NB. You have to forgive some of the photos with this post. There are two things my camera doesn't like, and it had to put up with extremes of both: dark and bright sun. If you feed it any slight dimness whatsoever, it claims it wants a flash and when you don't give it one it sulks and blurs whatever photo you take. In bright sunlight it decides to either bleach everything or to miss out a colour or two. So, some of these pictures are edited to try and get the best out of what I took. Funnily enough, some of the best photos (in my opinion) on here were taken perfectly naturally, which goes to show it's not a bad camera after all.
This trip to Kyoto was going to be with Lena, another exchange student, from Germany, and we would be meeting up with her old Japanese friend, Gen. Reachable from Nagoya by normal trains within two hours, en route it slowly started to become obvious that everyone around us was also going to Kyoto. At this I cottoned on that Japan's "koyo" season was really in full swing. "Koyo" is the very popular appreciation of leaves changing colour in Autumn, and of course there's no better place to fully observe and appreciate orangey leaves than in Kyoto, where you can see them alongside a lot of well known beautiful temples. This was most evident when we arrived at Kyoto station to find people everywhere and enormous queues for every bus, taking new-come tourists to various parts of sightseeing.
An interesting observation was that the overwhelming majority of the tourists were Japanese, aka domestic. I can't really imagine a similar situation of national vigour to appear in Britain, unless you think about actual events such as the Fringe in Edinburgh or New Years celebrations. Perhaps X-Factor, however depressing that may sound.
Kyoto Garden
From the garden, it was then off on a trek to find Nijo Castle. This wasn't after a burning desire to see the castle, though I was very curious to experience the Nightengale Floors (floors that creak slightly musically as you walk across them, designed to wake the local lord up before you murdered him). It was much more of a curiosity to find Reizeiin, the locale and scene of the Kyoto ghost story I'd translated for the Classical Japanese module the previous year. After a long, long walk around countless small crowded streets, even asking a nervous-looking postman where I was (the fact that he didn't know either was a both reassuring and not) I eventually found the castle, and started eastwards from there. I couldn't find the exact street, but soon realised why - the clever folks who owned the hotel built over that particular block in Kyoto had built it over the road too, effectively replacing the whole Reizeiin story with the ANA International Hotel. Ah well. I didn't have the classical road map in the first place, so I can't really be sure anyway.
Kyoto Castles
After Nijo it was back to the station to meet up with Lena and her good friend Gen, and then take a crowded train to Tofukuji, one of the most popular spots for Koyo in the whole of Kyoto. And it showed - I had seen similar masses of people when I'd gone to Tokyo, but this that same number all crammed into a much smaller space. Of course, there was only one spot that you *had* to take the picture from, so it was each for his own as you pushed around to try and get to the edge to get a view. I learnt that being big and foreign does indeed have its advantages. It wasn't even a very good picture.
Kyoto Buddhism
From there we went to the (cameras forbidden) Sanjusangendo, the longest wooden building in the world at 118m, containing no less than a thousand near-identical statues of the bodhisattva Kannon. The unbroken length of the building and sheer number of statues was fairly mesmerising to say the least. The hall's name, Sanjusangen (lit. 33 intervals), refers to the lengths between the supporting pillars, which add up to the same number. Apparently the building also hosts an annual archery contest, where contestants have to fire arrows down the length of the building (outside, of course).
Kyoto by Night
Kyoto Living
We spent the night at Gen's appartment, not too far away by taxi, and far enough away from the temples to avoid the crazy numbers of people swarming all over Kyoto. I've valued this overnight experience ever since, however odd that may sound. Having never seen a "Japanese room" as it were, it was very enlightening to see how the style completely differed from the idea of a room we have in the West. Although I know it can't be the absolute rule for rooms throughout Japan, and it would be foolish to assume so, I marvelled at the design. Three rooms - small bathroom/toilet/shower combo, small kitchen, and a larger square plain room. On one side were some shin-level shelves, with books, a TV, and any personal effects. Aside from these there was no other furniture, save for a Kotatsu (square, foot-high table with a duvet attached with a heater underneath). Everything else belonged in the large cupboard in the wall. When it came to sleep, the kotatsu was dismantled and put in the kitchen/genkan area, and futon and duvets were brought out of the cupboard to make beds. In the morning the process was simply reversed.
Like I said, I don't know why, but I still strangely like this way of organising things. Of course, it's no good for anything but living by yourself with the occasional friendly visit by a small number of friends, and the space might get a bit restrictive, but equally I was impressed, and it will always stick in my mind somewhere.
Kyoto Outskirts
Kyoto by Evening
2 comments:
In spite of your camera always throwing hissy fits you have some amazing photos. Even if you did steal a lot of them... xx
Only 5 were stolen - the group one at the top, and four of the night scenes at Kiyomizu. The rest I have to claim credit for.
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