Monday 21 October 2013

Reflections on Tokyo




Here we are sitting on the Shinkansen (Bullet Train) travelling at incredible speed – perhaps around 300km per hour at times and pondering the last 6 days in Tokyo which was an incredible experience.  The city is an amazing mix of old and new – some parts are many hundreds of years old and others, space-age technology and amazing buildings.  The city is crowded, as already noted, the coastal Tokyo-Nagoya residential strip totalling some 35 million people, a quarter of the nation’s population.  The people are incredibly hard-working, many working very long hours and come Friday night, they stay in the izakaya (pubs) until very late.  The number of restaurants is amazing – in shopfronts, basements and up steep stairs to higher floors.    Most railway/subway stations have large numbers of take-away cafes and sit-down restaurants with almost every type of food we could imagine.  Much of it is very reasonably priced and certainly, from our experience, very tasty and fresh.
The people are mostly well-dressed and impeccably groomed, particularly the young women.  They are very fashionable and despite some very strange outfits, beautifully presented.  The shops and department stores are crowded, particularly at weekends, with sweet young things looking for the new and interesting outfits, shoes and hats they can find.  They totter around on impossibly high heels with micro-mini skirts or short shorts and above-knee decorative stockings.  We visited one of the high end department stores during the week and were amazed at the range of product, most appearing to be produced in Japan.  Some of the product, particularly kimonos and embroidered panels, etc., were extremely beautiful and incredibly expensive.  This is a store several levels above David Jones in sophistication and probably even above Galleries LaFayette in Paris.  There were several artisans at work and we managed to buy hand-made personally embossed chopsticks for a quite reasonable price – a nice keepsake.  
In some areas there is a concentration of same-type stores.  Fashion areas, kitchen goods and electronics in particular are grouped together.  “Electric Town” in Akihabara is an area not far from central Tokyo where there is building after building for many blocks, where electronic equipment and software of all types is sold.  There are buildings of 5 or 6 floors devoted to one particular type of game or brand and there seem to be dozens of these buildings.
We can’t say enough about the welcome we’ve received wherever we’ve been.  Greetings from staff in restaurants, shops, cafes and everywhere else has been a feature.  Looking a little lost on Saturday afternoon and pondering the map to find a particular store, we had a young mother ask if she could help and then she led us on a 3 block detour to point out the store we were looking for.  She spoke some English and had actually visited Australia at one time, but only the minimal Sydney/Gold Coast/Cairns few days experience.  She had finished her shopping and was heading home when she stopped to help, so we were most grateful.  We only wished that we’d had one of our little koalas with us to give to her little son.
The shinkansen, as with most of the trains we have experienced so far, are extremely efficient and clean and safe and many local trains are very crowded.  And yet, despite the crowds, there is no angst and certainly no delays.  The shinkansen are reputed to run less than 6 seconds late on average.  Amazingly efficient!   And not a hint of BO despite the crowds in the subways!  
Today, before boarding the shinkansen, we purchased our lunch which was a bento box with several types of vegetables, potato salad, prawns, pork and chicken prepared in different ways, a cold beer and all for a little over $10 each.  Absolutely beautiful!  (Pictures attached).      

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