We also discovered that Chile had suffered a terrible 8.8 magnitude earthquake and that a tsunami was racing across the Pacific. Every channel on TV had tsunami warnings for up and down the whole coast of Japan. Fortunately, we are not in an area that would be affected. My heart goes out to the people of Chile and Haiti both.
On a lighter note, we ate while we wore our Team Canada Olympic shirts (THANKS MOM!) and watched the recording of Canada vs Slovakia and Slovakia versus Finland. Yay Canada! Both games were fantastic. Sorry Slovakia. Better luck next time around.
Then we headed out to Osaka Castle Park to check out some plum blossoms. One of my students on Friday reminded me that there is a beautiful area near the castle where the city has planted hundreds of different plum trees. So we thought it might be nice to have another Sunday Walkabout.
We took the subway over to Tenmabashi and Ulala showed me where she went to junior and senior high school. Then into the park that surounds Osaka Castle and around the moat (yes, there's a moat) and toward toward the plum blossom zone. I told you there would be more flower pictures. I tend to be shutter-happy on these walkabouts. Just wait til the cherry blossom "pink wave" comes next month.
I took quite a few of pictures and we walked a LOT. After sunset we looped back around and down through Tenmabashi and along the river down to Yodoyagawa, while i took a lot more night pictures. Then we wandered around southward to Hommachi making a big half circle through the back streets looking for a place to have dinner. Being Sunday, though, most of the restaurants in the financial district were closed. It was nice and quiet to walk through downtown and see the towers and the obligatory lobby-art with almost no one else around.
We ended up deciding to have dinner at the Hard Rock Cafe Osaka (to which i, despite living here for over six years, had never been). For the "Hard Rock" Cafe, they sure played a lot of R&B and hip-hop. Meh. We had a great dinner and i even bought a Green Day T-shirt (don't you judge me). Now i'm full and my legs feel like they're going to fall off.
Far too many photos from the day:




Symian is: plum walked out.
Currently Reading: nada
Currently Listening: R&B at the Hard Rock
Kanji of the Day: 童/ドウ/わらべ
your photos are always quite good, but in this particular post the 3rd photo from the top really struck me. The composition with old and new practically superimposed.... awesome.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Sonya! I sometimes get a little de-sensitized to the old-new juxtaposition here in Japan. There's just so much of it. You'll be in an ancient temple one minute and step out into the street and be faced with traffic and talking vending machines. Crazy.
ReplyDeleteBTW, I enjoyed your haiku. Your writing continues to be original, engaging and high-quality. Keep it up! =)