My parents came to Japan! I was very excited to see them, and we had an excellent if tiring tour from Tokyo to Fukuoka. They are now on their own whirlwind tour of the standard Japanese Touristy Locales (Kyoto, Nara, Mt. Fuji etc.) and I am at work. I think they have the better end of the deal.
We spent two days in Tokyo, one at Tokyo Disney Sea, and then stopped in Himeji, Okayama, Kurashiki and Miyajima before making it back to my apartment in Kitakyushu. From there we took a day trip to Fukuoka and Dazaifu. By the end I was pretty tired. There’s only so many days of walking (at least) 8 hours a day that I can take.
My parents delved into the exciting lands of Japanese foods, and came out not so enthralled with the ryokan fare (too many unidentifiable foods, and Dad is apparently not a fan of the “rubbery” and “slimy” food groups which are so popular here), but seemed to do well with katsu, gyoza, okonomiyaki, and tempura. The meal at the Italian restaurant was definitely appreciated, however. The okonomiyaki dinner was probably the most adventurous location-wise, being a tiny little 10-seater counter place with the only menu being the plaques in Japanese on the wall, but they had a good time and enjoyed the food. I was pleased! My parents’ favorite dinner was at a restaurant under the train tracks near Ginza called “Andy’s Shin-Hinomoto.” Lots of little dishes to share, and the food was all tasty and well cooked. The only problem was that they were out of potatoes! My mother even tried to use chopsticks once or twice (but generally gave up for the more well-travelled fork)!
In Kurashiki we met the man who had sold his land to the city to make the visitor’s center for the historical area, and listened to him wax nostalgic about the nice garden they had ripped out and his process to move out of his remaining property. It was sad to hear him talk of getting everything ready for his passing, and to hear him talk of the things of his childhood that had been lost and changed, but fascinating nonetheless.
In Dazaifu I discovered that the long line was just for the special exhibit and not for the museum in general, so we went and saw of the prehistoric artifacts but not the special Buddhist artifacts.
Overall I had a great time, and enjoyed myself, and my only wish is that we could have had more time so we could take things more slowly.