palace. After much fumbling communication with the attendant there, it was clear we weren't allowed to park there, so we turned around and ended up finding a spot in the 4th floor of a basement (so, technically the -4th floor) underneath a department store.
We left our luggage in the car and walked towards JNTO (Tourist Information as guided by our book), but they had closed 15 minutes before we got there (around 5pm). We grabbed some brochures, went up several floors of the building, had dinner surrounded by business-people enjoying the end of the work day (yes we were dishevelled gai-jin (foreigners), and may have stood out). We then walked out of the building, under some train tracks, bought umbrellas at a nearby convenience store, and walked around Ginza looking for a hotel.
We came across a 4 Seaons, but rooms were around 70,000 yen a night (about $900!). The front ladies were very helpful and very surprised and confused about our road trip idea (not too common a concept in Japan, I guess). They gave us a map of the local area and circled some reasonably priced hotels we should try.
We navigated the city using the map, brochures, and public maps on the street corners and somehow found our way back to the car. We drove around the Emperor's Palace, exploring the area a bit, gave up on the GPS showing where hotels were in the area (it had "H"s, but it was still very unhelpful) and went to Northern Ginza by the Nihonbashi Station and parked in a basement lot. There must have been hundreds of identical looking black cars with a specific decal on the side, but we asked a man washing them if it was ok for us to be there and he gave his assurance that it was, so we parked. We gathered our luggage and began walking around Ginza looking for Yaezu Terminal Hotel.
We wandered the streets for hours with all our luggage in the rain. The alleys were narrow and packed, but we were so tired and stressed it didn't matter since we were able to just be in awe of the bar scenes around us in downtown Tokyo. We finally found it around 10pm and we passed the heck out.
By the way, here is our hotel room:
Billy is sitting on his cot that they arranged in the room so 3 people could sleep... and here is our bathroom:
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