03
Dec 1996

It wasn’t a good time to be in Rwanda – or Zambia or Uganda for that matter - but there we were. All desperate for first contact. That magical experience.

We had already spoken to a group that had made the attempt in Uganda, only to high-tail it back down the mountain with the sound of shots ringing in their ears. Such was our need, this did not deter us.

The maximum number for a group is eight, and there are strict rules to be obeyed when visiting our distant...

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24
Aug 2006

As humans we are designed to gravitate to story telling and it is an excellent way to remember facts and details.

This was proven to me recently on a tour of Japan. I collected books to read on and before the trip to go with my guidebooks and picked up this collection of short stories at Gleebooks out of luck.

The material in this book is well sorted into categories and covers the full gamut of the Japanese experience seen through the eyes of a foreigner. It wasn't...

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27
Aug 2006

I have just returned from a two-week sojourn in Japan. I was unable to send many postcards – the Internet is revolutionising some countries faster than others...here, postcards are as hard to find as Internet cafes.
 
The trains and subways were easily negotiated to arrive at my hotel. The trains are scarily efficient. You buy a ticket at your starting point, and all stations have a ‘fare adjustment’ machine where you can check your ticket and add more money on in case...

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27
Aug 2006

Off on the shinkansen (bullet train) – it is an amazing sight seeing these dolphin nosed machines zoom through a station. We arrived at a blissfully small town, a huge relief after the concrete and neon of Tokyo. We arrived at our first ryokan. Our room was small, but appeared spacious due to the lack of furnishings. A bare tatami mat floor with a low square table holding tea-making equipment was in the centre of the room. Having already forsaken our street shoes...

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27
Aug 2006

A day was never going to be enough in this famous place. At 7am I was already up and ready to catch a local bus out to the Fushimi Inari Shrine. If you have seen Memoirs of a Geisha, the little girl runs through what looks like an orange tunnel. This shrine has about 11,000 torii gates, one next to the other, all the way up the hill. I can recommend it to even the shrined-out. All along the way are lots of little shrines, many dedicated to foxes, who feature in Shinto,...

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27
Aug 2006

This stunning monument is on the way to Nagasaki. It is Japan's castle-to-beat-all-castles. It is said to resemble an egret in flight with its white wings spread on its mountain perch. Impressive like Nijo, it has multiple rooms and lookouts, sometimes with mannequins to show scenes of daily life. It did have something that Nijo didn't however: a hari kari yard.



27
Aug 2006

Nagasaki is very cosmopolitan, as you'd expect. It was really the only city that had any foreigner interaction for all those years Japan was locked away. The Dutch even had their own little island from which to base their trade. Funny, as it's now landlocked, thanks to reclaimed land, but the European-style buildings are open as tourist attractions. Quite bizarre.

The Peace Park and the A-Bomb museum were the obvious places to visit and they were informative,...

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© 2012 Alicia Thompson
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