I Had An Ice Day Watching This Winter Olympic Sport For The 1st Time In Tokyo

Having attended many summer olympic sports I thought it was time to turn my attention to some winter action but it was actually my lack of attention which nearly resulted in missing this figure skating event!

Only a few days before this NHK Trophy tournament did I even remember it was on and that I had a ticket as it’s not exactly a sport I follow in any way! I purchased the ticket about half a year ago and then forgot all about it. When I found it, I was a bit taken aback by how much I had paid for it all those months ago!! With all the extra fees charged, it cost nearly Continue reading

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The Traditional Japanese Hybrid Sport You Didn’t Know About!

There is an ever growing number of hybrid sports out there such as chess-boxing, cycle ball, foot golf, pickleball and slamball. Some of them sound pretty cool and interesting whilst others just seem totally bizarre and ridiculous. As for a combination of horse riding and archery, that surely can’t be real can it?

Surely such a sport is just the work of fiction!

Well actually it is, and it has a long history dating back to 10th century Japan before becoming more established and famous in the Kamakura Period (1192-1334). Whether Continue reading

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TF Top 5……Public Toilet Designs In Tokyo #3 (Urine For A Treat!)

To celebrate the unofficial toilet day on November 10th in Japan I have decided to deposit a third compilation of interesting public lavatories in Tokyo. The Tokyo Fox site sure is plumbing to low depths but hopefully you will be bowel-ed over and end up thinking it’s an excrement idea!

Japan is such a backwards country at times when it comes to many things but if they put just half as much effort into those things as they do in coming up with toilet ideas then it really might help move the country more into the 21st century. Most of the toilets included here are of the modern variety which have become more common place in the Shibuya ward area in recent years.

To get to the bottom of the matter, Continue reading

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The Highs & Lows of This Year’s International Tennis Tournament In Tokyo

The sports stadium or arena in Japan that I’ve visited most frequently is not actually Hitachi-dai (the home of my Japanese football team Kashiwa Reysol)! Neither is it Ajinomoto Field Nishigaoka; the closest stadium to the Tokyo Fox Global Operations Centre. It’s also not Prince Chichibu Memorial Rugby Ground which hosts many top tier rugby matches. Instead it is the home of tennis in Tokyo.

The terribly-named Ariake Continue reading

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TF Flashback: A Mouthwatering Food Tour of Singapore (2014)

The late Anthony Bourdain’s food based TV shows really helped me to be a lot more daring when diving into international cuisine and I subsequently gained a much greater appreciation for food-related travel. Going to this particular place soon became far more appetising than it had ever done in the years before when I travelled around much of Asia without much thought for visiting the city-state-island-country of Singapore.

A night flight was immediately followed by a taxi to Continue reading

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I Met Britain’s No. 1 Female Tennis Player In Tokyo (& I Was On The TV Coverage A Fair Bit Too!)

Whilst the 2021 US Open champion Emma Raducanu has taken a lot of the limelight in recent years when it comes to British women’s tennis, there is actually another female player who has been steadily rising through the ranks over the last decade to become Britain’s number one. Perhaps more importantly she is from the same city as me and is a fan of it’s football team!

My 1st selfie with Britain’s No. 1 female tennis player! Can you recognise her?!!

Around ten years ago I began to hear the name of Continue reading

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Time To Taco ‘Bout This Year’s Mexican Festival In Tokyo……& A Few Other Recent Ones!

After an absence from any festivals in Tokyo for over a decade, things changed this year as my wife and I thought it’d be a good idea to combine our regular long Sunday morning dog walks with trips to some of these events. For a six month period between March and September we went to five weekend festivals celebrating the cultures of countries from Asia, Africa, North America and Europe.

Fiesta Mexicana @ Odaiba, Koto-ku; Sunday 15th September.

The smallest of the five festivals was probably the Mexican one but that is what will be the main focus of this post. On a boiling hot mid-September day we Continue reading

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Unstaffed Stations Of Japan #18 – Takio

Think of train stations in Japan and the mighty Shinjuku station is sure to come to mind for many people. That is the world’s busiest train station, and Japan monopolises the top 50 list with only five of them not in this country. However, at the other end of the scale are some tiny stations which are usually unstaffed and used by very few commuters.

Station: Takio

Prefecture: Continue reading

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An Away Day Trip of Note to One of My Bucketlist Japanese Stadiums

Once I’d visited Sapporo Dome for the first time back in 2015, my sights were then set on the next most appealing Japanese stadium that was used in the FIFA World Cup of 2002. Nine years later and that dream was finally realised but was the match I saw live fitting of the occasion and my presence?!

It was 22 years ago that Japan and Korea co-hosted the biggest football tournament on earth. As much as I got into that World Cup, I have to admit that I wasn’t really aware of this particular stadium in Continue reading

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My First Time To See The New-Look Kasabian Live In Concert

Replacing band members like guitarists, bassists or drummers is quite common in the music business and can often be done with minimal fuss and disruption to their look and sound. However, switching the lead singer is a different thing all together. Very few bands have continued after the frontman or woman exits the band for whatever reason whether it be illness, death, scandal or musical differences.

Four years ago, Tom Meighan departed Kasabian as a charge of assault against him was imminent. The band wanted to protect their image and so he was gone. Replacing Tom  was a possibility but eventually it was decided that Continue reading

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