Tokyo Daytripper: The Old-Fashioned Amusement Park In Northern Tokyo

On Friday the 24th of August I went to Toshimaen Amusement Park which is a 15 minute train ride away from where I live. Sadly we didn’t have so long there as we only got there at 2pm and it was also quite mild for a day in the ridiculously hot and humid August.

Swimming pools in Japan seem to have very little to do with swimming. These areas are full of inflatables and people just lying around drinking and eating and then theres also the J-girls doing their make-up and acting cute in maybe the only country in the world where they can wear heels with their swimsuits and not be considered tarty!

The highlights are (apart from the many many cute girlies!) of course the slides and due to the queues in this place I only bothered to go on two. The first was your twisty type descending from up-high and was quite painful as my feet got smacked round against the side and the second was a speed one which I didn’t see to much of as there was so much water sprayed in my face along the way down a big dip. A good adrenalin rush though!

Most people drifted away between 5pm and 6pm and after that it was time for the rides. We didn’t have a pass for all the rides but could pay for them individually which means that you don’t go on anywhere near as many rides. Being very choosy we only did the one and that was the 500 yen Cyclone. It was really good and maybe this was heightened by the fact that there was just a simple waist seatbelt for protection while we were seated on velvety seats in a log looking rollercoaster with a few dips and a long dark tunnel part.

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Australia 2007 Pt VII – Melbourne Again

The 4.45am airport shuttle took me to Hobart Airport for my 6am flight back to Melbourne and I was surprised to bump into colleague Mark in the waiting lounge who i climbed Mount Fuji with. After a slight delay I was back in Melbourne at 7.30am and took a tram to the Royal Melbourne Zoo as I felt I should tick the ‘see kangaroos and koalas’ box on my imaginary checklist.

I didn’t visit this zoo six years ago as I did something similar in Sydney but this was quite a good one with the chances of getting up quite close to some animals without a huge fence or glass window in the way. The kangaroos were fairly free and the Emu’s were roaming around too making me feel a little paranoid as I posed for a photo or two in front of them.

Emu's  Australia Aug '07 093  These Gorilla's must have had an argument!  Giraffe meets Zebra  finally the koala looks in my direction!  Peccaries

After exchanging yet more money at a good exchange rate I bought plenty of tacky souvenirs for my students and headed back to Ruth’s to spend a final afternoon with her and baby Eifion which we did with a simple walk down to the cafe by the local beach and then I even experienced the excitement of changing a nappy for the first time but will it be the last time?!!

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Australia was really the place that kickstarted the travel-bug in me all those years ago and had became forgotten in some ways but this little trip certainly made me remember what I had liked about the country and why I had gone ‘down under’ in the first place.

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Australia 2007 Pt VI – Tasmania, Port Arthur

I’m not usually a fan of tours but without a car in Tasmania its quite difficult to do without them. Consequently I went on an ‘Under Down Under’ day trip to Port Arthur which was very much my second choice but there wasn’t a trip to see Wineglass Bay on the east coast on the only day I had available to me.

Port Arthur though is Tasmania’s most popular attraction and is the penal colony used during the time of first convict settlement in Australia and it has a very dark history. As I said I don’t really like tours as they do tend to just pad out an itinerary which could probably be done a lot quicker and this one was no exception but having said that I did enjoy it!

When I boarded the bus at the ridculously early time of 7:30 am I already knew two of the girls (one from Hong Kong and one from Japan) from the previous day at Mount Wellington and after a lot of fannying around we got to the small town of Richmond which is a British style village famous for Australia’s oldest bridge in use dating back to 1823. Just a photo stop there basically and then it was off to see Waterfall Bay which offered the usual splendid coastal views and rock formations which becomes a bit same-same after a while.

Richmond Bridge Remarkable Cave at Waterfall Bay Australia Aug '07 305

Following that walk we drove through a small town called Doo where all the houses had hilarious (?) doo pun names such as ‘Much A-Doo About Nothing’, ‘Just Doo It’, ‘Love Me Doo’, ‘Doo Me’ and inevitably ‘Doo F*ck All’!!

After a basic lunch at the Remarkable Cave we entered Port Arthur and hopped straight on to a half hour cruise of Carnarvon Bay taking us around the Isle of the Dead where over a thousand people were buried in a ‘secure and undisturbed resting place’. We didn’t disembark there but some people did. Instead, we had two and a half hours to tour the site at our leisure with an optional walking tour which I didn’t do for fear of information overload. I was happy to just wander around reading some of the information on show which i did in the company of an English girl called Cath and to be honest it was a lot more interesting than I thought it would be.

Australia Aug '07 026 Australia Aug '07 034 Australia Aug '07 035 Penitentiary at Port Arthur The Hospital Guard Tower
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Australia 2007 Pt V – Tasmania, Hobart

I was up early out of habit and had to wait around to take the 9.30am bus to Hobart where I checked in to Central City Backpackers which was surprisingly quite nice. I had to make some pretty quick decisions once at reception regarding what I’d do that that afternoon and the following day. Mount Wellington summit eventually won over the Cadbury’s chocolate Factory for much the same reasons that I never went to the Boags brewery in Launceston or the Cascade brewery in Hobart because as much as I like these things I don’t know if I really care so much how they’re made.

The afternoon tour up the mountain was ruined by a lot of cloud and a complete ar*e of a bus driver who I had an argument with on the descend. As we were ascending the mountain it was obviously very cloudy and he said we would stop on the way back down to get some photos.

It was absolutely freezing at the peak and myself and the three asian girls on the bus wandered around for a bit and waited patiently for the cloud to clear which it eventually did a few times for a matter of seconds. Given that we had paid A$25 for that two hour trip (starting late and finishing early on top of that!) I was certainly expecting a quick photo stop at a clearer point on the way down but when I asked about that he gave me some b*llocks about it clearing up wonderfully from where he was sat in the van which it so didn’t.

Australia Aug '07 056 Australia Aug '07 025 The pinnacle of Mt Wellington Australia Aug '07 072

Back in Hobart city I walked around Salamanca Place and Battery Point still fuming about the idiot driver. They were fairly pleasant areas of sandstone restaurants, shops, galleries, craft shops and offices but nothing too special in my mind. I later ended up in the wharf area where I had fresh fish and chips on one of the many seafood barges.

Fish and chip barges Hobart Harbour Australia Aug '07 266 Mount Wellington at sunset
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Australia 2007 Pt IV – Tasmania, Cradle Mountain

I know its Winter and out of season in Tasmania but I never expected to be the only one on the Gray Line day tour to Cradle Mountain. Thats what I was though as driver Dave and I made our way west of Launceston to cradle county. I didn’t know until I left Tasmania but it appears that I was very lucky with the weather there as its supposedly only nice for about 20 days a year. The upside of being the only tourist was that I had more control over what we did and this included such cheesy tourist photos of the wombat and kangaroo road signs.

Once at Dove Lake I could see the beauty of Cradle Mountain standing before me. The only decision I then had to make was whether to walk around the lake or climb up to the Marina Lookout. Thankfully I took the latter option and chose the ‘easy’ track which wasn’t so easy for the fact that the middle of the path was very icy plus it was also very boggy in places and my foot went in a couple of times which wasn’t too pleasant.

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Unlike Mount Fuji a couple of weeks before this mountain hardly had anyone on it. I must have only seen about a dozen people on the whole climb and descend which took about two and a quarter hours and it was lucky that I did see them as a couple pointed out a wild wallaby to me which I would probably have missed. Another pairing were on hand to take some photos of me at the top which was great as the views were magnificent with the reflections of the mountain in the lake waters providing an amazing spectacle.

I inadvertantly took the ‘difficult’ route down which was actually a lot easier as it wasn’t so icy and with the steps and chains to hold on to it was far quicker than the other route which was important as I was needing to get back to the driver fairly quickly to move on to the next place.

As we left the beautiful serenity of the mountain and lake behind we saw a wild wombat which was a bonus for me and further benefit was seeing the famous Tasmanian Devil albeit at a conservation sanctuary.

Tasmanian Devil Park Australia Aug '07 279 Australia Aug '07 276 Australia Aug '07 261 Australia Aug '07 264 Australia Aug '07 219 Australia Aug '07 236 A wild Wallaby

We stopped off at Ashgrove Cheese farm on the way back to Launceston to sample a wide variety of cheese (and honey too) made on the premises and I even purchased a few wild wasabi cheeses as novelty presents for a few of my students. All in all it was a very pleasant day trip and I was pleased with what I had seen.

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Australia 2007 Pt III – Tasmania, Launceston

I got a good soaking at 5am on Sunday 12th August as I walked to the pick up point for my Airport bus. Typically, it stopped as soon as I got there! I checked into Launceston City Backpackers on arrival in Tasmania and went out straight away as no time to waste. 15 minutes later and I was at Cataract Gorge, the undoubted highlight of the area, where I took an easy stroll along the riverside trail to Kings Bridge where I was in a bit of a dilemma as to whether to continue on or turn back knowing that I wanted to visit a dam back the other way.

Luckily I got talking to a couple who offered me a lift to the power station lookout at Duck Reach which was two kilometres away on foot and on top of that they also drove me to Trevallyn Dam where we whiled away far longer than was right waiting for a log or two to make its way towards the edge before plummeting. An anti-climax if ever there was one!

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After that I had a go at cable hang-gliding which was something I had read about and wanted to do. As I glided over the edge of the cliff and across the valley to my destination 200 metres away the feeling was quite good but nowhere near as stomach-churning as I’d hoped. Still, what can you expect for just A$20?!

There didn’t seem to be too much on offer in the city and that was made even worse given the fact that it was a Sunday and many things were therefore closed. I saw the Japanese Macaque monkeys in the city park and walked around the Aurora Stadium and that was about it until the early evening when I went to watch the fantastic ‘Simpsons Movie‘ as it’s not out in Japan yet or ever likely to be!

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Australia 2007 Pt II – Melbourne

During my working holiday year in Australia in 2001 I spent about a third of that time in Melbourne living in St Kilda so I was looking forward to taking a nostalgic trip down memory lane. Before that though I went with Ruth and the baby to Brighton beach and Ramsay Street and then found my bearings back in Melbourne city centre and did a bit of shopping before visiting the recently opened Eureka Tower and its 88th floor observation deck where i could see great views of Melbourne and the surrounding area.

There was even a cube which extracts itself from the building and hangs you over the edge and at that stage the glass is frosted before it suddenly clears and you’re left staring down nearly 300 metres to the ground. This would of course been more scary had my sister not told me of this the day before and for those of you who don’t want to know about it please look away, erm, a couple of lines back!!

Australia Aug '07 097  Albert Park lake

After that I visited the ‘Neighbours‘ shop out of curiosity and wasted a bit more money in there before taking a quick peek at the Crown Casino and then it was off to Albert Park which plays host to the Australian F1 Grand Prix each March. Of course bugger all was happening there now but it was literally just a pit stop (pun intended) en-route to St Kilda to visit my old haunts. I saw the house and hostel where I stayed though the latter had closed down.

The 'Neighbours' centre  Crown Casino  Australia Aug '07 119  Australia Aug '07 133  St Kilda Beach  Australia Aug '07 143

I also saw the iconic laughing face of Luna Park, a few cake shops and walked along the beach at sunset before necking a couple of quick beers in my old locals ‘The Espy’ and ‘The George’. Some people say that laughter is the medicine of life but not for an asthmatic like me who needs inhalers!! Unlike the UK and Japan, these are freely available over the counter in Australia so I stocked up on a few of them too.

Luna Park  The Prince Of Wales

On the way back to the city I stopped off at the Shrine of Rememberence which I also visited for a photo stop the following day in daylight after watching an Aussie Rules Football game at the MCG. The famous cricket ground was far from full for the clash between Hawthorn and Brisbane Lions but it was a good atmosphere for me to be able to savour and the third quarter was particularly exciting as the Hawthorn Hawks ripped through the Lions’ defence.

Aussie Rules football @the MCG  Australia Aug '07 170

My final calls of duty were meeting up with cousin Dan and then going to ‘Hungry Jacks’ for a set meal which I couldn’t even manage to finish. Not used to that kind of generous portion I guess and it was also strange to be in a country where I understand everything being said around me. Not such a good thing to be honest and it shows how much I can shut myself off in public from the Japanese if I choose to do so.

Melbourne Central Roof  Shrine of Rememberance  Australia Aug '07 179  Australia Aug '07 185
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Australia 2007 Pt I – Baby Eifion

I just returned from a short holiday to Oz to visit my sister Ruth and her recently born first child. After an hours delay I finally arrived in Melbourne via Sydney and its fair to say that I did suffer a bit from reverse culture shock at first as I have only been in Asian countries since early 2005.

Back on Aussie soil for the first time since my year working holiday visa ended in February 2002 I met Ruth and it wasn’t long before I was carrying the baby. Eifion looked pretty scared at first but probably not half as scared as I was having never been near a baby before in my life. He was supposedly born bigger than most babies but he seemed tiny to me and despite initial looks of fear he soon did what does best and fell asleep as we walked to the local beach in Parkdale and on to the pub in Mentone for a quick beer.

first beer for the baby!! the 'Evans' family mother and son Australia Aug '07 027 Australia Aug '07 022 finally putting my trust in the holder

The following morning was Friday the 10th and we took Eifion to the colourful huts on Brighton beach once we’d dropped Carl off at work and a bit later we even treated(?) him to a trip to Pin Oak Court a.k.a Ramsay Street. Only 11 days old and he had already been to the scene of so many great moments from the TV soap ‘Neighbours‘. It may have been my third visit but I had to wait more than 20 years to first visit the famous street. I think he was so overcome with excitement and emotion that he slept through the whole experience!

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I even changed his nappy and pushed him along in the pram thing on my last day when I returned to Melbourne for a day which was a useful experience but not something I hope to do for quite a while yet on a regular basis. On the whole it was quite a good time to visit as he slept most of the time which is certainly not how babies are portrayed in the movies and on TV. I guess that when my parents visit next month he will be a bit more animated and noisy and its scary to think that the next time I see him he will look very different whether that be in a year or a decade or whatever.

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Climbing Mount Fuji

After a hard days graft on Saturday 28th July most workers would maybe wind down for a couple of hours before painting the town red. Not for myself, school manager Shinobu, colleague Mark and his friend Joey who decided to ignore every other teachers negative stories and overcome the challenge of conquering the symbol of Japan. I don’t mean eating our way through the menu at a kaiten-zushi but climbing Mount Fuji.

It seems that most teachers have ticked the ‘climb Fuji’ box on their things to do in Japan but having been in this country for over three years I still hadn’t. I’ve been asked a couple of times in recent years but have always declined very impolitely as very few seem to have said anything positive about it. A few years on and still not so wiser I had a change of heart.

The bus took us from Shinjuku up to the fifth station some 2305 metres up the mountain already and straight into the mouth of a souvenir shop jam-packed with tat and a load of climbers. We set off on the climb at about 10:15 pm equipped with just about everything possible thanks to Mark’s research. Within a few minutes I had used up, and undoubtedly annoyed everyone with typical juvenile remarks like “race you to the top” and “are we there yet?”. To prevent altitude sickness we took it easy to start with and used our oxygen cans complete with the inevitable Darth Vader impressions.

As we ascended the mountain, layers of clothing had to be added but that wasn’t the only change as the food and drink prices at the huts increased the higher we got. Anyone for a 600 yen cup noodle?!!

MountFujiClimb July '07 001  MountFujiClimb July '07 005

I was actually close to enjoying myself as we climbed from station to station and I thought we still had a while to go till sunrise. My original thinking was just to reach the summit but as I continued on I really did want to see sunrise……but then we hit a sh*tload of people at the final station.

Absolutely hundreds, if not thousands, of people seemed to appear and we realised that we wouldn’t be at the peak for sunrise in the land of the rising sun. This last part of the climb (about 500 metres) was so frustrating as you just couldn’t move more than a few steps every half minute or so on the thin path. Sadly no Disneyland-style FastPass was available and it was near to complete silence among the crowds with even more depressed faces than at recent Leicester City games and that’s saying something I’ll tell you!

At about 7am, nearly nine hours after we had set out, we reached the top. A round of applause, cheering, champagne, fireworks, balloons, people partying and celebrations all-round – there was none of that!! Just a sense of relief, the inevitable crowds, a kind of village with the ubiquitous souvenirs and a massive line for the toilets. Nothing like relieving yourself in view of a line of people and I only had to pay 200 yen for the privilege!!

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Although we didn’t catch much of a sunrise we did see the crater and a small shrine at the top. We didn’t have time/couldn’t really be ar*ed to walk round the crater to send our postcards from the post office where you can get a special postmark. Instead we passed them on to a couple of trustworthy looking old ladies and began the descend which is said by many to be the worst bit. Fearing a re-occurrence of recent knee problems picked up while jogging (over one year of that now) I put on my knee supports and descended down the loose volcanic rock trying to keep up with Shinobu the speed demon.

My trainers were getting filled with the gravel and the heavens opened up after a while on top of that. Not wanting to hang around too much we bolted it down in a lightning fast 2.5 hours. Sadly when we reached the bottom we realised we had taken the wrong course down and had ended up in Shizuoka Prefecture rather than on the other side of the mountain in Yamanashi. This was the last thing any of us wanted after such an arduous climb up and down the sacred mountain and so getting home was delayed for a few more hours.

As previously mentioned, my original aim had been to just climb Fuji-San but I was still a tad disappointed that I couldn’t observe sunrise from the top having made the effort. However, whenever I see the picture perfect views of Fuji-San I can be happy with the thought that I have climbed it and perhaps even further satisfied in the knowledge that I’ll never have to climb it again!!

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A New Addition To The Family #1 – Eifion

I am now an Uncle as my eldest sister Ruth gave birth at 9.36pm (Australian time) on Monday the 30th of July 2007. Eifion John Evans is her and her husband Carl’s first child weighing in at a whopping 9lb 2oz (don’t really know what that means myself!!) so congratulations to them.

 

I am flying to Melbourne in Australia on my birthday (August 8th) next week so will get my first proper glimpse of my nephew which will be a little daunting as I have never really been anywhere near a baby so have no idea what I’m supposed to say or do.

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