Because there were a lot of people there we played an extreme version of this game. Usually you use normal sized cards, but at the social they wrote all the poems down on paper and pasted those to cardboard. I think they were 3 feet by 2 feet? I don't know. But it made it really fun because everyone was running around to try and find the right card.
After the social I went with Shingo, Naoko, Hoku, and Ken to Umeda and window shopped for a bit. There was a special summer sale going on at the mall we went to so it was super crowded. So crowded that there was someone who directed the line to the escalators at the entrance. Quick side thought, in Japan they call both elevators and escalators elevators. It was fun walking around just looking at the different shops. We stopped at a perfume store and smelled the different perfumes and colognes. It was interesting, sometimes the most expensive perfumes weren't the best smelling. We walked past a dessert shop and one of the desserts they had was a parfait about 26 cm tall. Sometime I want to get a group of people together and get it.
Ken and Hoku came home with me because we were throwing a goodbye party for Mari, Ken's sister. She left for Southern Virginia University this morning. But Megan made brownies that her mom sent her. While we were waiting for the brownies to cool we went to the fair that was being held around the castle. Mari and Ken played a game where you use paper paddle to scoop as many bouncy balls out of water before the paper breaks. Usually it's fish, though. Mari was able to get over 60! We went back for brownies and finished off the night with youtube videos. I will miss you Mari!
On Tuesday we went to the Danjiri Festival museum with Sister Sato and the Yukimotos. Kishiwada is the most famous in Japan for it's Danjiri Festival. I think the Danjiri Festival is thrown to celebrate the history of a town. A float carved with images from history is pulled around the streets. I think there are about 60 people pulling the float. Then there are people sitting on the float playing a flute and drums and then one person dancing on the roof of the float. It's hard to explain and it's a lot cooler if you actually see it. The festival is in September so we won't get to see the actual festival. But it was cool being able to go to the museum.
On Wednesday Megan and I got to try on kimonos! It was so fun. There are two main types of kimonos. Ones with short sleeves and ones with long sleeves. Before you get married you wear kimonos with long sleeves. After you're married you wear short sleeved kimonos. I got to try on Sister Sato's kimono that she wore before she got married. I think she bought it when she turned twenty. In Japan, your twentieth birthday is your most important birthday because that's when you become an adult. When you turn twenty you buy a really nice kimono and take pictures. Also, you wear it on Adult Day if you turn twenty that year, or if you have already turned twenty or something like that. It was raining, so we couldn't really go outside, but I still had fun just wearing it.
Today I made plans to go to either Umeda to get the really tall dessert or Namba to get Turkish ice cream. I invited Megan, Meg, Hoku, Shingo, and some of our students, but in the end only Megan, Shingo, Hiroharu, and I were able to go. So we decided to go to Namba to get Turkish ice cream and do Umeda another time. I had a lot of fun. The best part was trying to find where the stand was that sold the ice cream. The directions we got were: it's on a street perpendicular to a main street and has a bunch of banners with cats on them. We did eventually find it. It involved looking it up on HIroharu's cell phone and asking people if they knew where it was. After eating Turkish ice cream we took some purikura then went to a make-it-yourself takoyaki restaurant. It was really fun making them and they were so good! Shingo and I want to open up a takoyaki restaurant next to the crepe shop that Megan and Hoku are going to open.
YUM.
ReplyDeleteThe guy at the icecream place was white! OMG. Fun fun.
He was Turkish.
ReplyDelete