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Rick's b.log - 2015/06/16 |
It is the 5th of April 2025 You are 3.16.212.58, pleased to meet you! |
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The Aomori information site provides a reasonable level of information on the area, though your browser may scream about the site being untrusted (get me out of here!) because for some reason the Aomori Prefectural Government have issued their own SSL certificate which, obviously, is going to be rejected by any browser that is paying attention.
You might recognise the word "sable" from expensive paintbrushes. The fur of the sable is unique in that it is fairly stiff yet feels smooth no matter which way you stroke it (unlike, say, a cat or a dog where the stiffer fur usually feels rough if you stroke backwards). One of the best known sable brushes is the Kolinsky sable brush, harvested from the tail of the kolinsky (a Siberian weasel, not a sable). The animal is classed as endangered and is therefore on the CITES list. Compliant countries have either banned the sale of sable brushes, or will seize shipments in customs - the United States has taken this stance since 2013.
I hope you enjoyed this.
Japanese stamps
I picked up some pretty Japanese stamps in Sunday at a vide grenier. €0,10 apiece.
This, written in the evenings of the three days following, has been a mass of research work to identify each stamp and what it is about.
ふみの日
みかんの花咲く丘
神宮外苑のイチョウ並木
野はう
I knew there was going to be one I wouldn't be able to identify. Well, here it is. ☺
姫路城
Here's the official website, you can enjoy the low resolution animated Flash (!) and the link to a RealPlayer .ram file (!) and party like it's 1999...
鹿児島国際火山会議記念
The other text, 昭和63年, means the 63rd year of Shōwa - or 1988 in Christian year numbering - corresponding to the 63rd year of the reign of Emperor Hirohito, the presiding Emperor of the radical change between "the empire of Japan" (up until the Japanese defeat in WW2) and "the state of Japan" afterwards, in which the country turned to a more pacifist nature, something Mr. Shinzō Abe (current Prime Minister) seems to be a little too eager to forget. That said, the press is reporting today that his approval ratings have slumped to a new low. That's quite something in a country where a huge number of people have exactly zero interest in politics.
倉敷美観地区、岡山県
晩秋の富土山、 静岡県
Here's a gratuitous link to a Getty Images photo that looks sort of similar (though could do with more saturated colours). As for the mountain? Here's a hint - it isn't Kilimanjaro! ☺
中禅寺湖、 栃木県
A review on TripAdvisor paints a grim picture of the foibles of being a tourist, though I think it is a stretch calling an inadequate bus schedule at a peak time "an emergency"... If I was going to go there to enjoy the autumn scenery, I'm afraid I'd try to find a way to be dropped off in the morning and picked up in the evening. In between? I'd use my legs. I don't believe you can experience much in a short bus trip, certainly not when you're likely to have so little time that your eyes will be looking at your viewfinder for most of the journey and you'll eventually realise that you might have travelled halfway around the planet and actually not managed to see what was right in front of you. Only a bunch of photos. Well, here's one you can enjoy from the comfort of your own bedroom! (it looks like it was scanned from a magazine)
白神山地、 青森県
Shirakami-Sanchi is at the very top of Honshu (what you'd probably think of as "the main island") just below Hokkaidō. The area is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
For a UNESCO World Heritage site, the JNTO website is pitiful. Three short paragraphs? That's it? Luckily, there's a little bit more off one of the links.
熊野古道ツヅラト峠、 三重県
熊野古道ツヅラト峠、 三重県
Information in English is here and if it takes a while to load, that's because the link tabs are full size images scaled in the browser. If that sounds like too much bother, you could just grab the English language brochure (PDF, 2MiB). It is a double-sided fold-in-thirds on three pages. Uh-hu, yes, the extra page is a map. I wonder how they print it.
エゾクロテン、 北海道
In Mie Prefecture (mentioned above, the pilgrim paths) there is a saying: "the fox has seven disguises, the tanuki has eight, and the marten has nine" (狐七化け、狸八化け、貂九化け; kitsune shichibake, tanuki hachi bake, ten kyū bake) referring to the reputed ability to shapeshift (stuff of legends). Those who watched Ghibli's Pom Poko will be quite familiar with the shapeshifting Tanuki (the racoon-like creatures with the giant testicles). Imagine something even more capable!
世界フィギュアスケート選手権大会記念
The other writing is Heisei 6, or the 6th year of the reign of the current Emperor (Akihito), or 1994 in the revised Christian calendar.
弘前城と、 青森県
More on Hirosaki Castle.
中山道馬籠宿、 長野県
When a nearby railway passed by Magome-juku, the town fell into obscurity. More recently, it has been restored as an Edo-period town. The Edo period is contemporary with the Baroque movement, the Scientific Revolution, Louis XIV and the Palace of Versailles, the English Civil War - and people such as Galileo Galilei, René Descartes, Blaise Pascal, Isaac Newton, Robert Boyle, Gottfried Leibniz, Oliver Cromwell, George Frederic Handel, Johann Pacelbel, Rembrandt van Rijn, Samuel Pepys, and the later years of William Shakespeare.
I think from that you can get an idea of when this period was, related to Western history.
In Japanese terms, the various shogunates consolidated to create a centralised feudal government which brought the "warring states" to an end and brought stability to the country; though on the flip side the country moved from being open to trade with foreigners to persecuting Catholics (which were considered a threat for believing something so very different, and possibly for considering the Pope on the other side of the planet as their important figure) and eventually sliding the country into hundreds of years of seclusion, though there were many advances within the country. This period tends to be romanticised in television dramas and films as it is the latter part of the samurai/shogun era, before all of that was wiped away by the birth of the Empire of Japan following the Meiji Restoration.
Anyway, enough history. Here's some info on Magome-juku.
ふみの日
(^_^)
Gavin Wraith, 18th June 2015, 15:04 Thanks. I did enjoy it.Gavin Wraith, 18th June 2015, 15:10 Forgot to mention that in March there was a wonderful exhibition in Winchester public library of Hiroshige's 53 stations of the Tokaido. Also see here
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fifty-three_Stations_of_th e_T%C5%8Dkaid%C5%8D
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