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| Shinjuku gyoen, Tokyo |
1. Silence – the minute you step out of the airport you feel as if you have been transported into a ‘silent’ zone without any warning signs put up. You realise that you are the loudest person around but you quickly get adjusted and start speaking in hushed tones along with the rest. Not the best place to be in if you are accompanied by two energetic children!
3. Toilet seats – At first glance it looks like any ordinary toilet except the range of buttons provided on the right-hand side. Your first visit to the toilet would certainly be longer than usual as it’s only human to want to explore the menu of buttons provided. Some have the options given in both English and Japanese, but if not the images are pretty clear in what should be expected. The decent sized, comfortable, warm seat and range of “wash up” options should see you coming back for more. One of the things I would have loved to bring back as a souvenir!
5. Train network – Running across the length and breadth of the country, trains seem to be the lifeline of people as they travel huge distances using this vast and intricate network. The speed of the train and it’s cost is directly proportional to each other as we figured only after buying tickets for the Shinkansen from Tokyo to Osaka! Initially the train system map looked like a 1000-piece jigsaw puzzle but the more we travelled the less complex it became. By the third day travelling by trains seemed to be the easiest mode of transportation and the quickest too!
8. Bicycles – another very common feature of the city, the locals seem on live on their bikes as they rode along carrying their belongings in the baskets provided in front or their children in the toddler seats at the back. We had a good time cycling too, though only in a park in Tokyo, it was a cheap and fun way to spend an afternoon with kids as all kinds of bikes from single to tandem to bike with side wheels were available. What surprised me most though is people riding their bicycles on the pavements in Osaka and at a steady speed too. I had to hold on to my 6-year old’s hand as tight as possible all the time!![]() |
| Anti-fog mirror in our hotel room |
10. No Trash bins – I found this really strange at first in Tokyo, thinking that maybe I wasn’t looking carefully, till I ended up carrying an empty carton of juice for 40 minutes before I found a bin to throw it in. And this was true in Osaka as well. It was as if some one was mysteriously hiding all the trash cans in the city! I guess people carry their trash around till they reach home, like I did, pockets filled with empty snack packs, straw, paper receipts and what not, as the streets were spotlessly clean. If one is more organised then probably carry a small plastic bag or better still don’t make any waste at all! Actually there is a legitimate reason for trash bins not being there in Japan, read here for more.
11. Language – If I thought that there weren’t enough English translations of Cantonese in Hong Kong, I take my words back. One would be lost without knowing how to read or speak Japanese in Japan. Street signs, instructions at a theme park, even everyday supermarket wares were only in Japanese. They have two different kinds of scripts from what I understand, making it an intimidating prospect for a non-local at least in the beginning. But again their culture, their ‘politeness’ took over as they went out of their way to make sure that they helped us. Polite gestures and patient non-verbal communication is all that it takes to get the job done. Hong Kong-yan are you listening?







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