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Wednesday, April 30, 2008

I can say a lot in six words.

Carrie from The Gremlin Wrangler tagged me.

In the tag, you write your memoir in six words or a title or something like that. This is tough, and I could go so many different directions with this...

The Virgin Mary I am not.
(Despite the picture below.)


Carrie is also hosting a giveaway where she will be giving away one custom portrait in pencil of a loved one of yours. So, go check out her blog post and see the details to enter this contest!

NAVIGATION

One of the delights of traveling in Japan is the amazingly efficient network of subways and trains. We found that finding our way around the various subway and train stations was not the horror story we expected. Most stations have plenty of English signage, so if you can read a map, you’re OK.

Not that reading the Tokyo subway map is easy, mind you. Check it out (click on the image to embiggen):

Tokyo Subway Map
Tokyo: Just a wee bit more complicated than New York City.

The voice announcements on the Tokyo subway are - believe it or not - easier to understand than their muddled, half-garbled counterparts on the New York subway. And that’s the announcements in Japanese. In English? Even better.

As long as you can tell Asakusa from Akasaka and keep your Shibuya, Shinjuku, and Shimbashi straight, you can get around in Tokyo. The subway in Kyoto was even easier to deal with.

When it came time to travel from city to city, the superexpress trains, AKA the shinkansen (“bullet trains”), were a delight. Using our seven-day Japan Rail Pass, we had unlimited rides...all we had to do was show our passes at the ticket office to get reserved Green Car seats. Sweet.

On one memorable day, we employed no fewer than nine different modes of transportation, not counting our own two feet. Starting out in the morning:
  1. Taxi from Hotel Ra Kuun (just up the road from Motohakone) to Motohakone.
  2. Boat from Motohakone/Ashinoyu to Togendai.
  3. Ropeway (gondola lift) from Togendai to Shouzen.
  4. Funicular (cable car) from Shouzen to Gora.
  5. Switchback railway from Gora to Hakone-Yumato.
  6. Rail from Hakone-Yumato to Odawara.
  7. Shinkansen from Odawara to Tokyo station.
  8. Subway (Maronouchi Line - Ginza Line) from Tokyo station to Shimbashi station.
  9. Monorail (Yurikamome line) from Shimbashi station to Daiba station.
All of this while schlepping our luggage, too, and without counting the evening journey from our hotel in Odaiba to the Asakusa Kannon shrine, Shibuya, and then back to Odaiba. Footsore? You betcha.

Meanwhile, Back on the Farm . . .

As if to remind me I needn't go lusting after the exotic flora in DC's Botanic Garden, one of my tree peonies opened with an exquisite ruffled bloom, the size of a small cabbage.

And this is our latest calf -- a little bull whose mother had neither milk nor maternal instinct. He gets fed milk replacer from a suck bucket and, if hit lives (as the old farmers always cautiously say of any young creature, including human babies), should be a fine healthy fella. We've generally had good luck with bottle-raised calves, though there have, in thirty years, been some sad losses. But that was when the calves were weak and sickly to begin with.

This two day old boy, here seen resisting being moved to another barn, is strong enough to put up a struggle. A good sign for his survival.
Nice to be home!
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Interview with a 4-year-old.

This is Princess Dorothy (because she loves dressing up like a princess and she loves dressing up like Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz). She just turned 4 years old, and this interview was very challenging.


Let's start out easy. What's your favorite food?
Chicken nuggets. french fries. hair. earrings. (Ok, Princess Dorothy, you're being silly.)

What's your favorite thing to do with friends?
Dress up. And, putting cell phones on our faces (Princess Dorothy, you don't put cell phones on your faces.) Yes, we do. (Ok, then, next question.)

What do you want to be when you grow up?
Sleeping Beauty. (hehe) Or a chef. (I had no idea she even knew the word chef or what it meant!)

What's your favorite TV show?
Ni Hao, Kai-lan and Backyardigans. These are both shows on Nick Jr. that I have watched oer and over and over again with her. I could sing the theme songs no problem.) Look Miss Rhea, I'm upside down! (Princess Dorothy, please be careful!)

What's your favorite thing to do with your family?
Painting pictures. Miss Rhea, I'm hanging upside down!

You are sad when?
Bugs. I don't like bugs, Miss Rhea.

You are happy when?
When I get flowers...(she grins mischieviously)...and when I get a bear. (A bear? Why a bear?) Because they growl. (ok. Of course...)

If you had 3 wishes, what would they be?
Purple. Lions, tigers and bears. (Ok, I think this interview is over.)

Miss Rhea, will you be tickle monster again?

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

THE TWO TOWERS

Houston Steve, with whom I share a certain bizarre Mystical Connection, was enjoying a Parisian vacation with his charming wife Debbie right about the same time I was gallivanting around the Land of the Rising Sun with Elder Daughter.

And once again, the Mystical Connection reared its head, for each of us found ourselves simultaneously drawn to strange-looking Metallic Towers on opposite sides of the globe.

The Two Towers

Here you see Houston Steve posing in front of the Eiffel Tower, a piece of architecture reviled in its day but which has come to symbolize the City of Light itself. And you see me in front of the Tokyo Tower, an unabashed knockoff of the Tour Eiffel but which sports an uglier paint job (dictated by Japanese aviation regulations) and which enjoys a few extra meters height advantage.

The view is pretty snazzy, especially from the Special Observation Deck, 250 meters up.

View of Tokyo

And if you really want some Bowel-Clenching Fun, stand over one of the “Look-Down Windows” on the Main Observation Deck...and look straight down. Oh, don’t worry. It’s perfectly safe, judging by the enthusiasm with which little kids jump up and down on the glass.

A Vertiginous View

(But why do those reinforcing wires put me in mind of a French-Fry Slicer?)

Washington, DC


Lynn (my very dear friend from high school days) and her husband Doug picked me up at the hotel on Sunday after my Malice panel was over.
They gave me a quick driving tour of DC -- a really beautiful city and at its best in spring.

Then we went to the Botanic Garden and wandered through the huge conservatory. I suffered extreme plant envy -- especially for the amazing orchids and bromeliads. There were some pretty fabulous cacti there too -- many of which seemed to have been designed by Dr. Seuss.

Here's a link to pictures of just a few of the things I really liked.

DC Botanical Garden



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I WAS SO HUNGRY...

...I could eat a whale.

So I did.

In my attempt to scale new heights in Politically Incorrect Dining, while in Tokyo I enjoyed an appetizer of kujira na beikon: whale bacon sashimi.

Whale bacon ain’t cheap. You can find it in food markets in various spots in Japan, sold in little packages at a price that works out to about $140 per pound. Not even Zabar’s offers deli that costly.

Whale Bacon
Whale bacon (center) at the Nishiki Food Market in Kyoto.

What does it taste like? Well, not like chicken. Or fish, for that matter. It’s a nice, dark-red meat with a sizable layer of tasty fat, bringing to mind nothing so much as pastrami. As I savored the delicate, raw slices, I wondered how it’d be served hot on rye with mustard. Probably pretty good.

Did I have moral qualms about eating one of the gentle giants of the deep? Not really. Whale is a traditional protein source in Japan, and my having three or four slices isn’t going to have an impact on the size of the annual whale harvest - a harvest that is, ostensibly, undertaken for the purpose of scientific research. Research into the question of how to make a tastier pet food, or how to sustain an ever-increasing human population, or how to turn blubber into biofuel - who knows? But I figure whales are probably about as bright as cows, and we eat those. I’ll have second thoughts when one of ’em learns to pick up a harpoon.

Hey, at least I didn’t have horse sashimi. That was on the menu, too. They charge extra for the mane.

Interview with a 6-year-old.


Let's start out easy. What's your favorite food?
Pizza, hamburgers, ice cream, and Ketchup (yes, he will eat ketchup straigt from the bottle or individ. packet)

What's your favorite thing to do with friends?
Play outside, play tag & make up new games to play.

What do you want to be when you grow up?
Make Pokemon movies.

What's your favorite TV show?
Pokemon

What's your favorite thing to do with your family?
Eat dinner and play card games.

What's something you would like to do with your family?
Play video games, go swimming.

You are sad when?
People are hurting me. (By "people" I think he means his big brother, who rarely ever hurts him on purpose...)

You are happy when?
When I'm playing video games, sports and with my friends.

If you had 3 wishes, what would they be?
To have wings and fly, to be invisible and to meet an alien.

What does your mom want you to do?
Brush my teeth and sleep in my own bed.

What was your scariest dream?
When I was trapped by aliens (yet he wants to meet one...)

If you were handed a million dollars today, what would you do with it?
Buy 7 houses. (Why, 7 Remy?) To sleep in a different one each night. (Oh, of course. lol)

This was a small glimpse into the mind of a genius six-year-old. Yesterday's interview was with an 11-year-old and coming tomorrow....interview with a 4-year-old!

Monday, April 28, 2008

Back from Malice

It's been a long day -- to fly from DC to Asheville, first one flies to Detroit, oddly enough. But I'll post a few pictures from the Malice Domestic convention beginning with the panel composed of four nominees for best novel -- Rhys Bowen (Her Royal Spyness), Margaret Maron (Hard Row), Louise Penny (A Fatal Grace), and Donna Andrews (The Penguin Who Knew Too Much). Elaine Viets ( Murder With Reservations ) the fifth nominee, was unable to attend.

The very charming Louise was the winner and I have to say her Armand Gamache series, set in a Canadian village, sounds intriguing.
(I was rooting for Margaret who is another North Carolinian -- plus I've read most of her novels while I'm not so familiar with the others. )

I was part of a panel on "Gutsy Gals," moderated by Kate Flora ( Theda Kozak series.) In the picture below, Mary Saums (Thistle and Twigg series) and Kate are shown as we gathered to prepare for our panel. Not pictured are Judy Clemens (Stella Crown series), Julia Pomeroy (Abby Silvernale series), and myself.
Seen from the dais as the audience trickles in for our panel -- lots of folks who admire women who can shoot straight and otherwise hold their own.
And after the panel, signing. A gratifying number of folks bought my books and told me they were looking forward to the latest one.
Apologies for this sketchy post -- but I'm off to bed.
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Interview with an 11-year-old.


Let's start out easy. What's your favorite food?
Chicken 'n dumplings, pizza and steak.

What's your favorite thing to do with friends?
Joke around.

What do you want to be when you grow up?
An inventor.

What's your favorite TV show?
Future Weapons, Life with Derek and Home Improvement.

What's your favorite thing to do with your family?
Have a family night (where we go out to eat and then to the movies or bowling or something like that),

What's something you would like to do with your family?
Swim with dolphins or some outside activity.

You are sad when?
When somebody kind gets hurt.

You are happy when?
When I'm playing and having fun, and when there is no fighting.

If you had 3 wishes, what would they be?
I would wish for immortality (to end whenever I wished), wings and to be able to breathe in outer Space.

What does your mom want you to do?
To get in good shape and get good grades.

What was your scariest dream?
My mom being chased by a stalker.

If you were handed a million dollars today, what would you do with it?
A new house, a maid, invest it to improve profits and donate the interest.

This was a small glimpse into the mind of a genius pre-teen. Coming tomorrow....interview with a 6-year-old! And, the day after that....interview with a 4-year-old!

TRADITION

Room 33, Open Door
Room 33 at the Hiiragiya Ryokan.

We Jews are very big on tradition, the respect for which is one of the few things we have in common with the Japanese.

In order to experience traditional Japanese culture at its highest, most exquisite level, one must, when in Japan, stay at a Japanese inn: a ryokan. A night at a ryokan is generally more costly than a night at a comparable Western-style hotel, but there is no better way to get the flavor of staying in a Japanese home. And besides, breakfast and dinner are included in the price.

In the classic ryokan, your room serves as both dining room and bedroom. Dinner is served on a low table in the middle of the room; when it’s time to retire, the innkeeper moves the table aside and sets up a futon right there on the floor. Come morning, the futon is removed and the table replaced for breakfast service.

Shoes are an absolute no-no - you remove them as you enter the ryokan, donning a pair of slippers for walking the public areas. You remove the slippers before entering the room itself, the floor of which is covered with tatami (woven reed) mats. There’s a separate pair of slippers provided for use in the toilet - and only in the toilet.

We stayed at the Hiiragiya Ryokan in Kyoto, possibly the finest traditional Japanese lodging in the country. The Hiiragiya occupies a building that has stood since 1818; our room - previous occupants of which include Yukio Mishima (the ultra-nationalist Japanese author and actor) and Charlie Chaplin - was over 150 years old and contained decorative shoji screens painted two centuries ago. Modern touches include telephones, televisions, and electrically controlled curtains - the equipment is discreetly disguised behind cloth covers and operated by cleverly designed, unobtrusive remote control.

Our arrival was on a rainy afternoon, a perfect time to sequester ourselves after a morning spent exploring one of the local department stores. Japanese department stores, it should be noted, are an entirely different species than their American counterparts. The sheer variety of goods, coupled with the obsequious überpolitesse of the salesforce, makes Nordstrom look like a flea market. I could have spent the whole day in the lower level alone - a floor entirely devoted to food in all its bizarre Japanesical variety.

But we had a date at the Hiiragiya, so we extracted ourselves from the depaato and grabbed a cab. I should point out that my foresight in printing up a map showing directions to our ryokan in Japanese turned out to be a major help.

We showed up, removed our shoes in the foyer, and were greeted warmly by what appeared to be the entire inn staff. Within moments of arriving in our room, a kimono-clad server brought in a bowl of matcha (traditional bitter green tea), a cup of bancha (plain old green tea), and a paper-wrapped pastry elegantly presented on a minuscule tray. As rain pattered down on the carefully manicured garden visible through our windows, we changed into our cotton yukata robes. There is no need for street clothes anywhere in the ryokan, as long as you have your yukata.

At 7:30, the hour we had selected for our dinner service, the traditionally clad Inn-Ladies began delivering a lengthy procession of exquisitely-crafted little dishes: a true kaiseki banquet.

What was the food like? Suffice it to say that the menus I post every month or so from the Sommelier Guild don’t even come close to the kaiseki-ryori served at the Hiiragiya. Here’s what we had for dinner:
Aperitif (Shokuzen-shu)
Cherry blossom cocktail

First appetizer (Sakizuke)
Bonito, Canola blossom buds, Sticky soy sauce with Japanese pepper

Second appetizer (Hassun)
Sea bream roe in jellied broth
Hosta seasoned with soy sauce
Eel on tofu ball (crushed tofu, carrot, kikurage mushroom, pea, and egg)
Grilled mugwort tofu pudding
Duck, broad bean, ormer, dried sea cucumber belly

Sashimi Dishes (Mukouzuke)
Japanese spiny lobster
Sea bream
Tuna
Wasabi mizuna cress, yam, wasabi blossom, laver, wasabi leaves

Simmered Dishes (Nimono-wan)
Greenling, uguisuna-spinach, carrot, yuzu citrus

Grilled Dishes (Yaki-zakana)
Grilled trout
Miso wrapped in lotus root, ginger stick

Steamed Dishes (Mushi-mono)
Steamed sea bream in pea bun
Horsetail, bracken, ginger, sticky kudzu and bamboo shoot sauce

Simmered Dishes (Takiawase)
Bamboo shoot, wakame seaweed, butterbur, kinome (young leaves of Japanese pepper)

Deep-fried Dishes (Age-mono)
Fried sweetfish
Koshiabura (edible wild plants)
Gyozyaniniku (a type of long green onion)
Salt, tempura dipping sauce

Vinegared Dishes (Su-no-mono)
Firefly squid
Scallop, Udo (edible wild plant)
Chive, Japanese ginger, vinegared miso

Soup (Tome-wan)
Aka-miso soup with yuba (skin of soybean milk), wild rocambole, agarikusu mushroom, Japanese pepper

Rice (Gohan)
Rice, mixed bamboo shoots

Pickles (Kou-no-mono)
Kyousakura (turnip pickled with cherry blossom, cherry leaves, and salted plum juice), Japanese white radish, canola blossom buds

Dessert (Mizu-mono)
Gyuhi rice cake, mango, strawberry, mint

We washed all these miniature Works of Art down with liberal doses of bancha and warm sake. Yummy? You betcha.

Every window looked out on a tranquil garden with running water and happy, swimming koi. We had our own private Japanese-style cedarwood bath as well. Nothing like a hot bath after dinner to relax aching travel-worn muscles.

Garden
Outside our room, a Japanese garden.

As raindrops splashed outside and we relaxed in our little haven, the innkeepers came in to whisk away the remnants of our dinner and set up the futons. Ohhh, the futons. Who knew that sleeping on the floor could be like sleeping on a cloud?

After a restful night, with sleeping gear stowed away, we breakfasted in our room on the finest delicacies. I ate slowly, not wanting the morning to end.

Checking out was like bidding farewell to old friends. In the best of all possible worlds, I’ll be back one day.

More pix below the fold.

Shoji
200-year-old shoji doors.

Table set for dinner
The table, all ready for dinner.

Futon
Now, that’s Turndown Service.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

The Bug & I at Camp Mystic

Every term that a campter completed at Camp Mystic, they received a tribe letter. I got a blue K that stood for Kiowa, and the Bug got a red T, which stood for Tonkawa.

If you have no idea what I'm talking about, read this post to understand.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Big Kitty



It's Sunday and time for Camera Critters meme. Feel free to join in!



Camera Critters

THE HONORABLE TOIDY

The Japanese Toilet
Toiletry of Japan. Left: Western style fixture with washlet seat. Right: Japanese Squat-Pot. There’s a small basin on the far left for hand-washing. Note the special slippers for use exclusively in the toilet.

Jimbo, of Parkway Rest Stop fame, predicted that I would, at some point, write on the topic of Japanese toilets.

Of course, anyone who would include the term “Rest Stop” as part of the name of his Web-Log ought to have an interest in the subject...and I would not dream of disappointing a friend and Honored Guest. So here followeth Elisson’s observations on the Japanese potty, variously known as o-toire (“honorable toilet”), o-te-arai (“honorable lavatory”), or, in less polite company, o-benjo (“honorable hole into which one shits.”)

First of all, as with so many things Japanese, tradition and technology coexist side-by-side, creating situations that may be surprising to the Western eye. Public facilities (e.g., parkway rest stops) will often have Japanese-style toilets, consisting of a porcelain basin set into the floor with a drain at one end and a hood (and flush handle) at the other. One squats, facing the end with the hood, and lets fly. Elder Daughter, who had no option but to learn how to use one of these things, soon figured out the correct posture for Efficient Squattage, and decided that the Japanese-style toilet actually had advantages over the Western kind. But I took her glowing recommendation with a grain of salt, since (1) she is younger and far more limber than I, and (2) she never put her Squat Technique to the ultimate test, as it were.

Mad Toire Skillz
Elder Daughter demonstrates the proper Squat Technique.

For gentlemen, the options include not only the Japanese-style squatter, but the honorable Urinal. No explanation is required.

Most places, in addition to the traditional Japanese facilities, will offer a Western-style toilet. The shinkansen (the Bullet Train), for example, offers all three options (Japanese, Western, and urinals for the gentlemen). Interestingly, the gentlemen’s booth has a window: you can see whether the room is occupied, but you cannot see the actual Act of Pissage. Not for the shy.

But it is with Western plumbing that Japan displays its true ingenuity and technological advancement. For, with few exceptions, Western-style toilets are not mere toilets.

They are Washlets.

Yes: Washlets. For each one is provided with a special device that, once one is finished with one’s Personal Business, one may activate, thus causing a stream of warm water to be squirted into the Strategic Location. The more advanced models even provide for aqua-massage and a stream of warm air with which one may dry oneself. And did I mention heated seats? Yowza!

This is all to the good. Japanese toilet paper is, in almost all cases, coarse, flimsy single-ply stuff, and the less of it one uses, the better. And it appears that the Japanese have decided that, rather than improve their toilet paper, it makes more sense to invest in hardware that renders it practically unnecessary.

Some models of the Washlet allow you to control the strength of the water stream. Merely by turning a knob, you can go from an anemic trickle to a full-blown blast with enough pressure to act as an effective (and convenient) Bagless Enema. Oh, boy.

In addition, many toilets (both Western and Japanese) have a useful water saving feature: the ability to choose between a small flush and a big flush - the latter presumably for what the Brits call “Big Jobs.” Why we Americans haven’t adopted this technology is beyond me - it makes way more sense than our stupid low-volume “water-saving” flush toilets that end up requiring 37 pulls on the handle to get rid of anything larger than a thumbtip.

All this Washlet business makes perfect sense in Japan, a land of fastidious people for whom personal hygiene is a matter of honor. She Who Must Be Obeyed has suggested that the flag of Japan - a red circle on a field of white - might very well be symbolic not of the Rising Sun, but of a Brown-Eye scrubbed raw in an attempt to achieve perfect cleanliness.

Indeed. Nippon: Land of the Rising Sun...and the Spotless Bung.

THE OFFICIAL BLOG D’ELISSON DICTIONARY,Volume 15.

Yet more stuff that should be in the dictionary but isn’t.

Previous installments of the Blog d’Elisson Dictionary may be found in the Archives: Volume 1, Volume 2, Volume 3, Volume 4, Volume 5, Volume 6, Volume 7, Volume 8, Volume 9, Volume 10, Volume 11, Volume 12, Volume 13, and Volume 14.

Spootzle [shpoot-sl] (n) - Small, dumpling-like turds; the result of “dropping the kids off at the pool” with an Impacted Intestine.

“Last time I ate at that German place, I got all blocked up. Spaetzle in, spootzle out.”

[Tip o’ th’ Elisson fedora to SWMBO for coming up with this most useful term.]

Mystic Memories

As a child I spent many summers going to Camp Mystic in the Texas Hill Country. It was a very special place with lots of good memories. A private Christian girls camp on the banks of the Guadalupe River, it wasn't too far from the ranch we lived on.

Your first night at camp, you draw a slip of paper, which decides what tribe you will belong to for the rest of your camp-life. I drew a blue slip, proclaiming me a Kiowa. Bug, my little sister, ended up becoming a Tonkawa when she drew a red slip.

You stay in cabins according to your age, but you also visit your tribe hill once a week under the cloak of night, and the locations of the tribe hills was secret. There were lots of competitions and events centered around your tribe as well, which makes for a lot of good-hearted fun.

My favorite activities that I always signed up for each summer were archery, horseback riding, drama, dance, arts and crafts, soccer, nature study, campcraft, rifle shooting, and swimming, but there were even more than that available. I think horseback riding was my favorite.

Here is a picture of the Guadalupe River where we swam every day.



Some of the cabin names were Bubble Inn, Chatterbox, Tumble Inn I & II, Bug House, Look Out & Look Out Nest. Below is a picture of Hangover, the oldest girls' cabin, named for obvious reasons.



On Sundays we had chapel service on Chapel Hill, which no matter what your religious beliefs, it was a spiritual experience being up high on a hill early in the morning in the country. We also had to wear all white on Sunday.

All our meals were served family style in Harrison Hall, pictured below.



I have many wonderful memories from camp, although I experienced a lot of homesickness as well. Yes, I threatened to run away from camp in many letters home to my parents...I'm dramatic that way.

Here's your introduction to Camp Mystic. I'm sure I'll be blogging about my time there much more in the future. :o)

Friday, April 25, 2008

Potbelly pigs, Miss Goody Twoshoes, a scar, Latin, a shotgun and floating in bed.

6 Random Facts About Me

The Rules:

1. Link back to the person who tagged you.
2. Post the rules on your blog.
3. Write 6 things about yourself.
4. Tag six people at the end of the post by posting links to their blogsites.
5. Let them know they've been tagged by leaving a comment on their site.
6. And let your tagger know when your entry is up.

I've been tagged by Giggle, the creator of the Adventures of Rat Girl to do this meme, so here we go!

1. I had a pot belly pig in when I was in high school. I really wanted a puppy, but for some reason my mom talked me into getting a pig. I resisted. She took me to see them. Once I saw their adorable little faces, I knew I was lost, and I had to get one. We adopted Kory.



He had a little harness we attatched to a leash, so he could go on walks. He loved to have his belly rubbed. He would sit for food, follow us for food, pretty much do anything for food. He also would have marathon peeing sessions...once on our couch!



Every night he slept in my bed, burrowing under the covers. He was sweet and adorable and a wonderful pet!


2. I have never smoked or tried illegal drugs of any kind. I have only drank alcohol a handful of times. In fact, this is the ONLY picture I can find of myself with a beer in my hand. This photo is from when I was seventeen and in Salamanca, Spain where the drinking age was more like 16, rather than 21. I was always the designated driver at parties in high school. I just don't like losing control, I think.


3. When I was 12, I ran through a sliding glass door in our pool house and cut open my right hand. I ended up severing three and half tendons, was rushed to the ER by my mom, and had to have surgery. I then had to wear a brace for a long time and go through physical therapy to get the use back of that hand. I had to write with my left hand for a while, which was a mess. However, the bright side is that when I did get full use of my right hand again, my handwriting was somehow a lot, lot nicer than before the accident. I still have a wavy scar that goes the entire width of my hand. It's faded now, but you can still see it.


4. I started taking Latin in fifth grade at my elementary school, and fell in love with it immediately. I took it in 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th grade...and all of high school. (I also took Spanish during this time period) I even took some Latin in college. Now, I want to pass this along to my sons, so I am starting to teach them Latin at home with the Minimus books.



5. My dad taught me to shoot a gun when I was like 9 or 10. I've gone both deer hunting, quail hunting and skeet shooting with him. For those of you who don't know, skeet shooting is done on a practice range, where clay pidgeons (they don't look like birds though, just clay discs) come flying out and you try to shoot them. It's a fun way to practice!


6. Finally, growing up, I had a floatation bed. It's different from a water bed. It's less watery, because you have a mattress between you and the water part...so you just have a slight rocking/floating sensation, compared to a super mushy water bed. It was awesome. Our live-in used to rock me to bed at night by lightly pushing the bed...



So, there you go! Six random facts about me. I'm not sure who to tag...let's go with:

KP
Mama Bird
Tearese
Blondie
Jules
Valarie

And, if any of you don't want to do it, that's ok with me. I just feel obiligated to pass it along. :o) Enjoy!

A BRIEF DEBRIEF

Tokyo, Japan is a wonderful town
Asakusa’s up and Odaiba is down
The people crap in a hole in the ground
Tokyo, Japan -
It’s a wonderful town!


Erisson and Eruda Datta
Erisson and “Eruda Datta” go native in Kyoto.

Just two of the 847 photos we took during our ten-day sojourn in the Land of the Rising Sun, a journey that took us from Tokyo to Kyoto, Hiroshima, Beppu, back to Tokyo, to Hakone, and back to Tokyo.

We ate plenty of Interesting Foods, stayed in both Western- and Japanese-style rooms (with quality ranging from spartan-but-clean to magnificent), managed to get everywhere we needed to go, and (in one memorable day) used nine separate modes of transportation - not counting old, reliable Shank’s Mare. No small feat, especially considering that a map of the Tokyo subway system is enough to give the average New York straphanger a splitting headache.

We bathed in natural volcanic springs and even enjoyed a sand bath - being buried in hot volcanic sand for 15 minutes. Not for people with heart conditions, they say.

We stood at the hypocenter of the Hiroshima A-bomb and marveled at the city that has - literally - grown Phoenix-like from the ashes of World War II.

We were awestruck at the myriad contrasts between Old Japan and New, a place where tradition and technology live cheek-by-jowl, often creating bizarre juxtapositions. It’s the country that gave us anime, Godzilla...and Hello Kitty.

It was a perfectly wonderful Father-Daughter Trip...long enough to allow us to see and do many things... and long enough so that I was more than happy to come home to She Who Must Be Obeyed.

More pictures below the fold. Click on any one of ’em to embiggen.

Fuji-san
The elusive Fuji-san, as seen from the Hakone Ropeway.

Shimbashi-dori
Along Shimbashi-dori in Kyoto.

Tenryu-ji
At Tenryu-ji, a Buddhist temple in Arashiyama.

Tokonoma at Tenryu-ji
A sacred alcove at Tenryu-ji. Has Keesie been here?

Ryokan Breakfast
Breakfast of Champions in Kyoto.

Genbaku-Domu
The Genbaku-Domu in Hiroshima.

Asakusa lanterns
Lanterns at the Asakusa Kannon Temple, Tokyo.

Pagoda
The famous Five-Roofed Pagoda at Asakusa, Tokyo.

Kujira-na Beikon
Elisson enjoys a slice of whale bacon. Really.

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