Saturday, December 10, 2011

Geeksville - Tokyo Robot Exhibition

A few weekends ago Kept Ninja and I ventured to the Tokyo International Exhibition Centre to see the iRex Robot Exhibition.


There was a mix of industrial robots (for manufacturing); healthcare robots (robotic legs) and leisure robots (toys!).


Few videos and pics below :)


Tokyo International Exhibition Centre

Umm...art?

iRobot

Pinky

Storm trooper wannabe

... more than meets the eye

Robot artwork

Robot artwork

Robot artwork


Robot wars - Take I

Robot Teddy Bear


Giddy up!


Robot Wars - take II


Robot Wars - take III
xoxo

Karate Kate

Friday, December 9, 2011

It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas... in Japan

The weather has changed and the Christmas season is setting in to Tokyo. All the pumpkins are gone and the twinkle lights are in full flight. Despite being predominantly Buddhist and Shinto, the country appears to embrace Christmas, like one of Santa's hugs.
Our tree... at our apartments
I'd love to know what percentage of people's incomes they spend on shopping here - the typical weekend for a couple involves a few hours of shopping - the lady buys, the man carries... if they have a bub on board then the shopping goes in the pram and the man carries the bub... if they have a dog... it will definitely have it's own pram and an outfit on! 
Bulldogs in sweater vests


Few pics from around Tokyo and Yokohama of the Christmas decorations...
Strange Christmas bear tree

The blue signs say "Birth & Glitter"... of course?

SOGO Christmas Tree

Even the escalators get decorated!

Nissan's Winter Wonderland

Even the Marino's soccer shop is decorated!

Dean & Deluca goodies

D&D
We did a spot of Christmas shopping in Kappabashi today, so we stopped at Tokyo Station and grabbed lunch at Dean & Deluca. The trees in the area are stunning!



Imperial Palace up ahead



Kappabashi is the area that has the plastic food, kitchenwares and restaurant goodies. We bought a few gifts and got a few keepsakes for ourselves...

Our fav knife shop

Bits and bobs for entertaining

Garden Bugs bake tin
"Zoo Friends" bake tin - we couldn't resist
Happy Holidays all - two weeks til New York, Washington and Boston!!!


xoxo
Karate Kate


Saturday, November 12, 2011

Hanemun - Iriomote-jima

DAY 1:


Almost 11 months after our wedding, we headed south to a little island in Okinawa called Iriomote! The location was rather randomly selected based on the nice hotel, the potential activities and the remoteness. Remoteness indeed... took two planes (4hrs flight time from Tokyo) and a 45min boat ride to reach the island.


The island has a population of ~2,200, its circumference is 130km and it's home to the Iriomote wild cat, an endangered species.


Our hotel, Nirakanai Sanctuary Resort was a bit like Cable Beach Club Resort - about 160 rooms but it was only 25% full in early November. It was around 29 degrees each day and 90% humidity - peak season must be HOT!
Nirakanai Sanctuary Resort
The resort sits on Tuduman Beach which is has nice sunsets and no waves... doesn't quite rival the West Australian beaches, but it's very nice by Japan standards.
Tuduman Beach
We spent the first afternoon swimming on the beach and lounging by the pool with a book. The resort gave us a complimentary buffet dinner - Kept Ninja got quite excited by the potato gems... the real highlight were the four different types of cake and the mango and guava ice-creams!


DAY 2:


Our first run of the buffet breakfast was rather successful - it's a marathon, not a sprint... there is only so much room on the plate and limited stomach space, so a strategy is required. Again, potato gems were a distraction.


Our guide picked us and a few others up and took us to a big boat on the river. We had a 30min boat ride down the Urauchi River and were dropped off to do a walking trek for 2 hrs. We saw three waterfalls - Maryudu, Kampire and Mayagusuku Falls - the path was muddy, humid but fortunately undercover from the sun. We were glad to be in our hiking boots - we saw one guy wearing a suit... amateur! Our guide came back and met us for lunch on the side of the river. We were relieved and surprised that the lunchbox wasn't all seafood (Kept Ninja's not a fan... which can be troublesome in Japan!) We now love Onigiri - which are rice triangles with a surprise in the middle.


We then hopping in a twin canoe and paddled 8km back down the Urauchi River. We stopped at various locations for a break and to be educated (via a laminated info sheet... English was scarce). First stop was a waterfall for cool dip, then we saw some Looking Glass Trees which were hundreds of years old. We learnt that mangroves process salt and excrete it through their yellow leaves, and my favourite stop was when we canoed into the mangrove area - it felt like that scene from The Notebook - truly beautiful... plus I had my version of Ryan Gosling in the canoe with me :)
Looking Glass Tree
We got back to the hotel in the afternoon for the usual afternoon swim and lounge by the pool.


Our hotel was a few km from various restaurants so about 10 of the restaurant have a free car service to and from the restaurant which was really convenient! Our first random pick was "Painkan no Tonari" which was pretty good - very casual, the seaweed tempura was awesome (Dish of Day 2)! The Okinawa beef was a bit grisly. Most dinners were ~$50 total for 4 drinks and 4-5 dishes!
Seaweed Tempura
DAY 3:


Our guide for the day was Tatsu-san - he was middle aged, massively tanned and spoke bits and piece of English. It was just the three of us for the day of snorkelling - 6hr personal island tour, lunch included for ~$100 each - bargain!


First he took us to Barros Island, which is only 20m x 4m - purely made of coral pieces. We anchored and had 40mins to frollick on the nearby reef - I was glad we had wetsuits on but we really didn't need them - the sun was a greater threat than the temperature of the water. We saw some amazing fish and coral - all very similar to Coral Bay - probably more plentiful and coral looked more lively and of greater variety.
Barros Island




I got "Fish Bombed"

Can you see baby Nemo?


We then moved to Hatoma Island to a different reef - also beautiful - we stopped on the island and had some "oyshi" onigiri and wandered around for a while. We then headed to a reef near Sumiyoshi beach (Iriomote) for our last dive spot. I was dubious - the tide had picked up and I couldn't see the reef - just the deep blue. Shame on me for doubting Tatsu-san - he plonked us right on the reef (without a GPS) and it was spectacular - we could see up to 30m down - truly magical. After 90mins of paddling into the current, I was kaput and we headed back to Uehara Port.


The drop-off


Restaurant #13
The perfect day was topped off by a fantastic meal at restaurant #13 (on the restaurant map). The setting was great - sunken tables, lanterns and the English menu was a Godsend. Dish of Day 3 was the cheese and chive spring rolls.


Cheese Spring rolls, and squid


DAY 4:


Suichi-san, our guide for Day 4, took us canoeing down a little stream - it was much more relaxed than Day 2's canoe. Kept Ninja and I opted for a canoe each... as I had trouble leaving the steering to the back of the caboose! We had one other person touring with us and her English was better than our guide's, so she assisted in translation. We saw some poisonous snakes whilst canoeing... so you had to watch what your oar picked up! We parked our canoe's near a looking glass tree and started our ascent up the jungle. Luckily, we were given booties with carpet soles to wear - they gripped well on rocks, tree trunks and in the mud. We saw a few jungle flowers which were in Avatar - so pretty! After 20mins we reached the base of the Pinaisara Falls and jumped in fully clothed - so refreshing! I checked with Suichi-san first and there were no snakes in the bottom of the falls... he waited til after we got out to tell me that there were eels in there... nice!




Pinaisara Falls


The canoe duck


We had some onigiri and mochi (Japanese dessert balls) for lunch and started the less inviting trek back down and canoe back to the car. We had a quick clothing change and headed around the island to Yubu Island. It was 27km and Suichi-san delighted in telling us that there were no police on the island... seatbelts are also not prevalent...*alarm bells*.
Serenade on a buffalo taxi

We caught a water buffalo taxi across to Yubu Island - judging from the size of the restaurants, etc, on the island, it must get very busy in peak season. We went into a butterfly sanctuary. Kept Ninja fought it out with a black and red butterfly for a picture - the latter was the victor... but I got video - warning: this clip contains profanities.


We also saw chickens, goats, horses and "wild" boars. The island has a boar hunting season - unfortunately for Kept Ninja, it starts mid November. The drive back gave us a good overview of the island - hilly rainforest in the middle, with one main road on the outside near the crystal, blue water. 


Pumba

For dinner, we took Suichi-san's recommendation and went to #12 - it was rather rustic but the food was great - dish of Day 4 was the yakitori (chicken kebabs).
Oops too slow - the yakitori is gone
DAY 5:


Return boat trip was a scene from "The Perfect Storm" - I was grateful to make it out with breakfast still in my tummy!


xoxo
Karate Kate







Wednesday, October 26, 2011

What would a Ninja do?

After weeks of self-inflicted cabin fever, my exam was over and we were free to explore!

Saturday kicked off with a 1hr massage (I deserved it! :P)… again, there was utter bemusement on the masseuse’s face when she told me how tight my muscles were… *sigh*

After a tasty lunch at Wolfgang Puck’s café in Bay Quarter, we hit the train to Akihabara to pick up some MP3 players… several hours later and with a  few swipes of the credit card we emerged victorious! We then crossed into the centre of Tokyo to Asakasa to restaurant called… "Ninja"… guess who picked it? :)

 We were dubious when we first walked in and the hostess clapped her hands for a Ninja to appear… that was just the start of it! We were escorted by lantern through a maze of small ceilings (Marcus wouldn’t stand a chance!), staircases and a big trap door… to our table. It was in a small area with 3 other tables. Our Ninja waiter pulled out a magic menu… and we realised all the set menus had an abundance of seafood… not friendly for my Ninja. Fortunately there was a very long ala carte menu too. We resisted the “Beauty Cocktails” and opted for a bottle of French red. Our menu choices are below, as is our ninja magic show – it was amazing… or maybe there was something in the wine? Apologies for my commentary in the background – I don’t really sound like that, do I? See if you can pick up on the fake pen joke he throws in there… not cool! They also did fire tricks and the best food trick we saw was a grapefruit with a knife through it, when they removed the knife the fruit started smoking (solution: the blade must of held a piece of dry ice, when pulled out, it dropped into the liquid below)...very cool!

Forbidden Fruit
Stewed Apple with marinated duck inside!
 Tristan's entree - duck with wild rice

My main - roast lobster
Tender lamb

Dessert choices - what would you have chosen?

Ninja chose the "Merchant and Corrupt Official" - chocolate layered cake under the gold
I went the Bonze - pumpkin ice-cream and chocolate cake - yummo




The next day we hit Tokyo again, to exchange an MP3 (damn you Sony and your non-international language supported toys!), and to finally hit a baseball batting cage! It was a little walk from Shinjuku station. Our batting techniques are below… clearly one of us was a little leaguer… and the other did ballet :P My pitches were at 80km/hr and Ninja opted for 90km/hr… they came every 4 seconds, so we had 30 balls x 2 rounds each … and we have been in a world of pain every since!



We headed home via Costco. I found a 16 year old bottle of port for $60, so I was rather chuffed… until we got to the check out and the lady gave us the “no deal” sign to Mastercard (our AMEX hasn’t been replaced yet)… so with our tails between our legs we scrounged together to pay the huge bill but had to return the port – I was so ashamed… and bitter about losing it! Damn you Costco!

We returned home to Skype the newest member of the Bardill clan – Elijah – another huge cutie born last week (good job Chels) – he’s super cute and I could tell he was less impressed than I am at Uncle Frog’s (aka Kept Ninja) facial hair! This “beards at births” tradition is not all its cracked up to be!

Until next week…

Xoxo
Karate Kate

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Who knows? Suuuuuumo's

Well, where do I start? Our adventures of late have left no time for blogging! Let’s go back to the very beginning, a very good place to start… (yes, The Sound of Music was on SkyPerfect recently!)

For the second time in our marriage, Kept Ninja and I were separated by sea :( He flew to China to holiday with his folks for a week. I was a little apprehensive for three reasons:
   1. Our credit cards were cancelled the day before he left as someone was spending our money at Saks in Aberdeen;
2.    We weren’t sure if his mobile would work there (it didn’t); and
3. Finally, I hadn’t cooked for myself in 6 months and survival was not a give in!

Fortunately, Kept Ninja made a big loaf of wholemeal, 2 batches of fruit muffins and 3 litre of chicken vegetable soup :)

After a week of moping and watching romance movies, Kept Ninja was due to come home… only a typhoon could stop him! ...and it did. Typhoon Roke cancelled flights for 4hrs and sent me home from work at 3pm. 
One day later, Kept Ninja’s aunt and uncle arrived. Two days later Kept Ninja and his folks made it home.

Unfortunately, Kept Ninja didn’t make it back in time for the Sumo on Friday. So I took Keiko, Sabatino and Roberto from work. It was quite an experience. 

In a nutshell:
-       The amateur’s (Jonokuchi) wrestle first – their sizes varied from little guys to 250kg jumbos. I felt sorry for these guys cos they don’t get to wear cool hairstyles, they have more cellulite than muscle, and they have to clean and cook for the higher ranked wrestlers (rikishi).
-       The dohyo (ring) is covered with sand, which they sweep constantly.
-       During the actual bout, a rikishi can use a number of manoeuvres, except pulling his opponent's hair, hitting his opponent with a closed fist, boxing his opponent's ears, choking his opponent (although he may push at the throat), or grabbing his opponent's mawashi in the crotch area… first to touch the ground or step out of the ring looses!
-       There are 6 referees (gyoji) – one who jumps around the ring with the wrestlers, the other five sit on mats near the ring and sometimes get hit by falling wrestlers. They only jump up if they think the main man got it wrong.
-       The Juryo were next up – they are the middle-men – the bouts last longer as do their warm up – they get to throw their weight around, AND throw salt.
-       Finally the Makuuchi battles were up – they throw salt til the cows come home, then receive a moist towel, throw some more salt and then fight! The Big Kahuna or Yokozuna, had been undefeated for several years and lost for the first time the day before… we witnessed his second loss in as many years… which lead to cushions thrown into the ring (you predicted it Kz!) It’s a round-robin tournament so he still won overall.
  - Most competitors were Japanese but there were some from Russia, Mongolia, Brazil and Estonia!...
Surface prep

Aw, the little guys wrestle

Warm-up stretch - hello boys!

The Yuryo - who feels good about their physique now?

Yuryo 'Hello Boys' is remarkably more flexible!

Nothin' like a good salt throw...

Man-love - sumo style

Legal throat attack

The Makuuchi... check out the bright blue boy... he's Russian

Yokozuna (aka "Big Kahuna")

David Vs Goliath

David won - does everyone agree?

watch out for the flying sumo wrestler...

The dummy-spit - Yokozuma crumbles under pressure!

Baystars fans - unimpressed with their performance!
We had Tris’ parents, Aunt and Uncle stay with us for 10 days so we showed them around Tokyo and Yokohama. Few pics below – highlights were:

-       Baystars game – ok they lost, but we got Baystar caps :)
-       Oktoberfest at Red Brick Warehouse – 1 litre stein’s and bratwurst
-       Going up Landmark Tower – 69 storeys’ – great view!

Landmark Tower View
Landmark Tower View
Oktoberfest - Red Brick Warehouse
PROST!
On Sunday we went to the Rakuten Tennis Open in Tokyo – it was a charity event day – we saw Bernard Tomic, Milos Raonic, and Mardy Chicken (aka Mardy Fish), each played Japanese players. Then David Ferrer played David Nalbandian, and Juan Monaco hit with Rafael Nadal. Half time entertainment was pretty interesting… see video below!

We had our 11th Japanese lesson on Monday night – we can now say when we woke up, what activities we did during the day and what we ate – the lesson feels like confession! Even more disturbing is that we learnt how to invite another person out to do an activity together and Tanabe-sensei was winking at Kept Ninja as he accepted her Karaoke date on Friday! :P ha ha but seriously, he IS her favourite!

Long weekend coming up – which gives me just enough time to cram for my Strategic Management exam in 13 days time!





Xoxo
Karate Kate