| Hida Kokubunji Temple, Takayama |
| The Great Bell in the Folk Village |
With another attractive old town a few miles away
we decided to extend our stay to three nights and drove off to Hida, a town
almost totally destroyed in a fire in the early twentieth century. Hida has a pleasantly calm atmosphere and was
well worth going to. It had what they called a canal running
through the town but it was really a fast flowing walled stream only about six
feet wide. However, there were big Koi
everywhere in it. According to the
notices, a thousand of them which are all removed in the winter and spend until
the following spring in ponds. This is a
town which has one of the annual parades which Japan is famous for with
extravagantly decorated floats. These
floats have a base about 8 feet wide and twice that in depth and they stand
about twenty feet high. Each has puppets
controlled by puppet-masters (as they call them) and from the film we saw it
would be really something to see the parade actually taking place. In the museum displaying three of the floats
(temperature and humidity controlled environments for the floats). One of the floats had been destroyed
in a fire in the late nineteenth century and a temporary one labelled ‘leave of
absence’ appears in its place each year.
They play the long-game here.
Hida was where we had one of those unforgettable
experiences
that crop up from time to time. Fancying a coffee and seeing a place marked on our map, we ducked under the standard half curtain over the door with a Trip Advisor sign on it and realised that it was not a coffee shop but a private house. Before we could run for it, the owner appeared and it was indeed a place for coffee. It was a really lovely traditional Japanese House with Tatami mats, delicate wood and paper screens, antique lacquerware and a small courtyard garden. Having taken off our boots we were ushered to a small table next to a window by the garden and while we ordered, our hostess sat on her heels at our feet. When it arrived it was served, again from a kneeling position with great ceremony, the cake forks for the cheesecake (delicious) were carefully placed at the right angle on the plate before being put in front of us. The coffee (also delicious) and the pot were similarly carefully placed. I think the kneeling is something to do with keeping your head below that of guests to show respect. She explained that the cups and saucers were 150 years old and the plates were 200 years old. So no worries there then. It turned out that the place doubled as a
sort of museum and the coffee and cake was the most expensive I’d ever had –
but worth it. As we were leaving and
being carefully shown out, Heather noticed a certificate on a stand. Our host had, for the first time, entered
some marmalade in the International Marmalade Awards in Cumbria in 2017 and got
a Silver.
that crop up from time to time. Fancying a coffee and seeing a place marked on our map, we ducked under the standard half curtain over the door with a Trip Advisor sign on it and realised that it was not a coffee shop but a private house. Before we could run for it, the owner appeared and it was indeed a place for coffee. It was a really lovely traditional Japanese House with Tatami mats, delicate wood and paper screens, antique lacquerware and a small courtyard garden. Having taken off our boots we were ushered to a small table next to a window by the garden and while we ordered, our hostess sat on her heels at our feet. When it arrived it was served, again from a kneeling position with great ceremony, the cake forks for the cheesecake (delicious) were carefully placed at the right angle on the plate before being put in front of us. The coffee (also delicious) and the pot were similarly carefully placed. I think the kneeling is something to do with keeping your head below that of guests to show respect. She explained that the cups and saucers were 150 years old and the plates were 200 years old. So no worries there then. It turned out that the place doubled as a
| Silver ! |
On the day we’re due to leave Takayama, it’s cold
and wet and rather than just drive to Nagoya and get to our hotel earlier, we
decide to go the highly praised Glass Museum.
They advertise that they have their own London Bus to ferry visitors
from the station. Well, it is a Red Bus
but it certainly was never a London Bus.
The museum itself is a wonderfully designed modern building of concrete
and glass with large shallow pools of water on a bed of potato sized pebbles
under only a couple of inches of water.
The pools run right up to the walls of the building. Inside there were some fabulous pieces of
work. A lot by Lalique and Tiffany, one
by Chihuly and lots of other great pieces by glassmakers I’d not heard of. They also had a whole Charles Rennie
Macintosh dining room set up and I have to say the whole thing was set in a
most unexpected location for what seemed to be a world class collection. Oh, and on this cold, wet day we were the
only visitors.
We’re turning for home really and drive south from
the Alps towards Nagoya on this wet and gloomy day. It turned out to be a very atmospheric ride
through the very hilly and autumnal coloured forested countryside with mist
oozing from the woods high above us. Very
muted colours in thus weather but impressive nonetheless. I’ve written about the speed of the trains
here and that is just highlighted by how slow driving is. On the equivalent of Motorways or Interstate
Highways the speed limit is 80. But that’s
kilometres not miles per hour, so 50 mph on the fastest roads. Occasionally on others the limit is 40 mph
but almost everywhere even in completely empty countryside the limit is 30 mph
so the average journey time turns out to be about 20 mph. In quite a few towns the limit drops to 25
mph and sometimes as low as 18 mph. It
can get very tedious and it is difficult to keep the speed down. For our time in the Alps we had a Hybrid
Honda, running on petrol but pushing power from the engine and braking into a
battery system for efficiency. We got
over 68 mpg with quite a lot of mountain driving so I think that is pretty
efficient.
There are only a couple of days left when Heather
realises that we’re leaving from a different Tokyo airport than the one we
arrived at. Very fortunate too, we would
never have had time to get from one to the other in time if we had gone to the
wrong one. It really has been a great
trip, a very different and fascinating culture, city centres to wonder at and
really lovely people. We just wonder how many Japanese tourists are on their way home thinking "I could just murder a nice bit of raw fish and some seaweed".
So we drop the car and leave Nagoya for Tokyo on
our last Shinkansen ride, this time we’ve paid directly for the tickets because
our Rail Passes ran out a week ago and we’re on the Nozomi. This is the same rolling stock as the others but
the fastest ride with fewer stops. Before
we came to Japan we thought that the bullet trains would be reasonably uncommon
but they certainly are not. While we’re
waiting for our Shinkansen ‘Nozomi’ to arrive we just check the board and find
that there are twelve an hour going just from Nagoya to Tokyo. The bullet trains have either eight or
sixteen carriages, each of which carries a hundred sitting passengers. They still have the same voices doing the
messages though, with one woman sounding exactly like a breathless Marilyn
Monroe impersonator. You half expect an
announcement to end “bo bo di bo”. With
two stops included, our Nozomi averaged a bit over 122 mph. We’re in our left hand side booked seats and
as we power out of a tunnel at 125 mph or so, there, there on our left is the
iconic snow-capped cone of Mount Fuji !
Looking much closer than we expected and with a cloud free summit it
really is very impressive. As we speed
past, the clouds drift in and obscure the entire mountain so if the train had
been one minute later we would never have known it was there.
Bunce luck holds again !
STOP PRESS !
As we sit in Munich airport with a delay
announced for our connecting flight we check the news on the BBC to find a
story about the good ol’ bullet train.
Management of one train company (there are a number running different
services) have apologised “for any inconvenience caused” because a Tokyo to
Tsukuba Shinkansen train left at 09.44.20 instead of 09.44.40. Twenty seconds early ! No passengers had complained.