I was in Japan for a around 2 weeks earlier in May. I know many of you have been before, but this was my first time. I loved it but that's probably largely because I didn't have enough time to see the negative.
I spent time in Tokyo (rented an apartment near the Nishi Ogikubo station), Matsumoto, Nikko, Nagano, Narai, and Kawaguchi.
For the most part, the cities are fairly unattractive during the day. Fairly bland architecture with a few gems scattered about. At night, the lights make up for the bland architecture. Even residential areas are fairly bright in Tokyo (especially around the stations).
Matsumoto was a nice little city. Compact and small enough to be easily manageable on foot or by a fairly user friendly bus, but large enough to be interesting.Nightlife was very good in Matsumoto. The castle and some of the older sections of town were charming and the mountain views (when it wasn't raining) were awesome.
The country is beautiful. I was lucky enough to get to a few different places in the mountains and man, was it impressive. Simply stunning. The U.S. has awesome natural beauty, but what shocked me about Japan was simply how close together everything was. We have thousands of miles of "meh" between the East Coast/Appalachians and the Rockies. Japan just offers stunning landscape after stunning landscape. Of course, I never made it more than a 300km from Tokyo so I could be wrong, but I doubt it.
The people were hospitable and friendly (I didn't speak a word of Japanese). However, you do get the feeling that they're constantly thinking "kindly leave..." Still, not one rude action was made toward me during the entire stay (though they may have called me horrible things... I wouldn't know better). Boy do they move. Especially in Tokyo. Fast paced like you wouldn't believe. Makes New York feel "laid back."
The trains were as advertised (fantastic). While the Shinkansen were very neat (and very fast), I found some of the regional and limited express trains to be more comfortable. No knock on the bullet trains, but standard reserved seating was only OK. The Narita Express was pretty comfortable as was the Tobu Limited Express we took to Nikko. My favorite train was the local train we took from Nagano to Matsumoto. It was two cars (no longer than a standard green line train) in length and it passed high into the mountains and had stunning views. The Fujikyu line was the worst... slow, rickety and uncomfortable. Not to mention packed with tourists. Service is fast, clean and reliable. Boy do I wish we could get that here.
Anyway, the real reason I made this thread was to post a few photos. These are just a sample (don't want to load TOO many).
Shinkansen at Tokyo Station:
Platform at Shinjuku station (busiest station on earth):
Shibuya District:
Shibuya Crossing... busiest street crossing in the world
An old Zero fighter at the War Museum in Tokyo:
Entrance to Yasukini Shrine in Tokyo:
Yasukini Shrine, Tokyo:
Yasukini at night:
Asukusa Station, Tokyo:
Asukusa Tokyo:
A river in Tokyo near Asukusa:
Central Nikko:
Nikko Temples:
Nikko Temples:
Forest scene in Nikko (Ok... I really played with this one):
More Nikko:
Nikko:
Nikko
Prayer Paper:
What Nikko's Temples are REALLY famous for. Hear No Evil, Speak No Evil, See No Evil:
Nikko... Again:
Sacred Bridge, Nikko:
Sacred Bridge:
Sacred Bridge (last time, I swear):
Matsumoto Castle:
Old shopping street in Matsumoto:
Narai:
Nishi Ogikubo area in Tokyo:
Nishi Ogi:
Nishi Ogi:
Nishi Ogi:
I spent time in Tokyo (rented an apartment near the Nishi Ogikubo station), Matsumoto, Nikko, Nagano, Narai, and Kawaguchi.
For the most part, the cities are fairly unattractive during the day. Fairly bland architecture with a few gems scattered about. At night, the lights make up for the bland architecture. Even residential areas are fairly bright in Tokyo (especially around the stations).
Matsumoto was a nice little city. Compact and small enough to be easily manageable on foot or by a fairly user friendly bus, but large enough to be interesting.Nightlife was very good in Matsumoto. The castle and some of the older sections of town were charming and the mountain views (when it wasn't raining) were awesome.
The country is beautiful. I was lucky enough to get to a few different places in the mountains and man, was it impressive. Simply stunning. The U.S. has awesome natural beauty, but what shocked me about Japan was simply how close together everything was. We have thousands of miles of "meh" between the East Coast/Appalachians and the Rockies. Japan just offers stunning landscape after stunning landscape. Of course, I never made it more than a 300km from Tokyo so I could be wrong, but I doubt it.
The people were hospitable and friendly (I didn't speak a word of Japanese). However, you do get the feeling that they're constantly thinking "kindly leave..." Still, not one rude action was made toward me during the entire stay (though they may have called me horrible things... I wouldn't know better). Boy do they move. Especially in Tokyo. Fast paced like you wouldn't believe. Makes New York feel "laid back."
The trains were as advertised (fantastic). While the Shinkansen were very neat (and very fast), I found some of the regional and limited express trains to be more comfortable. No knock on the bullet trains, but standard reserved seating was only OK. The Narita Express was pretty comfortable as was the Tobu Limited Express we took to Nikko. My favorite train was the local train we took from Nagano to Matsumoto. It was two cars (no longer than a standard green line train) in length and it passed high into the mountains and had stunning views. The Fujikyu line was the worst... slow, rickety and uncomfortable. Not to mention packed with tourists. Service is fast, clean and reliable. Boy do I wish we could get that here.
Anyway, the real reason I made this thread was to post a few photos. These are just a sample (don't want to load TOO many).
Shinkansen at Tokyo Station:
Platform at Shinjuku station (busiest station on earth):
Shibuya District:
Shibuya Crossing... busiest street crossing in the world
An old Zero fighter at the War Museum in Tokyo:
Entrance to Yasukini Shrine in Tokyo:
Yasukini Shrine, Tokyo:
Yasukini at night:
Asukusa Station, Tokyo:
Asukusa Tokyo:
A river in Tokyo near Asukusa:
Central Nikko:
Nikko Temples:
Nikko Temples:
Forest scene in Nikko (Ok... I really played with this one):
More Nikko:
Nikko:
Nikko
Prayer Paper:
What Nikko's Temples are REALLY famous for. Hear No Evil, Speak No Evil, See No Evil:
Nikko... Again:
Sacred Bridge, Nikko:
Sacred Bridge:
Sacred Bridge (last time, I swear):
Matsumoto Castle:
Old shopping street in Matsumoto:
Narai:
Nishi Ogikubo area in Tokyo:
Nishi Ogi:
Nishi Ogi:
Nishi Ogi: