Sunday, December 2, 2007

Nagasaki

It was a long trip for just two nights, but we thought it was worth it. We took the shinkansen(bullet train) and it was still alomost 6 hours. This country is deceptively big. It looks so small on maps. Anyway- we arrived in Nagasaki in the afternoon on Friday. We found our way by tram to our hotel. It was very small, but cheap and had western beds and our own bathroom. It was walking distance to some shopping and restaurants too. The tram system was great in Nagasaki. You could take a ride anywhere and it was only 100y(less than 1$). We basically settled in, walked around and found a restaurant to have dinner at on Friday. Saturday, we went everywhere. We started by going out to Glover Gardens and The Dutch Slopes. These are areas that have a lot left of all the European influence. Historical note: Nagasaki was the only open port during the isolation period. That's why it has so much cultural influence from the west. Then we crossed town to the Peace Memorial and a-bomb museum. It was smaller and less dramatic than Hiroshima's, but it still got the point across. After that, we dropped by the shopping area for lunch(Indian Curry), and bought tickets for the Inasa-yama ropeway. It is a cablecar that takes you up a mountain, where you can see the whole city. We went up right before sunset and it was beautiful. The sun was setting on one side of the mountain, while the moon was rising on the other. We stayed up there and had a coffee while the cities lights came on. It was really cool. After that, we went to the train station area, where there is huge shopping complex(with a gap- gap is pretty expensive here). We bummed around there and had dinner at this gourmet organic buffet. It was super good. We originally went there because I read on Frommer's web page that there was 1000y beer all you can drink in 90 minutes, but that ended up not being the case. Dan was slightly disappointed, but we both loved the food. After that, we went back to the hotel. Sunday we got up had breakfast and made our way back to the station, so we could make sure we got seats on the train.


This is the first night after dinner. We wandered around and found this reggae bar- who knew?


Here we are the next day at Glover Garden. It's a beautiful area with a nice view of the city and a lot of European influenced architecture.



This is the Confucian temple. It's much more colorful than the Buddhist ones.


This is the Peace Memorial Statue in the peace park near the a-bomb hypocenter. It's controversial, because it's not pretty. One hand is pointing towards the sky(where the bomb exploded) to always remember it and never repeat it, and one hand is held out like a Buddhist statue to represent peace.


In the peace park there are monuments that have been given to Nagasaki from other countries. I forgot what country gave them this one, but I liked it.


This is another one I liked.



This is a memorial to the "26 martyrs". 26 people who were marched across the country to Nagasaki because they were Christians and then crucified here. This was a long time ago.


Here is a catholic church near the martyrs monument. It has really cool mosaic spires.


This is part of the museum connected to the monument.


This is a view of the sunset from Inasa-Yama, the mountain that we went up via the ropeway. You can see the edge of the island Kyushu, the last of the 4 main islands(Okinawa comes next).



This was a view of the moon rising that we saw when we turned around.



Self-pic on Inasa-Yama.

2 comments:

Andre said...

Maybe the trains don't go as fast as they are claiming. That place can't be that big.

They call them "Bullit Trains" and move at horse and buggy pace while everyone says, "Wow, Japan is a lot bigger than we thought."

Liz Peltier Moyer said...

It's just long and skinny. I don't know though, maybe they are ripping us off with those expensive train fares.