Day 5 – Hakone

Thought for the day: People with really low tables shouldn’t place them between the bed and the bathroom at night. – Ouch!

…and Ouch again on the way back!

We woke up this morning smelling of sulphur from bathing in our private Onsen last night which has hot mountain spring water continually flowing into it.

I’m not sure which is worse, smelling of sulphur or fish?

Dave (see yesterday) seemed irritated with me. I could tell because her voice, usually the same deferential volume of all Japanese service people which, at its highest level, is barely audible, had become a medium whisper. Plus she was gesticulating at my feet.

I finally realised that it was because I was wearing my slippers in the room. It seems that you are only supposed to wear them to go out! Completely the wrong use of slippers in my opinion but I’m here to learn.

Also, where are my real shoes? I’m worried Dave may have confiscated them.

Breakfast, once again, was quite baffling. I know one of the dishes was raw tuna with shredded onions which was okay, there is a bowl of tiny whitebait/eels with grated daikon in the middle surrounded by what I can only describe as fishy jelly-like things. At the top you can see a bowl of fish and vegetable soup heating on an open flame. Some sour pickles on the left hand side, tofu in the middle and a soup with some baby clams and rice. There was also a rice porridge which was like cold rice and water.

Then Dave came back with kippers, or something similar which is what we actually ate for breakfast, with the easily identifiable kiwi and orange.

I know it’s beautifully presented, aesthetically pleasing food and some of it is absolutely delicious. I’m trying everything put in front of me but, surprisingly, Brigitte is becoming more squeamish as the food becomes more bizarre. Maybe our European breakfast food prejudices around eating raw fish before 8am are too firmly entrenched to embrace Japanese breakfast.

Dave has become quite chatty now that we have introduced Google voice translate and we have found out that a western breakfast is available so we have ordered that for tomorrow. God only knows what they think we eat for breakfast but hopefully it’s not raw fish.

Enough fishy tales. Good news, I can see from our Apple tags that our suitcases have arrived in Kyoto! We just need to find our way there tomorrow to meet up with them.

Today we went on a pirate ship. It sounds tacky but it was actually a really nice ship. As part of our travel package, we have a Hokone travel pass which allows us to go almost anywhere in the area on any method of transport and pirate ships arr included. (Ha-ha – that really was an unintentional misprint that became a pirate joke!!) – ‘To err is human, but to Arr is pirate’.

We decided to upgrade to first class so we could use the upper deck for £3 each – they didn’t mention about that option in ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ did they?

The cruise was across Lake Ashi to Hakone Machi, a small town at the bottom of lake. One of the local arts here is marquetry where they make beautiful wooden items, especially boxes using inlaid wood. All the colour is natural, no wood stain is used so the colour variations come from the species of wood used.

The other speciality here are intricate inlaid wooden boxes made using the same techniques, which can only be opened by moving/turning/sliding parts of the boxes. They usually have a sequence of between 4 and 20 individual movements before they will open, but they have one which has 324! How you could you ever remember how to open it is a mystery.

I bought one with 14 movements and I’m hoping someone has posted the solution on Youtube or I just bought an expensive wooden cube.

We bought quite a lot of things, paid by card and then realised we needed a bag. The lady told us they were 5 yen each and she only took cash. 5 yen is around 0.03pence and the smallest we had was a 1,000 yen note but there was no way she would let us off – good to know there’s probably a Japanese word for ’jobsworth’.

We ate lunch (avoiding all unidentifiable raw fish), and had an amble around, did some shopping, took a bus to the next village, Motohakone, did more shopping then made our way to the famous water gate of the Hakone shrine.

On our way, we came accross the best exterior restaurant food display we’ve seen so far….

Just take a closer look at the realism of the display. Zoom in and look at the ’custard’ in the centre right. It all actually looks quite appetising.

Here’s a picture of Brigitte and I underneath the shrine gate…

Okay, you’ve probably caught me out there but there was a queue a mile long so we couldn’t be bothered to wait.

Here it is from the water so sailors knew where to come and buy their luck. (See day 2)

Then it was back on the pirate ship ‘me-hearties’ and back to our Ryokan for siesta before a no-doubt fishy supper again.

Hakone is a beautiful area. It reminded me a bit of the English lake district but with volcanic activity and different foliage. Two full days here is ample, unless your a hiker and want to get out onto the mountain trails.

Many people come to Japan and never see Mount Fuji, it’s often covered in mist and cloud. A bit like tourists going to see the northern lights.

However, we were really lucky and had clear skies and sunshine so it was a magnificent ever-present sight looking down on us.

On the way back to the Ryokan the bus driver got even more annoyed than yesterday after I didn’t have the tickets that he’d seen only five minutes previously when we got on ready to show him. I took both our tickets out of my wallet and he grabbed them off me, gave one to Brigitte, one to me and shouted ‘one at a time’ in broken English!

Dinner time again at the Ryoken.

Another beautifully presented raw/pickled fish-fest. Sorry, there was another two courses I forgot to photograph of beef stew and sake molted rockfish. So much food. So much fish.

I’ve never been pretentious about food and I’ve eaten sushi and sashimi many, many times and always thought it’s okay, occassionally very good but rarely amazing. I thought this holiday would teach me differently but I’m even more convinced that this type of food is more about style than substance, or flavour for that matter. Most raw white fish has very little taste, the flavour comes from the soy or wasabi. It’s purely about texture and I think I’m more of a taste person. The taste here seems to come predominantly from the pickles served as an accompaniment. The pickles, unlike subtle acid flavours in European cooking that balance, clean, contrast or compliment the main food, are the main flavours of the meal so what’s the point of the main foodstuff?

There, I’ve said what I think. Is this a controversial opinion? Am I mad not to enjoy it or am I just not understanding the subtlety and nuance of the food if there is such a thing. I know my pallet has spent sixty five years exposed to European cuisine and maybe that’s the reason, maybe I just have a poor pallet or understanding but to me food is, of course, about texture but even more about the overall mix of flavour. Of course, I realised that of I am correct it’s purely from a European perspective as the Japanese, Koreans etc must love their food equally to the way we do. It’s just that our ingredients and preparation methods have evolved differently over the centuries. I also love Teppanyaki, Teriyaki (‘Yaki‘ means cooked), I’m just talking raw fish – sashimi, sushi etc.

Let me know if you agree or if you think I’m a food Neanderthal. Or maybe it’s a generational thing? It would be interesting to know if I need re educating or secretly others think the same. Don’t worry, I can take the criticism.

In think I have created a poll so you can vote. If the link doesn’t work just copy and paste it into your browser and vote. It’s all anonymous and I’ll tell you the results tomorrow.

https://strawpoll.com/polls/NPgxEodEoZ2

And in other news…

We did initially think that it was a great idea rolling up the bed and gaining a room. However we just got back to our room after a lot of walking for a siesta. No bed 😩. Not such a great idea.

I think Brigitte really likes the fact that everyone here bows to her. What she’s not yet figured out is that the Japanese are just a very polite society and bow to everyone, she thinks it’s just her. 😂

Katie asked in the comments if tattoos really aren’t allowed in the communal springs and yes, it’s absolutely true. In Japan tattoos we’re a sign of gang membership so they were frowned upon and still are in many places.

Toilet roulette-Update

Just when I thought I’d mastered 4-6 button toilet roulette, the odds have been upped. We now have a….wait for it…. 15 button toilet. Maybe this is the king of roulette toilets.

I was determined to conquer it so I sat down, nervously.

The red button is obviously the ejector seat, flinging you backwards into a pit, like the chair on the Graham Norton show.

The second one seems to be what I call the ladies front bottom shower, a.k.a. the testiclé tickler. The third is your common all garden bottom wash. The first slidey buttons seem to increase or decrease jet pressure. The fourth is temperature, maybe? From experience, a cold jet of water can be quite a shock in the morning depending upon the exact point of impact. It also seems to have a timer function. I remember my grandmother saying it was always good to be ‘regular’ but to be able to set an advance timer would display incredible bowel training. I had no idea what the other buttons did so I enlisted the help of google camera translate so you can figure it out yourselves:

Amazing device isn’t it?

Well, that’s all for another day. Tomorrow we set off, bright and early, for Kyoto and more adventures.

21:13 – 10th May – Hakone

Day – 4 Hakone

“Man who spends half a day in fish market will smell like a tuna for a week”. – Ancient Japanese proverb. Well, not really, but it should be.

This morning we left the hustle and bustle of Tokyo for Hakone via the bullet train.

Instead of shlepping heavy suitcases around, Japan has a system for travellers where you leave your cases behind and for a small fee they are automagically transported to your next destination. As we are spending only two days in Hakone we have had them teleported to Kyoto, our next stop. Fingers crossed.

It should be easier now that we are out of Tokyo; and Japan is full of helpful local maps dotted around making it obvious where to go …

Navigation is still a challenge. The huge combination of underground (Metro) overground (JR) and bullet (Shinkansen) trains all go from substations within stations so first you need to find the correct station, then the correct station within the main station, all done by following the name of the line you require then the number of the station which has to be in the right coloured circle. It doesn’t sound too difficult but the sheer number of combinations and locations is very confusing and then you have to find the English names amongst the Japanese signs.

Hakone National Park is an area in mountainous countryside famous for its hot sulphur springs and Onsen, which are hot spring baths, often communal where no clothes, or tattoos, are allowed. I’m now grateful to my late father who stopped me when I wanted to tattoo “Leeds United Forever” on my left buttock. Actually, the way they are playing now, I’m grateful for more reasons than just being able to now bathe with naked men in an Onsen.

Hakone is just south of Mount Fuji and is an outdoorsy area full of walkers, hikers and people just relaxing and enjoying the hot springs.

We are staying at a Ryoken, which is a traditional Japanese inn set in beautiful gardens. We arrived well before check-in time so we dumped our rucksacks and, once again, and probably inadvisably when you consider my rubbish sense of direction, armed with only map and no local knowledge, set out to explore Hakone, which is only 1,277 square Kilometres (500 sq.mi.) so no chance of not getting lost.

We took the cable car at Togendai to go and explore the National park. To add to our transportation confusion the Japanese call what we call a Funicular a Cable Car and what we call a Cable Car, they call a Ropeway.

The Ropeway

As the Ropeway (Cablecar) rose into the mountain we had the spectacular sight of Mount Fuji suddenly coming into view. It’s unusual to see it but it was a lovely clear day and it’s quite a sight.

Our first stop was Owakudani, which translates to ‘Immense simmering valley’ formed by the last volcanic eruption 3,000 years ago. It was originally known as ‘Hell Valley’ due to the sulphuric gas venting from fissures in the ground. It’s still active, hence the sulphur gas.

It’s famous for its black eggs, boiled in the sulphur springs. According to the locals, eating just one egg adds seven years to your life. We bought four so that’s two eggs and fourteen years each! Not eaten them yet, but I’ll let you know when we try them. Please make a note in your diaries to check if we’re still here in May 2037. If not, please call trading standards and don’t buy any black eggs – they don’t work!

From Owakudani we took another Ropeway (Cablecar), then a Cablecar (Funicular), then a Train (Train) and arrived at Hakkne Open Air Museum which is a sculpture park. I have no idea why or how they did it, but the scope of the work here is breathtaking. At least six Henry Moores, a pair of Barbera Hepworths, a Rodin, a Picasso gallery, and hundreds more sculptures – over 2,000 large works of art in all, nearly 2,000 feet above sea-level, up a mountain in the middle of Japan. Absolutely incredible and very well executed in amazing surroundings. For those of you who live near me, it’s like the Yorkshire Sculpture Park on steroids!

We did the entire journey in reverse to get back. The final leg was by bus and the driver was very keen to see all of our tickets as we got on. As we left the bus half a dozen stops later he wouldn’t let us off without seeing our tickets again! Why? Maybe there’s a problem with them expiring halfway through journeys here?

We then checked into our Ryoken… you MUST watch this video!

This is exactly what we’d been hoping to see in Japan and it’s really fantastic to be here and experience it. Half an hour after checking in and putting on our Yukata, which is a traditional dressing gown like a less elaborate kimono, our maid? Geisha? Not sure what to call her, came in with dinner.

We sat at the table seen in the video, not good for the knees and then we were served a traditional Ryoken feast…..

The food was getting stranger and stranger, then this came out and even Brigitte, who eats anything, remarked that it was getting a bit ‘I’m a celebrity get me out of here!’

Tiny raw baby squid was very, very fishy and one raw sea creature too far.

We tried it, but just couldn’t.

Our serving lady (I’ve decided to call her David, as in Bowie, because she never stops bowing to us!) is coming in a few moments to make our bed, which is a futon on the floor. On the bright side, we won’t break our hips if we fall out!

And so to bed …. ANOTHER MUST WATCH VIDEO!

Nite nite. Sorry, no tower to see tonight.

20:13 -9th May – Hakone

Hakone

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Hakone, in Japan’s Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park west of Tokyo, is a mountainous town known for its hot springs resorts (onsen) and views of the iconic volcano Mount Fuji. It also encompasses Hakone Shrine, a Shinto shrine with a red “torii” gate overlooking Lake Ashi, which can be toured by boat, as well as the boiling sulphur springs of the Owakudani Valley.

Area: 92.82 km²

District: Ashigarashimo

Population : 13,492 (2012)

Prefecture: Kanagawa

Region: Kantō