I’m arrived and now blogging directly from Japan. My flight touched down last Thursday evening, around 5 pm local time, and after a short trip through customs and shipping my bags off to my guest house I found myself enjoying the titular bowl of ramen. (I thought the miso was even a bit creamier than Daikokuya and the piece of nori was quality.) I spent that night in a small business hotel in the Narita area. I hadn’t realised before that Narita is very countryside: no trains, roads through dense woods, occasional houses here and there. It was already dark when I took the shuttle to the hotel, and it was a surprise opening up my hotel room window the next morning to see sprawling rice fields and forest surrounding the building.
Friday was a very busy day. Suffering from a bit of jet lag, I was awake by 5 am and took the hotel’s first courtesy shuttle back to Narita Airport. The local Keisei line took me directly to Funabashi in just over an hour. Funabashi is where I’m living for the moment in a guest house, and my mission on Friday was to find the city office, get a temporary registration form, and apply for my Alien Registration Card. I had visited the Funabashi City Hall website while still in the US and printed out their English instructions. The instructions looked fairly simple: walk three blocks south of the station and make a right, and I thought I would arrive at City Hall in twenty minutes or so, right before they opened. However, it was more of a two hour wandering that awaited me. This was because I did not think to look up the kanji for “City Hall” until about an hour in; I missed the sign for the one street that was labeled on the map; and I thought the streets depicted on the map were major streets, when it turned out that City Hall was down a small, one-way sidestreet.
Well, regardless I got there and got my proper documents which helped to next get my cell phone in Akihabara. I had about two hours to kill before meeting up with the manager of the guest house I’m staying in, so I took a quick train in and found a keitai (cell phone) shop a good ways from the station. The trick in Akihabara is the farther from the station you get the better deals you can find; however, they also speak less English. My Japanese is conversational, but I don’t have a grasp of technical language, and this led to a bit of a mix-up when buying my cell phone, as I didn’t ask if it had an English mode. So later that night, cell phone in one hand and electronic dictionary in the other, I’ve exhausted the phone settings and realise I have a brand new “Japanese chaarenji” in front of me. (I’ve actually gotten quite handy with the phone since then.)
That evening was spent in Ueno and its sprawling, flea-market-like shopping district, Ameyakocho. Ameyakocho is made up of several tiny, intersecting streets crammed with small shop fronts of every kind. You can find little souvenirs, clothing, food, leather goods, shoes, alcohol, etc. I wandered through the different stalls, took a few pictures, and grabbed some katsu karee for dinner. As one of my two most favorite Japanese dishes, sitting down to a delicious plate of katsu karee was a great way to top off my first full day in Japan.
For the sake of getting some content up on my blog, I’ll stop this entry here. In the next couple of days I’ll continue my account of the weekend back in hectic, fast-paced, crazy Tokyo, and upload some pictures to go along with the story.