Showing posts with label typhoon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label typhoon. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Typhoon Guchol

It seems that from this point on, I will have to suffer increased temperatures and the unrelenting sticky humidity associated with summers in Japan. The last couple of days in Tokyo have been progressively warmer and tomorrow is forecast to reach 30C.....I will be sure to stock up my fridge with Sapporo beer. The humidity is the real problem as it makes life and sleeping very uncomfortable for a few months.

Although I was planning to hold off using my air conditioner until July, I may have to turn it on tonight for a short time to cool down my apartment.

To further add to the challenges, Typhoon Guchol is quickly approaching the coast of Japan. The wind is picking up and the rain is getting heavier with each passing hour. I'm hoping the Tokyo train network manages to cope.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Typhoon

It has been a very busy and hectic couple of weeks. Work, work, and more work. Fortunately, Monday is a national holiday in Japan (Marine Day) which means I'll spend an extra day sitting around the house doing nothing. The reason that I will be sitting in the house is that typhoon Man-Yi is expected to hit Tokyo tonight and bring high winds and heavy rain.

The weather in Tokyo has been strangely cool so far and I am hoping that this will continue. Clara has now started swimming lessons at the local gym and Yuki and I will join at the end of the month. I can't wait to do some exercise again. The last exercise I did was in Shimogo in March so I will probably take it easy to begin with. I have also applied to do the 2008 Tokyo Marathon but I have only a 25% chance of being accepted as it is always oversubscribed. I am secretly hoping that my application will be rejected as I don't have any time to train for it.

Monday, August 28, 2006

Road Trip

Unfortunately, we had to cancel our planned trip to Nagasaki at the last minute because of a typhoon. It was a shame but I will visit Nagasaki one day - I really wanted visit the old house of Thomas Glover, a famous Scot who once lived in Japan and who was instrumental in making his adopted country one of the world's leading industrial powers.

Instead of Nagasaki, we drove to many places to the North West of Tokyo (around the area marked with the blue arrow). We saw so many places, but only for a very short time - it feels like I never actually went to these places at all. I have to say that my patience was wearing slightly thin at being in the car for between 8 and 10 hours each day. Clara was well behaved though and never complained, although she did ask if we could make more stops to the many beaches we passed during our epic journey. Still, I am lucky to have seen more of Japan, however brief our stops were.

We stayed in a very nice hotel at a place called Hida Takayama. Hida Takayama has some old style Japanese streets which have wooden houses and shops. The area was quite charming and Clara really enjoyed her 15 minute rickshaw ride. The area seems to be famous for selling wooden goods - I was quite tempted to pick up a few nice pairs of chopsticks but some were quite expensive. After our tour of the 'old town', we retreated back to the hotel and Clara decided she wanted to paddle in a small stream outside our hotel (while Yuki was doing more shopping).

The next day, we drove to an extremely famous town in Japan called Shirakawa Go. This town is also a World Heritage Site and makes frequent appearances in calendars on sale in Japan. It was lovely to see, but the weather was scorching and there were so many tourists around. I would love to visit the town again in winter - I'm sure the houses would look fantastic when they are covered in a layer of snow. After Shirakawa Go, we travelled up the Noto Peninsula and stopped off at more picturesque places. Senmaida was lovely and it was interesting to see all the tiny rice fields (terraced) there. Terracing is said to exist so that the local people (for many generations) could make most efficient use of their land. It is said that the smallest rice field can fit under one farmer's hat. The other main highlight of the trip was visiting the seaside and looking at an island called Mitsukejima. This island has the nickname Gunkanjima - Warship Island in English (for obvious reasons). Our final destination was Nagano (the place which held the 1998 Winter Olympics). Nagano seemed nice enough and I hope to go skiing there one day in the future. Nagano is famous in Japan for the wine produced there. I also noticed another local product which is not as appetising - honey with a massive bee (which looks like a wasp) floating in the jar!!

After our short visit to Nagano, it was time to make the relatively short journey back to Tokyo. In Tokyo, I went to Ochanomizu Station to look at the many ski shops there and I also met a couple of Japanese friends who I knew in Scotland. It was time to return to Shimogo.