Month: July 2006

  • Yuanshan Festival of Rock

    Posted rather late – so some photos of an awesome weekend of music, in one of the finest gig locations I have ever seen – at the old Taipei zoo location near the Grand Hotel.

    Very special – doubly so since Andres, Nelson, Marta, Dean, Christina and others joined us. It was the second time I saw The Super Furry Animals live, and was blown away by the sure footed swagger of Dirty Pretty Things – half of the Libertines.

    So, finally, some music!


    Magical mystery cones – Peter rugby tackled one later on, much to the ire of the management. A case of not quite knowing how to handle foreigners in a rock festival mood.


    Shoes


    The star of the show


    Blurry


    Beer from a tea pot. No, it made sense. Apparently.


    Quite the most fantastic location for a concert. The best location since seeing Mogwai in Wulai

  • Tokyo Drift

    Some bikes … just for you.

  • I Think I`m Turning Japanese

    I managed to hold out an enormous amount of time before finally making it to Japan, and still Ele beats me to it by a few hours. But now I have broken my duck and I can be positive that I will be back here again very soon.

    Impressions are intense and very varied, both confirming and dismantling previously held stereotypes about these islands. All in all, it was everything I expected it to be, but also more accessible better value than I expected.

    Yesterday – my last full day in Japan was a well organised jolly to the beach, some temples and then dinner and (more) drinks in Shinjuku. A tiring, but amazing day, once again.


    Temples in… I’ll have to ask the place’s name!


    Ele (and Kauru just behind) pose with the flars


    Surf’s up – and against my expectations, the Japanese really could surf, and seemed to love the water – not like Taiwan

    As a final jaunt together, Ele and I managed to break through our collective hangover and squeeze in a quick visit to Akihabara to check out the Electric Town. Right now I am just about to fall over due to lack of food, so I should go and look after myself. I`ll be looking for my final mouthfull of sushi before I leave, I can be sure.

    Sayonara, Japan… I`ll be back.

  • Harajuku Girls

    We got in late last night. Roppongi. Mark as dangerous. The area I was told not to go was of course the first destination for the CSR crew boys here. A late night and a lack of sleep did not help getting up this morning, despite Tokyo being on our door step. Indeed, it took shaved ice with pure glucose sauce to kick me out of my stinker of a hangover. Roppongi.


    Ele, Kauru, Junko and I live it up


    Never have I seen so many energy drinks in one place – ‘functional’ drinks are huge in Japan, including Yakult and many other nutrition-packed liquids


    Kauru ties the fortune knot to the bar in Asakusa (not to be confused with Akasaka – our hotel)


    A local takes some time out to breathe on his Mild Seven


    Kimonos were a surprisingly common sight – wonderful

    After my shaved ice salvation and cruising around the Senso-Ji temple in Asakusa (confusing, since our hotel is in Asakasa) and emerging out of the metro to be faced with Philip Starke’s Asahi Museum work, we headed off to * to check out some of the shopping and then to Harujuku to meet Junko and Ian. Harajuku, for those not in the know, is the place in Tokyo to see the bleeding edge, drop-dead fashions -the goths, the rockers, the girls wearing makeup to enhance ugliness, the school girls, the Elvises and the zombies. I bought some sunglasses.


    Zombie woolly hats in Harajuku


    Utterly insane Pachinko – I played twice in games lasting all of 20 seconds and I have come to the conclusion you need a hole in your skull to play, and another to keep slotting money in.

    Dinner was Shibuya. A human hub, its road crossing is apparently the busiest in the world. It was here where I learnt that Ximending in Taipei gets its inspiration from. I swear, even down to the street lighting it was copied from this place. This was my vision for Tokyo and it happily matched it. Shabu Shabu was booked for dinner, which is a communal cooking pot with meat an vegetables comprehensively blew the doors off my local favourite Taipei version; I did not know it could be better. And I also did not know how much Japanese girls can eat in one sitting.


    Shibuya – waiting to charge!


    Ele, Ian and Kauru enjoy THE BEST SHABU SHABU I have ever had – and that is saying something. I am fairly sure my stomach became a solid ball of meat.

    Back to Akasaka, and after meeting up with Ele’s boss Gordon we headed straight for Karaoke to round off a great day in Tokyo – albeit a day with a rough, rocky and stormy start. Ending with Whiskies in the rooftop bar was perfect, and i have this feeling that I will be back in Japan sooner rather than later.


    Singing our hearts out guaranteed sexy voices the next day

  • Lost in Translation

    A predictable title perhaps, but completely apt since the view from the hotel is completely fantastic. I am pretending that the park stretching out in front of us is the Forbidden City, and I am also pretending that the sun setting over the mountains is instead a rising sun. But who needs such imaginary worlds when my sister and I meet up, duck downstairs to grab some sushi and are watching sumo on the television with the boss of the joint?

    Imagination and reality seem closer here…


    Ele looks out across to the Presidential Palace


    Traffic – the life blood of Tokyo

  • Tokyo – Flight 108

    Taiwan’s mishevious weather continues its attempts to scupper my flight plans. A tropical storm – the first since I returned from Green Island with my parents – crashed into the island about 24 hours ago, and it is fortunate that I appear to have no problems with my airplane to Tokyo. Damn you Taiwan weather!

    Finally, after two years of waiting I am making it to Japan. My sister is there on a week of business and as luck would have it she lands a few hours before me – grounds I am sure for bragging. I’ll be there for a long weekend, and we’ll be joined by Ele’s boss Gordon, her colleague Junko and a group of other people from CSR Cambridge. I have a suspicion that all of my time will be taken care of, and we’ll be getting a whirlwind tour of the city.

    Right now, I really feel like I needed to leave Taiwan and some fresh air. I’ll be fascinated to see what my reaction to being in Japan will be. I am certainly excited (peeing my panties more like), but I wonder how it will compare to that first touch down on the ROC. The rush of moving an entire life around the world is I think something that cannot be repeated – perhaps ever again.

    “Sayonara” ^_^

  • Test RSS / Atom Feed

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  • Spotted

    I need to kick start my blogging again so the best way to do this is to simply upload some photos. So, here are some amusing things that I have seen on my travels of late.


    A labrador seen near Danshui – shaved clean of any dignity


    Dad bought this in Hong Kong … amazing


    On the way home, I snatched this photo of a guy who could hardly turn he had so much foam loaded onto his scooter


    One of the local tradesmen specialises in brooms and hats and taps and bowls. As you begin to tune into Chinese you begin to hear the sounds of ‘buo li’ (glass) and other household items blairing (is that a new verb?) out of pre-recorded loud-hailers


    Taiwanese people like food. Taiwanese people like weapons. Taiwanese people like food shaped like weapons. (stretching the truth for the benefit of the blog)