After spending a great weekend with my children celebrating Swedish Christmas in a great and rainy Sweden, I took farewell and started my trip to Japan and Sapporo. Having done a number of long-range flights the last two years, it went as well as expected, i.e. a few spurts of sleep and lots of movie-watching. I had also loaded my Samsung S4 with AKBingo and Japanese dramas but to my surprise didn't Finnair have any place to charge telephones or computers! This was probably the first time in 12+ night-flights that this has happened for me. Otherwise the most interesting that happened was in Nagoya when I had only 1h20m to change planes, which would have been OK if the baggage drop hadn't taken forever. Instead I did get a little stressed out until I was past the passport check.
Sapporo indeed had snow, and sun, so it was a wintery landscape and city that greeted me. Even though the Japanese don't even nearly celebrate Christmas like in the West, there wed quite a number of cozy decorations. And at Nagoya airport a gang of personnel had dressed up as Santa Claus, a Christmas Tree, and so on, waving at passengers from outside as they we entered the plane.
At BUIE Gakuen, after taking a detour downtown to eat and check out some christmas happenings, I spent the evening eating and enjoying the company. And we saw the movie "The Hangover", which I had actually never seen. All-in-all an enjoyable arrival.
Nagoya airport, situated in a lake, had a spectacular view of the mountains (hard to convey here though…)
This time I took the bus instead of train and subway to BUIE Gakuen, and it was really simple and excellent. Buy a 1000 yen ticket at the airport machine, go to busstop 14 just outside, and then get on (you give ticket when you get off), and then it's about finding the right bus stop. But as the phones GPS works if the wifi is turned on, you can check against your address. My stop was the second Toyohira stop (3-8). The bus says the stops in English.Finally, a white christmas!
BUIE Gakuen, here I come
Francois wants me to see this. Interesting...
Sapporo Tower
A performance, one of several I saw.
Nice meal downtown. Aaah, finally the Japanese dining I have been looking forward to.
"A Panda Claus". This at one of the fashionable department stores… Kawaii desu ne! (^_^)
"små söde" = small and sweet, a danish style restaurant/cafe
Cultural differences - Observe the calendar, while the 23rd is a red day (the emperor's birthday), christmas goes by as (calendar-wise) normal workdays.
I combined the western tradition of christmas presents with the japanese tradition of giving presents when you have been on a trip, omiyage, to surprise my fellow residents with some small presents. Enthusiastic examination on which to choose ensued… ;-) Merry Christmas!
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