Tuesday, 10 March 2015

Winter, spring and calligraphy


Day 1: Winter. Snow piled high from the kitchen window.

Day 2: Spring Fukujusou blooming

Calligraphy display from a local high school (Takanosu)


Calligraphy display from a local High School(Omagari)

Calligraphy display from a ;ocal High School (Odate)

Calligraphy display from a local High School (Noshiro)

A video showing the kanji display being drawn by the Takanosu group.

Spring comes quickly when it comes. Hiro's mother was lamenting the fukujuso (Adonis amurensis) were not yet blooming. Lo and behold, the next day it was.  I can't feel much excitement at seeing them, but I guess if I'd been looking at snow for the past 4 months, they'd probably feel very cheery.

After Hiro's nieces graduation we went to take a look at a calligraphy display in the local Citizens Centre.  Hiro's older niece is in the calligraphy club and one of their pictures was on display.  The posters are massive - perhaps 3x4 metres - and are painted as "group performance". From beginning to end it takes about 5 minutes for the group to put it together. It was phenomenal to see it in action. You can see in the last picture the group raising their banner - the theme of this painting "gratitude".

Yonezawa north


North of Takahata

North of Takahata

Yamagata, the train to Shinjo
Oishida
Oishida

Obanazawa, Yamagata

Ticket prices from Shinjo to Akita

The crowded Ou line out of Akita city...it was like
being back in Tokyo. Though within 25 mins the train
had emptied out.

Yonezawa

I had an hour at Yonezawa. JR makes more money from the people who catch Shinkansen, so the train schedule is designed to maximize connections and convenience for the Shinkansen traveller. It's a pity it wasn't two hours in someway as Yonezawa seems like it has places of interest to sightseers.  
Yonezawa is mostly famous for its beef, but it also caught my attention when I read Isabelle Bird's  Unbeaten Tracks in Japan.

The plain of Yonezawa, with the prosperous town of Yonezawa in the south, and the frequented watering-place of Akayu in the north, is a perfect garden of Eden, "tilled with a pencil instead of a plough," growing in rich profusion rice, cotton, maize, tobacco, hemp, indigo, beans, egg-plants, walnuts, melons, cucumbers, persimmons, apricots, pomegranates; a smiling and plenteous land, an Asiatic Arcadia, prosperous and independent, all its bounteous acres belonging to those who cultivate them, who live under their vines, figs, and pomegranates, free from oppression—a remarkable spectacle under an Asiatic despotism. ..
It is an enchanting region of beauty, industry, and comfort, mountain girdled, and watered by the bright Matsuka. Everywhere there are prosperous and beautiful farming villages, with large houses with carved beams and ponderous tiled roofs, each standing in its own grounds, buried among persimmons and pomegranates, with flower-gardens under trellised vines, and privacy secured by high, closely-clipped screens of pomegranate and cryptomeria.

The snow was too high for me to read the sign
explaining the meaning of this statue outside 

JR Yonezawa

A statue of "A Young Man".
If there was more to the story than this,
it was covered by the snow.

A temple near the station

Not much ohaka maeri (grave visitation) possible here.

Ohigan - the spring equinox grave visiting season is in a couple of weeks.
There'll need to be some serious snow shoveling before then!

A rather forlorn looking doll.


Waist deep in snow

A sign telling the driver that the car has been parked
in a way that is bothersome to others.

Bego ya - a beef restaurant.
bego / beko is dialect for cow in parts of Tohoku

Decorative tiles on the footpath showing the local festivals

Just a reminder that Yonezawa is famed for beef!
A wagyu statue on the station platform.

Seishun 18, March 2015 Tokyo-Yonezawa


I've just returned from a seishun 18 trip to Akita and back. Photos below.The way up was a way I have travelled many times; it is particularly beautiful in the winter.  It's also the quickest route of the many that are available.   
Seishun 18 tickets only allow travel on local trains, with a very few exceptions. Searching for the route requires unchecking options such as express trains, shinkansen, planes, sleeper trains, buses and walking!  It's a long long trip - on the way up 14 hours -  but it works out at only 2,500 yen (less than 30$)  for the 700+ km trip in conrast with about 17,000Y for a ticket that includes shinkansen.

Utsunomiya

Shirakawa Castle



The Shinkansen line and the mountains from the Tohoku main line.

Kuroiso 


Fukushima

Heading north west from Fukushima station

A woman selling food along the tracks 

Entering Yamagata

Yamagata

The line to Yonezawa


The end of the winter