Showing posts with label Fighters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fighters. Show all posts

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Sapporo

On Why America Sucks at Everything, and Other Non-Baseball Topics

Flight to Sapporo
Domestic flying
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Sapporo, Japan


Outside of the Game:
This was when things got reals, yo, I had managed, more or less, a day a game of baseball in Japan, but now the teams at the ends of the Japanese earth were requiring me to up my game and include air travel as part of the equation. While reachable by train, Sapporo lacks a bullet train line (at the moment), and a regular train ride would take about as long as the plane ride over from America. It is, however, only an hour and a half plane ride from Tokyo. This choice seemed pretty obvious.

As with most things, the Japanese have an awesome travel deal for tourists with the JapanAir pass. It is slightly different than the JapanRail pass in that it cannot be used for unlimited air travel for a single fee, but it does offer extremely discounted airfares. It essentially makes any single-segment air trip in Japan (Tokyo to Sapporo, for example, is a single segment) about $120, roughly a third of the retail price. And that beats an eighteen hour train ride like a mule any day of the week.

It saddens me that there is nearly half the population alive in America today who has absolutely no knowledge of when air travel was awesome. Before the hijackings in the seventies, before the drug wars in the eighties, and definitely before “sexually aggressive pat-downs to children” period in our post-9/11 world, air travel was a glamorous and fun way of getting around. Even in the contemporary first-class cabin, any last semblance of air travel being fun and convenient has been wrung dry out of the process.

… In America.

Because I have had some culture shock moments traveling in Japan, but none comes even close to describing what I experienced my first time flying in Japan.

I was taking the 1 PM flight to Sapporo, so I decided to be on the conservative side and allow for Mr. Cock-Up by getting there at least 2 hours early. It was a short train ride to the Yokohama main station, where there was an express running to the airport. I managed to get there with over two hours to spare.

Upon arriving at the airport, it was a simple matter of finding the ANA counters, which, frankly, were hard to miss, being a bank of counters and kiosks about two city blocks long. I took out my reservation email for my Japan AirPass and waited in a curiously short line for ticketing and check in.

When my turn came, I was greeted by a cheery attendant who took my reservation, and started happily typing away on the computer. She then looked a little confused, and asked why I was here. Assuming standard security mumbo-jumbo, I told her I was on vacation, but she quickly apologized and asked why I was here so early. I innocently said to make sure I caught the plane.

Now she looked a little sad. She asked if I'd rather take the noon flight to Sapporo instead. I was already starting to lose my footing with the familiar here. I asked why, and she asked if it wouldn't be more convenient for me to leave earlier, or was I here to do some shopping? There was still some semblance of reality that I could grasp, but by this point it was sometime after 11:00. I asked if I had time to make that flight, and she told me sincerely there was plenty of time. Trust in Japan, I thought. Fine.

I asked how much it would cost to move to the earlier flight. Now I clearly had just hurt her feelings. No charge, she assured me, and the known world started quickly slipping away. I was probably just staring blankly for a while, waiting for someone to burst out of a back room screaming, “It's a cookbook!” But that didn't happen. It was just the smiling face placidly awaiting my next decision. I said yes to the earlier flight, and so she went back to happily typing away on the computer, and after the issue of isle or window was sorted out, she asked about my bags.

I gestured to my one carry-on, filled to breaking with a week's accumulated crap, and she came out from behind the counter, took me over to the bag measuring device, and told me I'd have to check the bag. It was nearly 11:30 at this point, and I once again asked her if I really had time to make the noon flight. “Hai,” she said smilingly in a way that made me feel awful for ever doubting her.

I went over to the next counter and another disturbingly short line to check my bag. The counter person asked a few questions, and then gave me a bar coded claim ticket and took my bag. It was after 11:30 at this point, and I hadn't even been through security yet for a noon flight.

I located the nearest security checkpoint, and found myself utterly baffled by the lack of any lines at all for security at the second-biggest airport in the capital. There were long tables jutting out of the security checkpoint, with signs explaining what you needed to take out of your bags and whatnot, and a big stack of trays into which to put the scanables. There was then a doorway that led to the scanning area. A-ha, I thought. That is where the line will be.

There was no line.

Once you walk through the doorway, you are at the security scanner. You scan your boarding pass at a machine that gives you a security receipt (which also notifies you of any gate changes), dump all your items on the conveyor, walk through a regular old metal detector and collect your stuff. Front to back, passing security took two minutes, if that.

Domestic terminal
Domestic terminal

I was going to spend more time wondering what in the hell we as a country are doing wrong, but it was nearly 11:40, and I had a flight in twenty minutes. I jogged around until I found my gate, and realized that they hadn't even begun boarding yet. Perhaps the flight was delayed? Nope, they just hadn't boarded yet. I then saw a sign that warned everyone to please be at your gate no later than ten minutes before your flight for boarding. At this point, I just wanted to drop everything and scream, “WHAT?” at the top of my lungs, but promptly at 11:45, they began boarding.

Boarding was announced with a flip board that began with “Pre-Boarding,” for the elderly, pregnant, injured and the like. When those had boarded, they flipped to the sign reading “Priority Boarding,” for all the frequent fliers and big shots. When they had boarded, they flipped the sign to “General Boarding,” and everyone just went on the plane. No calls by isles, no back to front: just get on the damn plane.

You scan your boarding pass and get a final boarding receipt (which will tell you about delays, seat changes, and et cetera), and you walk onto the plane like a human being, go to your seat, and sit down. The entire process took about five minutes for the entire plane, and then waiting ten minutes for stragglers. And this was a full-sized plane, not some flying bus. I nearly cried at the beauty of it.

The stupid bureaucratic part of air travel in Japan took all of about ten minutes – if that – and was at no point unpleasant. Doing some back of the envelope calculations, that number is about an hour and a half in America, and soul-crushingly stupid for that duration. Japan: kicking Americas ass in everything since 1950.

Once on-board, you get the normal announcements and pre-flight security notices, but they do all of that while you are taxiing. The flight attendants make maybe two passes through the entire plane during this period, and after the safety video, you get to watch footage of a camera in the nose of the plane as you taxi around and take off.

After take-off, I promptly slept for most of the hour and a half flight, waking up long enough to finish off the scorecard from the previous night as we landed. Once we got to the gate, they opened the doors promptly, and everyone funneled out in about two minutes.

Okay, I bet they lost my bag or something, I thought.

Nope. The baggage claim was right outside of the gate, and bags started flowing from the machine in about five minutes. I got my bag, cursed everything about aviation in America, and went to find the train to Sapporo proper.

The express train in the city took about a half hour and dumped me at the station in the middle of Sapporo. A quick trip to the tourist office got me a map and the directions to my hotel, which was right down the street. After an extended settling in period at the hotel, I went out into the northerly world of Sapporo tom see what I could see. And northerly was key here, as Sapporo is generally much cooler than Tokyo, which can be brutal in the winter (they have special instructions in the tourist guides telling people how to properly dress in the winter so they don’t die), but a break in the temperature was particularly welcome after the triple-digit summer heat.

Shiryokan
Shiryokan

A scheduled night without baseball is a rare thing on these trips, and I find myself a little lost as to what to do with myself during them. I started out by going to Odori Park, which was a block-wide park that runs nearly the entire length of downtown. Once I reached the other end, I kept walking in order to go to another park further on that apparently had a shrine of note. It took a little longer than expected, but I eventually found the nice-enough park and the shrine. And in the park maps, I discovered there was a zoo at the other end, so without anything better on the agenda, I took off in the general direction. Upon arriving, the zoo was closed, but there was a firemen training exercise going on that was worth watching a while, and another map let me know there was a big baseball stadium a short distance away. Even on my day off, baseball finds me.

I would subsequently find out that this was the old park for the Fighters before they built the dome a decade ago, and it was still sometimes used by visiting teams for away “home” games that the NPL often does to give some teams opportunities to have home games in other cities. At the time, all I had was fading twilight, a locked-up stadium, and a lot of unlit signs with a lot of kanji. I took what pictures I could before trying to find the subway back to the city center. The subway cars were of note because there was no “end” to each compartment – each car was connected by an open arch, so you could pretty much walk from one end of the train to the other.

Maruyama Stadium
The old park

Now nightish, I went to the TV Tower that is best to visit at night for its views of a lit-up Sapporo. It was completely tourist, but sometimes you just have to. The elevator ride to the top of the tower listed off interesting comparison facts (taller than the Statue of Liberty, bigger elevator than the Eiffel Tower, can leap tall buildings in a single bound, etc.). Once at the top, it did provide a nice panorama of the city at night, with strategically placed gift stalls in case you didn't get the hint by the gift shop you had to walk through to get in, and the gift shop you had to walk through to get out.

TV Tower
TV Tower

After visiting the tower, I was off to try and find a restaurant recommended in a guidebook, and I passed through Odori Park again. At night, it was taken over by the young. A pack of skate rats were plying their trade by a fountain, and, in case you were wondering, there are hipsters in Japan. A pack of twenty-somethings were also in the park, doing a conspicuous Japanese drum circle in the classic “Oh, how surprising you stopped to watch us doing this very unusual thing in public” way.

Skaters
Eating sh*t is universal

After watching the hipsters and skaters for a while, I was off again to find the restaurant recommended for the local specialty, “Genghis Khan,” a grilled lamb dish named for the beloved murderous maniac. I was able to get myself in the general area of where the restaurant should be, but I couldn't find the exact location. It was supposedly on the tenth floor of one of the nearby high-rise buildings, but the one that seemed to fit the bill only had nine floors.

I decided to give it one more walk around the block to see if I was missing things, when I came across the three most dangerous words I could have encountered: Nikka Whisky Bar. Nikka Whisky is one of the big names in Japanese whiskey, and they seemed to have an upscale bar and lounge here in Sapporo. I am a man of few weaknesses, but if you hit one, you hit it true.


Nikka Whiskey Bar
Hello, beautiful

I walked up to the second-floor establishment and was shown to the bar at a twenty-something bartender's station. She politely gave me the English menu and waited for me to sort myself out. I decided to start with a tasting menu of the 12, 18, and 21 year “pure malts,” which I supposed were somehow better than regular un-pure single malts.

As I was drinking, we got to talking, after she got over her initial Japanese embarrassment at having to speak English. I assured her she spoke English much better than I Japanese, and we talked about my trip, and why it was ironic that this was a Wednesday, and why kanji is awful, and why although she thought New York was awesome, people from there still came here on vacations.

The 21 year pure malt was really quite good, so I found out from her if they took credit cards, and the answer was a dangerous affirmative, and so it began. I had another full dram of the 21 year, and then had a different 15 before I realized I hadn't had dinner. Mustering the last of my prudence, I started to settle up the bill, and I asked her if she knew where the restaurant I originally sought was located. She said she didn't, but added there was one downstairs in the building that served a very good Genghis Khan. And the matter was settled.

Allowing gravity to lead me along, I went downstairs and sidled into a booth at the place and ordered some Mongol warlord. Outside of a large party in the back room, I was the only one up front, so the host was paying pretty good attention to me. He asked if I wanted anything to drink while I waited, and that particular portion of good sense, or even the  short-term memory to remember that I was coming to eat because I was already drinking on an empty stomach, had been previously drowned. Suntory it was.

Someone needs to do a serious scientific study on the affect of alcohol on inter-language communications, because (obviously up to a certain point) I can't help but think it helps. With his limited English, and my limited Japanese, the host and I managed to get information back and forth to each other effectively, and it only seemed to be more efficient as any semblance of sobriety quietly got his hat and sternly left the building. We started talking about my vacation, and baseball in general, and all manner of things, in great spirits. When he went in the back to deal with the party, he told the grill chef what I was doing, and then we started talking about baseball as well, he being a big Fighters and and all. As with last year, a little bit of “kompai” goes a long way towards bridging the language gap.

Seriously: double-blind study, government funding – I can't believe that some enterprising grad student hasn't latched onto this like a pit bull on a tasty baby.

Anyway, at some point I managed to get the check and try to head back to the hotel. Then, I made a discovery that was unique to myself that evening and had clearly never been discovered up until that point in history. If you are what one might charitably call less than sober, you can keep yourself moving in a relatively straight line by using the earthquake guide strips in the center of the Japanese sidewalks. I found this surprising, because in a country of millions of people who presumably drink every now and then, you'd imagine one of them would have discovered this before that night. But nope. It is one of those mysteries of science.

After a little sojourn on a bench watching the canal pass by the road for an indeterminate amount of time, I made it back to the hotel, and I woke up the next morning with a yukata over my street clothes, so I seemed to at least have had the right idea at some point.


The Accommodations:
Hotel Montery
Hotel Montery
I was staying at the Hotel Montery Sapporo, another in the chain of high-end hotels I had stayed in last year during my second run through Tokyo. It was in an old Western-style building, and wouldn’t seem out of place in older sections of New York or Boston. The rooms were fairly spacious, if on the small side for a Western-hotel. The bathroom had its own full-sized swing door, and the bathroom had a full-sized tub. The furniture in the room was all high-quality wood, and there was a full-sized dresser in one corner that helpfully held all my luggage.

As soon as I checked in, I made use of the one hotel facility nearly immediately. With all the insanely hot weather lately, I filled a hotel laundry bag with pants and shirts to rehabilitate into general use. When I brought them down to the front desk, they helpfully assisted me in filling out the necessary forms, and then, to my great chagrin, they took out my sweaty, smelly clothes one by one and put them on their nice wooden desk to confirm all the items they received. To their credit, they did not break character once, even after pulling out the pants I had worn the previous day in Yokohama.



On Pre-Scotch

Sapporo Dome
Sapporo Dome, 2011
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Chiba Lotte Marines vs. Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters
Sapporo Dome
Pacific League, Nippon Professional Baseball
16:00
Sapporo, Japan


Outside of the Game:
For some reason, I was particularly hungry upon waking the next day. I got presentable and went downstairs to avail myself of the extremely well-appointed breakfast buffet in one of the many event rooms in the hotel.


Light breakfast
Light breakfast

Put bluntly, I destroyed the thing. I just kept eating and eating and eating, and if there was ever someone who got his money out of a fixed-priced buffet, especially one as fancy as this, it was I. I think one of the busboys actually was watching me after a while, whether out of curiosity, awe, or revulsion, we will never know.

After I had finally eaten my fill, I went out to kill the day before the game. One can hardly go to Sapporo without a trip to the namesake brewery, and so I had a visit slated for the morning. The directions on the map seemed rather straightforward, and I set off confidently, with, as will be seen, nothing to back up said confidence.

A short time later, I found myself not where I thought I was and with no idea how I managed to get so far off track, or where, incidentally, I was. After tentatively striking out in several other directions to get my bearings, I finally triangulated my location, which was nowhere near where I needed to be. By keeping it to simple right-angle marches, I managed to get to a subway station that took me to a station closest to my goal.

Another short walk later, and I was at least in the neighborhood, but signage for one of the city’s biggest attractions was surprisingly scarce. After wandering around several parking lots, I caught sight of the famous Sapporo Brewery chimney, and just walked as unerringly as possible in that direction.

This took me past the indoor practice facilities for the Fighters that were near the brewery. There was little to be seen from the outside, although there was a crowd of fans waiting by one of the entrances, no doubt waiting a glimpse of the players inside who were likely practicing for the game I would be going to later that evening.

After far too long a trip, I finally arrived at the Sapporo Brewery. I made my way to the Sapporo Beer Museum on the campus and took a look around. The stylish museum is a top area about the history and brewing process, while the lower level centers on ad campaigns throughout the years. As part of your admission, you get a ticket for a discount drink at the Sapporo bar, conveniently located near the exit of the museum, right by the gift shop.

Beer elves
Beer is made by elves

Now, I haven’t had a beer in at least five years, probably much more. I drink wine with meals and scotch when I want to drink. However, it seemed wrong not to have a drink given the current circumstances, having access to the freshest Sapporo beer in the world. I used my token to buy a beer ticket in the vending machine, and then brought the ticket to the bar, where a perky bartender gave me a perfect pour. Beer is not bad, I grant. It was an excellent brew and hit the spot, but I’m going to stick to scotch.

Sapporo beer
One a year

After my drink, I went over to the beer garden to get some lunch. I ordered up some more Genghis Khan and utterly confused my waitress by not ordering a beer with my lunch. She was nice enough to me, even though I was an apostate. I devoured lunch, apparently not sated by breakfast, and headed back to the subway stop to go back downtown.

A light lunch
A light lunch

With some more time in the afternoon, I went over the Hokkaido University Botanical Gardens. In addition to the extensive greenery, the gardens also housed several small museums devoted to the first curator of the gardens, the native indigenous people of Hokkaido, and a small natural history museum that was the oldest museum on the island. The natural history museum was a Victorian affair of wooden glass cases holding stuffed specimens of the fauna on the prefecture that I enjoyed a little too much.

Natural history museum
Natives exhibit

I spent a relaxing late afternoon wandering the grounds until it was time to head to the game. I swapped out kits and grabbed the subway to the stadium. After the game, it was late enough in the trip and late enough when the game ended that I just took a subway back to downtown, went back to the hotel, and crashed for the night.


The Stadium and Fans: 
Home to center, Sapporo Dome
Home plate to center field, Sapporo Dome
The Sapporo Dome is located a middling walk from the nearest train station, but it is extremely easy to just follow the straggling path of fans constantly on their way to the park. Because for a Thursday-night game, the stadium was absolutely packed, and this seems to be a regular occurrence.

This may have something to do with the incredible amount of fan-relations done by the Fighters. During the pre-game, there were several on-field activities, including letting children run the bases (greeted along the baselines by players and mascots) and playing catch on the field while the players warmed up. The fans got to stay on the field with the mascots and cheerleaders during the player introductions, and they were brought back on the field during certain between-inning events, one of which featured Ronald McDonald leading the fan, mascots, and cheerleaders in YMCA. I have evidence.

Given the remote location, a sizable contingent of Marines fans were in attendance and bouncing up a storm, especially during their ninth-inning comeback run. 

The stadium itself is located at a high vantage point over the city, and outside one of the north entrance, there is even a patio seating area for visitors to look down on the city below (or at least if the weather was clearer than it was the day I went). This main entrance is enclosed under a glass ceiling, and several restaurants and stores are located in this atrium. Apparently, there is also the ability to go up into the observation deck in the top of the stadium, but it is not open before games on game days, or some such restriction.

In the back of the stadium is a practice soccer field, as the local soccer team also plays in the dome. There is a walkway all around the top level of the dome, but those are only exits once the game lets out. There is a lengthy tunnel that connects the north and south ends of the stadium, and there are player memorabilia and hands prints the length of the tunnel to keep you occupied during your walk. There is a large parking lot by the south entrances, providing another vantage point of the stadium.

The inside walkways are split on two levels and are incredibly spacious by Japanese standards. Concessions and merchandise stands line the lower and upper walkways, and visitors can walk the entire circuit of the stadium without interruption. Access to certain sections of the one-tier stands is regulated from the upper walkways and entry down into the main seating bowl is segregated from the outfield cheering areas.

You can walk right up next to the main scoreboard in right field, and there are two giant baseballs in left and right field. I had thought they may have been home run apple-type things, but there was a home run in the game, and they remained silent and unlit. There were also some special “Cinderella Seats,” but outside of some obvious guesses, I’m not sure what they were for.

In dead center field, there is a HotDog Park an extra level of stairs up. It has some specialty concessions, a glass smoking area giving a nice vantage to the field, and a large children’s play area looking down onto the ballpark.


At the Game with Oogie:
Ham scoring
Ham scoring

For this game, I was up on the first base side about halfway down the baseline, with some rather nice seats. I was sitting in front of a pair of ladies who chatted nearly constantly during the game, to the best of my understanding, about the game. They always excused themselves to me when they got up, which was nice of them, but unnecessary, as they weren’t interrupting me in any way.

Ronald
Corporate synergy

In wandering around the stadium pre-game looking for food, I ran across Ronald McDonald, or the Japanese version thereof. Disbelieving, I snapped a photo and was off, before I heard him say “besuboro,” at which I looked back and Ronald flipped me a thumbs-up. Sometimes I wonder if I imagine half of the things in my life. As I wolfed down a chicken box, I had plenty of time to contemplate the encounter, and it at least appears real. There’s a picture.


The Game:
First pitch, Marines vs. Fighters
First pitch, Marines vs. Fighters

This is one that nearly got away from the home team. To start, both sides traded singles in the first, and the Marines got someone in scoring position in the top of the second before ground-out ended things. The Fighters struck back-to-back doubles to get one across in the second, and take a 1-0 lead.

The Marines came back in the top of the third with a single, stolen base and double that tied it up, but the runner on second was cut down at home trying to take the lead on a subsequent single, leaving it 1-1 at the break of the third. The Fighters answered back with a single, stolen base, and double of their own to take back the lead, and just for good measure, they doubled again, to make it 3-1 in their favor.

The fourth went quietly for both sides. A minor threat came and went for the Marines in the top of the fifth, but the Fighters led off the bottom of the inning by taking the first pitch out to right field. They tacked on another tally with a one-out walk and stolen base brought around by a two-out single, leaving the score at 5-1 after five innings. Both sides went quietly until the eighth. The Marines got a leadoff single, followed it up with a double, and brought the lead runner home on a fielder’s choice, leaving it 5-2 after the Fighters went in order.

With a three-run lead, the Fighters brought in their closer and got ready to celebrate their win. Except that they would need to wait a while. A leadoff single was followed by a deep double that brought the runner home, making it 5-3 with no outs. A pop-out to second restored some sanity, but it another quick single sent home another run and put the tying run on first with only one out.

The runner on first promptly stole second, and made it to third on an errant throw by the catcher. The closer then plunked the batter on the second pitch, making it first and third with one out. A walk on four pitches loaded them up, and the Marines fans in attendance were bouncing their ever-loving hearts out.

The closer got a gut-check visit, and then induced a weak pop-up back to the mound for the second out. After fighting for six pitches with the next batter, he forced a ground ball back to the mound, and finally closed it out 5-4, ceasing the bouncing of the visiting Marines fans.


The Scorecard:
Marines vs. Fighters, 06-30-11. Fighters win, 5-4.Marines vs. Fighters, 06-30-11. Fighters win, 5-4.
Marines vs. Fighters, 06/30/11. Fighters win, 5-4.

I was on the Scoremaster again. Besides needing some fancy re-arranging necessary by the copious replacements and pinch hitters put in for the shortstop of the Marines, the only thing of note is that I finally got the umpire names for a Japanese game.

The scoreboards always show the umpire names in kanji only, and with no way of translating them, I can at best write down the kanji and hope I have the industriousness to try and work them out later. (Spoiler: I do not.)

It finally occurred to me this game that I had a shiny new camera with a shiny new optical zoom with which to pick up the numbers of the umpires sleeve, which would allow me to get their names out of my JapanBall book. And after several innings of trying to develop my mental powers to force umpires to turn to the left a little bit for sake of all things holy, I was able to track down my first umpire squad for a NPB game. And I think I may be the only person in the universe who cares.


The Accommodations:
I was at the Montery Sapporo again. My dry cleaning was waiting for me when I returned after the game, each item individually wrapped and pressed, and then placed in larger bags just to be sure. They were in much better shape than when they were delivered, and the wrappings actually helped with packing. At this stage in the trip, dirty clothes outnumbered clean by a healthy margin, so I was able to pack in the wrapped clean clothes with the knowledge they wouldn’t get skunked in the travel.

I spent a goodly bit of time repacking all my bags that night so make my main bag smaller so that I could use it as a carry-on on my flight the next day. I trusted the Japanese airlines, but not enough to put my only bag with them on a two-stage flight to the other end of the country.



2011 Japan II

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Fukuoka

On Money, and Other Mundane Matters

Fukuoka Yahoo! Dome
Fukuoka Yahoo! Dome, 2011
Sunday June 26, 2011
Nippon Ham Fighters vs. Softbank Hawks
Fukuoka Yahoo! Dome
Pacific League, Nippon Professional Baseball
Fukuoka, Japan
14:00


Outside of the Game:
It was another early travel day, waking at 6:30 to get my train to Hakata Station in Fukuoka. As part of my reservation at the Station Hotel, I had breakfast included, but it looked like I wasn't going to get to use it, as the restaurant did not open until 7, and my train was at 7:20. When I asked about this at the front desk, they told me to go in early to get breakfast, since I paid for it in advance and all. I do love Japan sometimes.

The hotel was only a short walk to the station (which I suppose it would have to be if you're going to name yourself the “Station Hotel”), and I found my bullet train easily enough and with about ten minutes to spare. I dragged myself onto another immaculate train and worked on my scorecards and this thing for the duration of the ride to Fukuoka.

Hakata Station was yet another edifice to Japanese design and layout. After orienting myself to the maps of the area, I found the proper exit and took the short walk to my hotel. As it was early in the morning, and I wasn't able to check in until later in the afternoon, I left my bags, and went on my happy way back to the train station to get the subway to the game.

And then it began. I decided to take out some money, as I was running on the low side because I hadn't gotten money out since I landed at the airport on Thursday. I stopped in one of the many 7-11s in the area that are supposedly on the US network and tried to take out some money, and it said my card was rejected. And I didn't think much of it, because that was the exact same error I got last year when I tried to get some money on a non-US network bank. Perhaps 7-11 wouldn't work anymore. It didn't overly concern me at the time, as there was a post office right by the train station, and I could get some money there.

At the post office, I had a repeat of the above, but it gave a much clearer message that the transaction was rejected by my bank. This gave me pause. I didn't think all that much of it, as I had money to get through the next day or so, and there was a CitiBank ATM in the main shopping drag in town. I knew my card worked with those, as I had gotten my money on the first day at the airport at one. So I got on the subway to the game and put it out of my mind until later.

It was another uneventful subway ride back from the game, and I walked back to the hotel to check in. I dragged my bags to the elevator and checked into my room. I did the standard unload, and then had a quick soak and shower before heading back out into the world.

I decided to walk to Tenjin, which is apparently the happening section of Fukuoka. It was only about fifteen minutes from my hotel, but I was again met with surprise by the hotel desk when I said an American was walking somewhere. Or maybe they were surprised that anyone was going to walk when you had a perfectly good transit system right there for you.

Travelling down to Tenjin I managed to have a route that took me through the red-light part of town, but thankfully, I was not again asked my intentions. The first thing I did when I got to Tenjin was to seek out the CitiBank ATM to try my luck. After a bit of looking around, I found it, and I was greeted by the “transaction declined by your bank” message again. So it was definitely a problem with my bank, and it would have to be dealt with. Marvelous.

Fukuoka
Shopping district

I walked around for a while, poking in and out stores and just generally tiring myself out. I had a quick chicken noodle dinner and headed back to the hotel. As it turned out, it was almost exactly the right time to begin calling America to deal with my bank, so I made the expensive call. As the evidence had pointed, they had put a hold on my card for my “safety,” and then chastised me for not telling them that I was leaving the country. Surprisingly calm, I mentioned I had used my card successfully in three separate countries, including Japan, in the last three years and there were no incidents “for my security” until now. After suitably proving my identity to the call farm, they promised to un-hold my account and put a travel notice on it (as I should have done) so I wouldn't have to deal with this again. Arigato, jerk-bag. At that point, it was time for bed. I had an early day the next day, I was pretty tired, and now I was annoyed to boot.


The Stadium and Fans: 
Home to center, Fukuoka Yahoo! Dome
Home plate to center field, Fukuoka Yahoo! Dome

The Softbank Hawks play at the Fukuoka Yahoo! Dome, which as I understand it, is right down the street from Altavista Stadium. The stadium lies a healthy walk away from the nearest subway station, and to get to it, you have to traverse through “Hawks Town Mall,” a shopping center and sports complex that featured a good deal of US baseball merchandise, not to mention a lot of American chain stores such as Hard Rock and Adidas.

The stadium grounds themselves are quite extensive. There is a huge DugOut store on one side of the stadium that sells anything and everything in Hawks merchandise, including items such as rulers and rice balls, not that I bought any of that. All around the stadium were also creepy hand statues. I mean that as it is written: molds of hands incorporated into odd modern art statues. I assume them to be people who performed in the dome over the years (as some of the hands were identifiable as the members of Bon Jovi and Frank Sinatra, for example), but I have no way of confirming or denying the hypothesis. The hand statues were lorded over by a giant hand giving either the “peace” sign, or the Japanese picture “V,” also undetermined by this reporter. I’ve found that you just have to take some things in Japan on faith.

Another big attraction at the Yahoo! Dome is the Sadaharu Oh Museum, worked into the center field area of the park. For the uninitiated, Oh is the biggest baseball hero is Japan by far, and holder of the world professional home run title. He is seen as the paragon of Japanese baseball for most, and his managerial career included a run with the Hawks, who have leveraged this to their advantage.

Oh Museum
Entrance to the Oh Museum

The museum is exhaustive, in addition to providing an eagle-eye vantage onto the field from dead center field. It provides extensive information on his playing and managerial career and statistics, but it has encyclopedic information on his family and formative years, going as far as to recreate his family restaurant in the exhibit on his youth. A giant merchandise stand shows off all of the tie-ins he has spawned over the years, and the museum features a recreation of a typical Japanese home at the time Oh set the home run record, with the TV continuously playing the historic shot.

Not a statue or record is overlooked, and a practical area has activities that let you sit in as a catcher for a simulated big-league pitcher. That exhibit was a huge hit with the older set the day I went, with a line stretching down the museum. The facility ends up with the inevitable (and well-stocked) gift shop and a restaurant, just like Oh’s family ran. 

The Yahoo! Dome itself is a single-level domed ring, with on-field seating along the baselines as so many parks in Japan feature. The cheering section bleachers are separated from the regular seating area, and all the concessions are located along the promenade ring that circles outside the seating area. Ringing above the regular seats are party or luxury boxes that extend most of the way around the seating area.

Particularly of note is the ginormous main scoreboard in the stadium, which stretches from the end of left field to the end of right field. It is in three sections, with the “left wing,” the area in center field, and the “right wing” in right field, broken up with some ad space between sections.

The MC at the game was a bi-lingual American, whose tendency to break from over-enthusiastic “announcer-talk” Japanese seemingly randomly into English was fairly disconcerting to my ears. The crowd seemed to love him, so what do I know? He also did English lessons with young fans on the scoreboard in-between some innings.

English lessons
Learning is fun.

The Hawks packed the house with loud and involved fans, and the home cheering area was rocking. Perhaps even more surprising was that the visiting Fighters, from as far away in Japan from Fukuoka as you can get while still being in Japan, had a numerous contingent in their cheering area that steadily supported their team through their unsuccessful campaign.

Post-game interviews
Serious business


At the Game with Oogie:
Japanese scorekeeping
Here we go again

I was sitting in the area behind home plate just to the left on the third-base side. A mother with a small boy was in my row, and in front of me was a man and his teenage son. Outside of getting some furtive glances from the boy as to what I must be doing with all the writing and picture taking, there wasn’t much of note for me at the game.


The Game:
First pitch, Fighters vs. Hawks
First pitch, Fighter vs. Hawks

This game easily featured the most strikeouts I have ever witnessed in a game in person. The Hawks notched 17 Ks, while the Fighters downed a respectable 6, for 23 total. The Hawk’s starter Settsu got 12 by himself (and the scoreboard was ready to celebrate each one with a new graphic), so you probably see how this game is going to go.

The Fighters went down in order in the first, and the Hawks started scoring immediately. A leadoff walk was followed by a foul-out on a two-strike bunt, and then a hit batsman put two runners on base. A single brought home the leadoff man, and this was followed by another hit batsman, and some sternly raised eyebrows. A fielder’s choice brought home the second run, and a subsequent single brought home the third, before a strikeout ended the bleeding at 3-0 Hawks.

The Fighters all struck out in the top of the second, interrupted only by a double, and then the Hawks went right back to it. A leadoff double was followed by a single, which brought home the lead runner when the third baseman botched a relay. A single moved the runner over to second, but the tail runner was erased when the next batter hit into a double-play. Another single brought the lead run home, but was erased himself when he was gunned trying to make it to second. Still, the Hawks had a comfy 5-0 lead.

And the Fighters went down in order again, with another strikeout mixed in. The Hawks got a runner to third but didn’t score in the bottom of the inning. The Fighters finally got something going in the fourth: Back-to-back singles led off the inning, followed by two quick outs. But the next batter hit a clean single to center, sending home one run, before the last strikeout of the inning – 5-1 Hawks.

The fifth went relatively quietly for both sides, but the sixth started with the Fighters center fielder taking the third pitch out of right field, for a 5-2 score. And then the side went in order, with two strikeouts.

That would prove the Fighters last gasp. Outside of some scattered hits, both sides went quietly into the night, with the Hawks starter being inexplicably pulled at the end of 7. The Hawks relief staff kept up his strikeout work, notching five more in two innings. The overpowered Fighters went down to defeat, 5-2.


The Scorecard:
Fighters vs. Hawks, 06-26-11. Hawks win, 5-2.Fighters vs. Hawks, 06-26-11. Hawks win, 5-2.
Fighters vs. Hawks, 06/26/11. Hawks win, 5-2.

It was back to the Scoremaster for this contest. On the surface, it wasn't much notable except for the strikeouts, but when I did the work completing it, there were a couple of surprises that came out, besides the surfeit of “K”s, both forwards and backwards. Nearly all of the Fighters outs were recorded by the catcher (obviously), first baseman (another gimmie), or the center fielder, with a line-out to the second baseman as the only outlier.

The Hawks, for their part, got put out six times by the shortstop, which is just unusual. It is even more so considering there was only one double-play in that total. Numbers, baby.


The Accommodations:
Chisun Hotel Hokata
Chisun Hotel Hokata

For this one-nighter, I put in at the Chisun Hotel Hokata, a Japanese business hotel just down the street from the station. I wasn't able to check-in until after the game and left early in the morning, so I spent relatively little time there.

It was exactly as I expected it to be, with small Japanese-style rooms, featuring a functional desk worked into the proceedings and a closet bathroom with the Rube Goldberg tub/sink/toilet combo all mushed together. The command console on the bed featured an ambient noise selection, which filled the room with easily-listening and classical instrumentals that had a very calming effect, which was appreciated after the somewhat trying day I had. It was entirely adequate for is purpose, and if I remember correctly, the room cost me $30, so all-in-all, an excellent bargain.



2011 Japan II

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Sendai

On Hiding from the Burning Eye

Kleenex Stadium Miyagi
Kleenex Stadium Miyagi, 2010
July 3, 2010
Nippon Ham Fighters vs. Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles
Kleenex Stadium Miyagi
14:00
Pacific League, Nippon Professional Baseball
Sendai, Japan


Outside of the Game:
After breakfast, a quick subway ride got me to Tokyo Station and my train up to Sendai. It was a two-hour ride on a double-decker train, and I spent all of it trying to finish up my scorecard from the game the night previous. So lost in the work, I almost missed the dulcet chimes notifying me that I had arrived in Sendai.

Another city that got some radical remodeling courtesy of World War II, it was redesigned into a pedestrian paradise of wide, tree-lined streets and conveniently straight thoroughfares. A quick stop at the visitor center got me a map from a helpful counterperson, and a short walk brought me to my hotel, the Sendai Kokusai.

Having an hour to kill before I had to leave for the game, I walked around one of the Ichibancho covered market, and there I saw the first picture of Godzilla I had seen in-country, a giant multi-story billboard on the side of a building. After meandering around the market, I stopped at a park in the north end of town that had a statue dedicated to a famous sumo wrestler Tanikaza, because how can you not stop at the statue dedicated to a sumo wrestler?

A ten-minute commuter train ride got me to and from the game, getting me back to the hotel at about 5 PM. At the hotel, I packed up everything for traveling the next day, took an epic soak to wash the day off, and then headed out for dinner.

As per my local specialties directive, I was off to a restaurant serving the pride of Sendai: gyutan, better known as cow tongue. Perhaps a bit dubious at the outset, at least I was sure that cow tongue grilled in front of me over charcoal, at an establishment that served nothing else but said tongue, was extremely unlikely to have any cross-contamination problems with shellfish.

Tongue restaurant
It's actually quite good.

Umami Tasuke is located in a restaurant alley just off one of the main shopping drags in town, and the staff at the hotel mentioned this place had an English menu. (They did. It read, verbatim, "Cow Tongue, 900 yen.") The place was a tiny, Japanese-style restaurant, with a few floor tables in one alcove and a counter situated around the grill. Four serious-looking men manned the counter. One on the right was clearly in charge of the oxtail soup, the one in the center manned the grill with scorched chopsticks, the next was in charge of rice and barley, and the last and youngest dealt with the customers.

I placed my order with the young man, and the head grill chef sliced a few pieces of tongue from a large slab (and I'm positive I don't want to know how that slab is constructed) and began his cooking rituals. A few minutes later, he plated the meat and handed it over the counter to me. I dug in, and it was actually excellent. This immediately led to one of the more unwanted thoughts of my entire life, to wit that I bet my tongue tastes delicious. After quickly downing one plate, I ordered another, to the approving nod of the stoic grill chef.

Fully sated, I made my way back to the hotel for some final packing and finishing off my scorecard from the day's game. Then it was off to a completely normal and in no way notable sleep.


The Stadium & Fans:
Home to center, click to see all the photos
Home plate to center field, Kleenex Stadium Miyagi

Outside of a rather unfortunate name, Kleenex Stadium Miyagi has a lot going for it.

The train station for the stadium was fully decked out in team colors and logos, so it would be a fairly hard thing not to know at which station to get off. I think I even heard them playing the team fight song. In case you were particularly oblivious, it was called "Baseball Station" in several signs.

The stadium was a short walk from the station and seemed to be part of a larger athletic complex. There was a large fan area in front of the stadium, including a "Sweets Town" that sold all manner of candies and such. There seemed to be particularly a lot for the kids at this stadium, as there was also a mini-tram ride around the entire stadium and extra activities areas in back for tikes as well.

Out in front, there were the regular fan club, merch huts, show stage, and the main club store. There was also another baseball diamond laid out in the ground, with the bases and plate inset in Plexiglass. I couldn't read the signs, but I could only assume that this was the location of a previous stadium before the current incarnation.

There were seated and picnic bleacher areas that had their own entrance in the back of the stadium, and all the other areas of the park entered through front gates. The outfield and luxury seating well walled of as per regular Japanese procedure, so you don't have the run of the place when you get in. The main interior area overlooked the pavilion outside and had basic stalls and concessions. In addition to this area, there was a special food area upstairs from the main entryway that had more advance culinary fare (including the steak and rice bowl place where I grabbed lunch), and a desert concession (where I got a specialty sundae named after an Eagles player in a plastic helmet -- I mean, how couldn't you?). The upper food court was equipped with "Oriro Desent Devices," and I frankly was a little disappointed that whatever emergency they were there to assist with did not happen so I could see them in action. Then again, I probably shouldn't go around wishing for disasters, no matter how cool the equipment might be.

Odd signage
Little worries about the signs, however.

The main seating bowl behind home plate was a multitude of special areas, with luxury boxes in the building behind home plate and on the wings behind first and third bases. Small on-field seating areas were located on the outfield side of each dugout. There were two big scoreboards out in center (and the one in right-center had bleacher seating underneath), and the outfield seating was alternating picnic areas and boxes of bleachers. The stadium was one of two in Japan that also had the narrow LCD displays, running along the bottom of the luxury boxes behind home plate and under the ads on the bleachers,a long with auxiliary scoreboards around the stadium. And, in perhaps a last gift for my last game, they showed the players names and numbers on some of the scoreboards in romanji (a.k.a Western lettering).

The foul ball patrol was there in force, but in a little bit of a twist, the whistles that they used to warn of foul balls were "screaming eagle" whistles, so there was a bit of the home-town flair.

Pre-game show
Pre-game show

The fans were numerous and involved. Except for a smallish enclave of visiting fans (located in right field instead of left here for no apparent reason, as the home and visiting dugouts were swapped), the game was nearly full of homers, and it was nearly full. The local rally was the waving of Eagle's flags and towels, and the seventh inning extravaganza was the seemingly common screaming balloons followed by the fight song.


At the Game with Oogie:
Ballpark grub
In-game rice bowl

I had tickets in the lower deck behind home plate in one of the premium sections. Under normal circumstances, this would be a great thing, but after being rainy and overcast all morning, Mr. Sun decided to come out to play, and his love was bright and merciless. And coming straight in from center field. I actually thought about bailing to the food court area after an inning or two until I saw a bunch of fans around me make desert hats out of their team towels. Towels are an... I've done that bit already. And so with my trusty towel, I too turned my hat into a shade, and was able to survive the travails of the suddenly sunny weather. (Although my peripheral vision was severely reduced. On one foul ball up and straight back, I had no idea where it was, except that the whistling of the foul ball monitors was quite close. The irony of getting brained by the first foul ball I'd actually touch was apparent, but thankfully unfulfilled.)

I was in an area mostly populated with season ticket holders. What was particularly nice was that there was one extremely strident team supporter right behind me, who I imagine is usually in the rooting area. He was singing along with the cheering section, and hearing him in isolation behind me was actually the first time I could clearly hear what some of the songs were.

There were also two Western fans to my left, who seemed to be relations of some of the gaijin players on the Eagles. At one point during a late-inning rally, the more gregarious of the two tried to start up an American-style player chant instead of the Japanese singing, which the fans in the area gamely went along with bemusedly, but temporarily.

American cheering
Cheer like 'Mericans


The Game:
First pitch, Fighters vs. Eagles
First pitch, Fighters vs. Eagles

This would be the second time that I saw the Eagles, but my first for the visiting Nippon Ham Fighters. (And the team is owned by the corporate entity "Nippon Ham," with the team being the "Fighters." So it is the "'Nippon Ham' Fighters," not the "Nippon 'Ham Fighters,'" though that way is, of course, much, much funnier.) It would be a fairly typical Nippon League game, with the pitchers both going deep into the game, and small ball being evident throughout. The Fighters scraped out two runs in the first, after the Eagles' pitcher was just barely unable to get out of the jam he got himself into. The Eagles were able to get one back the next inning, but the scoring on both sides ended after that. Although there were some opportunities on both sides, nothing came across, and the hometown Eagles dropped one to the Fighters of Nippon Ham, 2-1.


The Scorecard:
Fighters vs. Eagles, 07-03-10. Fighters win, 2-1.Fighters vs. Eagles, 07-03-10. Fighters win, 2-1.
Fighters vs. Eagles, 07/03/10. Fighters win, 2-1.

Once again, there was no local scorecard in the program (although there was a machine that allowed you to purchase said programs, something I've never seen before). So back to the Scoremaster book for me, though it was not nearly as tortuous an experience as recording the previous night's game. Besides a ground rule double (the first and only I saw in Japan), there was not much scoring of note, although the entire process was greatly helped along by a) my experience up to this point, and b) the scoreboards that actually showed player numbers (instead of just positions) and the player names in Western characters.


The Accommodation:
Sendai Kokusai
Sendai Kokusai

The Sendai Kokusai was the nicest hotel I had booked for the entire trip, which made sense, as it was the one I was likely to spend the most time in, and it was also the one where I'd be staying for my last night in-country, so I might as well get the fancy in when I could. I don't think I realized how upscale the place was until I sauntered into the marble-floored entryway looking like I had just been rolled by a rampaging gang of clothes wrinklers. The staff was too polite to mention how poorly I looked, and let me register and leave my bags before heading out to the game. After the game, they even more politely didn't mention that I looked as bad as I did before, with the added benefit of being completely soaked in sweat from sitting out in the sun all afternoon like some sort of crazy person.

My room was actually about average-sized for a nice, American hotel room, although it still had the standard combo toilet from the future and the command console by the bed, which, while queen-sized, was inexplicably only about four inches above the floor.

The hotel didn't just have a restaurant, but a floor of restaurants, in addition to a shopping mall in the basement and a hotel bar that took over most of the lobby floor of the hotel. It was the first place in Japan that I felt completely out-of-place in, and not because I was American, but because I was not nearly rich enough to be staying here.



On World-Moving Travel

Delayed flight
Guess if the delayed flight is mine. Go on. Guess.

Sunday, July 4, 2010
Hoboken, NJ




 
Outside the Game:
Seeing Godzilla for the first time the previous day had put the seed of another thought in my mind that was germinating, but not yet fully formed. It was something else fairly synonymous with Japan that I hadn't experienced yet, something of significance...

At around 4 in the morning, there was an earthquake. At least, that was my working hypothesis (later confirmed with a Website about Japanese earthquakes). I was having a dream where my parents were trying to wake me for school on a day when I really didn't prefer to go, prompting them to keeping shaking me harder and harder, until I finally awoke, screaming at them to just let me sleep.

Things are fuzzy at 4 AM under the best of conditions. Throw in your subconscious mind playing tricks with you and your entire room, nay building, shaking pretty severely, and it is positively a recipe for mental anarchy. Facts suddenly became clear, and there is that moment of clarity at the point of realization that why, yes, in fact, the entire building I am in is shaking rather intensely, I am nine floors above said quaking ground, and why didn't I pay more attention to the helpful and copious pamphlets provided by the hotel for just such occasions?

By now, the command crew was back on the bridge of the HMS Ooogiebrain, summoned frantically by the night staff accustomed to nothing more than playing a movie. Briefings were being held, committees have been formed, the passive voice was being used. I made a break for my slippers and the emergency flashlight (installed in every room in Japan -- I remembered that much of the pamphlet), when the shaking stopped. A quick base of the palm to the side of the head confirmed this was not a dream. The muffled sounds from the rooms around me confirmed that I did not just imagine this. For some reason, I felt compelled to stay very still. After a good five minutes of no further shaking, I made my daring break back to the safety of the blankets.

Using the console by the bed, I turned on some calming light jazz radio and stayed very, very motionless for a good half hour. The building having made no untoward moves for a half hour or so, I slipped back into a very, very cautious sleep.

I awoke somewhat rested but in no way relaxed. I had an over-priced but beautiful breakfast at the French restaurant at the hotel, checked out, and then made my way to the station for the first of my trains, casting an occasional doubtful and castigating eye downward to the earth that made betrayed my trust so fully.

I had a train back to Tokyo, and then a train back out to the airport. After my adventures on the way out, I decided to get to Narita extra early, just in case. Little did I know how early.

One of the last things they show on the airport express train is a list of airlines that are located in which terminals, and then a list of the flight statuses for the rest of the day. Although there were threats of rain later in the afternoon, it was a cloudless blue sky all morning and page after page of happy little "On Times" flashed by. Except one. I think you can guess where this one is going.

It turns out that my erstwhile plane coming in from Houston ran into some mechanical trouble and had to be replaced. This resulted in a two hour delay to my departure, which, added to my earliness for the original departure time, gave me a good four hours or so to kill.

To be fair, the Continental staff were quite nice about the whole thing, and gave me a food voucher without even having to ask for it. Still, four hours. The idea that I could watch a ballgame in that kind of time did pass through my head. Instead, I was doomed to stalk the terminal with a boarding pass to nowhere soon. Thankfully, the airport was fairly extensive, with a central mall, and two food courts, and even an observation deck. Not wanting to get trapped in the terminal area too early, I trudged through every non-restricted area of the airport, visited every store, and weighed every food option. I eventually spent the exact total of my voucher on cold sebu and roast duck, and then contemplated how to kill yet another hour. The answer came in the form of a 200 yen "massage" chair, that with small, almost negligible, changes could be made into a torture device of the highest magnitude. It did its manhandling as designed, however, and I finally relaxed for the first time that day.

Voucher
Voucher

Eventually, I could take no more and decided to go through security about an hour before boarding was supposed to begin. Security and immigration were painless, and I strode with false confidence towards my gate. As the gate came into sight, unsurprisingly, I saw no plane. However, as I reached the gate itself, the plane, lying seemingly in wait, rolled up to the gate. Well. Okay, then.

Still having an hour to murder, I walked around the gate area, making two purchases. One was a bottle of water that nearly depleted all my non-convertible Japanese change. The second was a mid-range, duty-free bottle of single malt Japanese whiskey. Hey, the plane was finally here. A man can celebrate.

And so time passed until it was nearly time to board. First Class and the elite club bastards were just starting to board when I heard my name. And this gave me pause, because it was the first time I had heard anyone actually say my name in over a week. It gave me further pause because this could not be a "Good Thing." I got out of line and went up to the counter to find my fate.

I was informed that one of the power outlets in my row wasn't working. And I replied that this was nice information and I'd work something out, and hey, didn't they see I was second in line when the pulled me over here to tell me this world-breaking news? They apologized and let me board with the elite crowd, and, lo and behold, as soon as the people in my row showed up, I arranged to share the one working power outlet with them for the duration of the trip. Truly, we live in an age of miracles.

I was in the first row after First Class again, so I had legroom to spare and stretching space for days. Not as out of it as I was on the flight in, I settled down to do some work on this and watch some TV, but unlike the flight out, I did take several sporadic short naps that all but assured that I'd have the maximum amount of disorientation when I landed. Blinking out into the sunlight that should not be there, I dragged myself through customs, got to my car service limo, and promptly passed out on the ride back to Hoboken to the point I had to be physically shaken awake by a patient livery driver needing specific directions to my apartment. Thus began the jetlag of my discontent.

Back home
Almost home


The Accommodations:
Hoboken, sweet Hoboken.



Epilogue:

And so it goes. Barring anything out of my control, I am going to go back next year and finish seeing the last five teams. I may also do a few repeats to sit in a rooting section or some variant thereof. One thing I will be doing before I return is taking a Japanese class (or at least one in kanji) so that I can be slightly more sure of not accidentally killing myself while dining.

Japan swag
Swag



2010 Japan I