Friday, November 28, 2008

Quiet Moment Message

-Celebrate today -

yes there is suffering...

but there is also love.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

I Suggest...Go West!



When you enter a public washroom in Japan...you never know what you are going to get.

There are often two options:

You can go 'western' and sit, or, you can try 'traditional Japanese' and squat.

Some 'western' styles in Hokkaido have heated seats! These fancy models often come with many other bells and whistles. When you sit, recorded running water sounds are played so that your neighbours can't hear your ummm 'natural' sounds. Belive it or not...for this high tech private-parts cleaning experience you can choose water spray location, speed, and temperatures. And after your job is done...all you need to do is stand up and the mess is tastefully flushed away...automatically!!!

Or you can choose the painful, nothing to hang onto, squat, pee on your shoes, pray to God you drop in the spot, manual toilet paper and flush model.

And sometimes, like at train stations, you don't get a choice.
It's all squat or get off the pot.

Now isn't that a relief!

Monday, November 17, 2008

Hog Wild!


If you check the map of Hokkaido that I posted in the `Sister` City entry, you will see that Obihiro City is just east of Kushiro. Two weeks ago we visited a very interesting resident of Obihiro - the owner of Rancho El Paso Mexican Restaurant.

This want-to-be-Latin Japanese man (I will call him El Paso) has been running a Mexican restaurant in Obihiro for 30 years!

El Paso has a lot of pork items on his menu, so five years ago he and his wife decided to start raising their own pigs. We were lucky enough to have a tour of his 500 strong pig farm. The most fascinating part of El Paso's farming style is that the pigs are allowed to roam around. Yes...it is a free-range pig farm! If you look at the photo above, you will see Farmer El Paso walking down a lane. Two pigs are coming up to greet him.

When the pigs are babes they are kept in a warm enclosure and when they get a little bigger they move to a small barn and fenced area. When the swines reach adult age and are able to behave themselves, they move to a larger enclosure where they can frolic in the forest and even swim in the river.

'Charlotte's Web' lovers will be sad to know that after a few years in nirvana...these little piggies move on to the sausage farm.

t

Sunday, November 16, 2008

The Sister Cities Compared




Burnaby B.C. Canada
Flag: bird
Coordinates: 49°16'N 122°58'W
Population: 205,261
Granted City Status: 1992
Area: 98.6 square km
Flower: rhododendron

Kushiro Hokkaido Japan
Flag: star
Coordinates: 42°59'N 144°23'E
Population: 189,539
Granted City Status: 1922
Area: 1362.75 square km
Flower: Nasturtium

Other interesting facts:

54% of residents of Burnaby do not speak English or French as a mother tongue.

Kushiro is the only ice-free trading port in Hokkaido. Its exports are coal, fish, and timber.

'Sister' City


Here is a map of Hokkaido.
Our Village of Tsurui is about a 40 minute drive north of Kushiro City.

A few years ago I was visiting family and friends in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia Canada. Both of my brothers were living in Burnaby at the time and one of them took me up to Burnaby Mountain Park.

I had never been up there and was surprised to see totem poles that did not resemble those of the West Coast First Nations people of British Columbia. They were instead totems carved by Inu First Nations people from Hokkaido Japan! What were these totems doing atop Burnaby Mountain?

Turns out Kushiro City and Burnaby City are Sister Cities! How appropriate - the closest city to the place where I was going to live in Hokkaido Japan was the sister city to the very place where my brothers lived!

When we stumbled across this information...my brother and I just looked at one another and said, "weird".

This coincidence made me feel a little better about my move so far away from home.

Never far from you bros.

your sis,
t

Thursday, November 13, 2008

That Moonrise


The moon rising over the mountain, Lake Toro, and our beached kayak.

Sunset and Moonrise


Today we did a trial run of a Noah 470 folding kayak. The Fujita Canoe company who builds and sells this amazing kayak allowed us to try it out before we consider making this pricey purchase.


Lake Toro is about a thirty minute drive from our home on the ranch in Tsurui. It was a beautiful sunny day today so we were super excited to get out on the lake and see all of the
gorgeous fall colours.


Kayaking is amazing. You can really get up close and personal with the wildlife on the water and shore as you are so low in the water and you can glide so quietly. We saw deer, ducks, seagulls, crows, eagles, and heron today.


After exploring about a third of the lake, we stopped on a sandy beach to make coffee. About 20 meters away from where we were sitting, about fifty ducks made a landing. The sound of these birds flapping their wings at such high speeds while hovering over the water before touching down made a sound that resembled a jet airplane landing!! We were shocked at how loud they were! These ducks must love taking off and landing again when the combined effort creates such a dramatic sound! Wow!


My husband took this photo of me while we paddled back to our car as the sun was setting. While we packed our gear away, the full moon started rising over the mountains. What luck!


I don't know if it was the sunshine or the moonrise or the wildlife or relaxing on the beach...but we LOVE the Noah 470 and hope to buy one soon.


t



Monday, November 10, 2008

Where is Hokkaido Japan?

Japan has four main Islands and Hokkaido is the northernmost one!

The capitol of Hokkaido is Sapporo.
The G8 Summit took place there in July of this year.
This city is located in Southwest Hokkaido...
above the boot that looks a bit like Italy!

The village where we live (Tsuri Mura) is in Easter Hokkaido.

More later...

I am off to cooking class!

t

golden feast


listening to small birds twitter
as the sun sets on this autumn eve

watching cranes graze on golden
and dark-chocolate corn fields

a melody to celebrate the leftover bounty
before the cold frozen days...

bring silence to this place


Tsurui Mura Hokkaido Japan

Tsurui - A village most commonly known as the place where the cranes (tsuru) reside (i). Over 80 years ago there were only a handful of these amazing birds left in the Kushiro Wetland. A concerned Tsurui farmer decided to feed these cranes corn over the winter months and many other villagers helped too. In part, from their collective efforts, there are over 1000 tancho to date. The beauty of this area of Hokkaido and the community spirit that the village of Tsurui possesses, must be what inspires the cranes to remain and grow in abundance. My husband and I feel that we share some things in common with the tancho. The welcoming and accepting spirit of the people and the beauty of the land have captured our hearts also.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

getting started

I must admit I am a little nervous getting started.

Once I open my mouth...

I can`t seem to stop talking.

Maybe it will be the same when I press these keys with my fingers...

b o u n d l e s s

How exciting! I finished my first entry.

t