Well Spring is well
and truly in full swing. The cold is behind me, the Sakura has already bloomed
and fallen and the new financial year is well under away. So what better way to
welcome in the new season than…a holiday. Last year I missed almost all of
spring thanks to a large amount of beamtime, the only spring I saw was of the 8
variety. This year with my group’s size shrinking, and the fact we have plenty
of data to work with, we’ve applied for much less beamtime.
April is about the
best month to be in Japan in terms of the weather. It’s not too hot, the rainy
season hasn’t set in it is definitely the third bowl of porridge of seasons in
Japan. With that in mind when my parents mentioned they wanted to visit I told
them that April was the best month. So without further ado here is a little
travel log of the week we spent in Tokyo.
As with nearly all of my trips to the capital that aren’t for work my journey started the night before boarding the night bus from Osaka. I’ve experienced these beasts quite a few times and it’s always a bit different, a topic for another post perhaps, either way they are by far the cheapest way to get to and from Tokyo for me and I’m now a gold member due to my frequent use.
One long and
uncomfortable bus journey later and I was standing in front of Tokyo station,
and it was finished. To backtrack it has been under renovation since I arrived
but now it is all done. I must admit it does look magnificent a real blast from
the late 19th century. After basking for a while I descended into
the maze therein to make my way to Ueno park.
I’ve heard many great
things about this place, it’s the home to many national museums, plenty of
sights of historic importance and also a zoo, admittedly I had no intention of
visiting that though. Suffice to say I was very excited to finally get there.
Ueno station on the Yamanote line is right outside so I had no excuses not to
haul my bum over there, sleep deprived or not.
First impressions?
It’s E.N.O.R.M.O.U.S. I think I don’t have too much experience of huge public
parks to draw on, or I’ve been in Japan too long where large green spaces are
few and far between, but either way I was really staggered by just how much
open space there was. The park was established way back in the meji period as a
drive for more public places of exceptional beauty, an idea borrowed from
European countries at the time. Well good work Meji people you really nailed
it.
Asides from monolithic
Tokyo National Museum, Tokyo Metrapolitan Art Museum and National Museum of
Western Art, amongst a few others, the park is home to a wide variety of flora
and fauna. Over 9,000 trees call it their home and as such it has become a
particularly famous place to visit for 花見 (flower viewing) in early
april. Most of the blossoms had already fallen to the ground thanks to a heavy
storm a few days previously but there were still many out braving the early
morning to lay down their tarps for festivities in the evening. Amongst them is
an incredibly old Cherry blossom tree that is incredibly designated as a world
heritage site.
After necking a coffee
I wandered about the place in a bit of a daze. As you can imagine, this being
Japan after all, there were plenty of shrines knocking about the place. The
shrine to Benzaiten (A goddess of luck), which sits out in the middle of a lake
definitely caught my attention. I wandered over one of the many bridges out to
the shrine taking in the skyscraper dominated skyline that, for me, always
epitomises Tokyo. The shrine is not so special but I guess it gets a lot of
visitors as there were many people setting up Yatais (portable food stalls). I
got talking to the lady who owned on such that was selling dried fruits and
nuts. She was fairly impressed with the fact A) I spoke passable Japanese and
B) I’d come all the way from Hyogo by Night bus and gave me a nice handful of
dried fruit for breakfast. Language skill level up.
So as I mentioned
earlier there are many museums and galleries in Ueno and the thing that
impressed me most was the price. None were more than 600yen and some were even
free. Having not long been severely ripped off at the Kobe municipal museum I
was more than happy to see this.
I had to debate were
to go a bit but in the end my inner science nerd won out and I went to the
National science museum. What can I say, science isn’t my job it’s my lifestyle
choice. That and it had a giant whale model outside so I was intrigued from the
beginning.
A quick warning here.
Whilst the exhibits are enourmous, informative, and well layed out there is
also almost zero English information in the entire building. I was a little
shocked by this given it is a national museum, but I have long come to expect
this from Japanese institutions. That being said if you can read there is a lot
of interesting stuff here, with a heavy emphasis on natural history.
The one weird thing I
did get out of the museum though was how amazingly Japanocentric it was. One
exhibit that really stuck out was one in which the indigenous vs non-indigenous
flora and fauna of Island nations was compared. Specifically Japan, New Zealand
and the UK. Now it is true that Japan does have a lot of animals very
particular to it’s lands alone but as an outsider the way the display was set
up almost made it feel like “Japan rules and these other countries suck.” This
was also apparent in a section tracing the anthropology of human existence in
Japan. One display said in all but words “The Japanese people are special and
unlike every other race on the planet.” Maybe I’m just being cynical but it’s a
little unsettling that these kind of messages are being passed down to
children.
The next floor down
however my dark thoughts were dispelled by a wonderful showroom full off old
scientific instruments. If there is one thing I most definitely am it is a
massive instrumentation geek. I love this stuff. Looking at old telescopes,
seismometers and even a 1933 electron microscope really brightened my mood. A
kind old man even stopped to explain a bit about the history of the
seismometers and how in ancient times in Japan it was believed a giant catfish
demon was the source of earthquakes.
The museum itself is
absolutely huge. It is separated into two sections, Japan and global, each of
which has three upper floors and two basement floors. Being a natural history
museum a large portion of the exhibits were set aside for hulking great
skeletons (some amazing dinosaurs in there), taxidermy models and, weirdly
enough, a large exhibit displaying the intestinal tract of various animals. I
was immediately taken back to my youth spending time wandering the displays of
Liverpool museum.
Nostalgia aside this
place is an excellent waste of time and money at 600 yen. I easily spent 5
hours wandering it’s corridors and I could happily have spent longer. What I
will say is that I’m glad I got into Ueno and the museum early because by the
time I was leaving around 3pm the whole area was incredibly crowded.
So there ends day one,
didn’t really do much after I met up with the rents. Anyway look forward to day
2 some time soon.
Ja mata ne.
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