Tuesday, October 26, 2010
China or the Nation at the Center of the Earth - Shanghai
China or the Nation at the Center of the Earth
Fortunately, we did not see any major traffic tie-ups. Our Chinese tour guide told us that the air was relatively clear and the traffic relatively light because China was nearing the end of a week long public holiday and most people were on vacation.
Friday, October 22, 2010
Korea in Less than Four Hours
When the Silver Shadow sailed into Busan, formerly Pusan, I think I expected to see a beach resort. For more than fifty years, Pusan has been an R & R site for U.S. troops stationed in Korea. That is about all I knew about it aside from the tour book statement that it is a large container port.
It is definitely a large port. We docked at a pier several miles from the city center. The shuttle bus to the center of the city took us past a bustling seaport, huge shipyards busy building ships and many residential neighborhoods that look a lot like Chinatown in New York except that the signs in Korean don't look a lot like Chinese.
Although the cruise line offered a number of tours, most included temples and shrines in which were not particularly interested. Nor were we interested in a tour of a porcelain factory. Michael and I decided to do our own tour of central Busan on foot. I think the experiences we have enjoyed most on this cruise have been our own explorations of how people live in the exotic cultures we have seen. I definitely include the Alaskan ports in the exotic culture category
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The absolute highlight of the morning was our visit to the Busan fish market. We saw more kinds of mostly live fish and seafood than I have ever seen in my life. There were any number of fresh caught and dried fish for sale on the sidewalks for blocks surrounding the market. The market itself occupied a two-story building that seemed half a mile long. Tanks of wriggling creatures met the eye in every direction. I think the live sea slugs were the creepiest. Many fish I could not identify, nor would I have any idea how to prepare them. There was a restaurant area on the second floor along the windows facing the bay. It had very low tables and benches that were barely above floor level. Camera shy women worked at stalls along the aisle. They were setting up shop for the lunch crowd, busily slicing, dicing, and dropping fish parts into kettles and pans. Had it been later in the day I might have been tempted to have lunch there. I have included a photo of some shopkeepers lunching over the live fish.
Several blocks in from the main drag was a huge multi block open-air market. Vendors on each street block sold similar items from storefronts that were more like booths than proper stores. I remarked to Michael that it looked like an open-air Wal-Mart. He replied, "Where do you think Wal-Mart gets its stuff?" It's true. The goods for sale looked exactly like those found in U.S. discount stores. I didn't see anything less expensive than it would have been in the U.S. except for some Rolexes and Calvin Kline, Gucci and the like knock-off merchandise. Later I saw a number of fellow cruise passengers toting high-end merchandise packages back to the ship. I hope whatever they bought doesn't fall apart the first time they wear it.
In Japan, souvenir merchandise was mostly labeled "made in China." In Korea, not so much. The Korean gift items were better quality than the Japanese China-made items. The open air market wasn't as much a tourist trap as a market selling to locals. I enjoyed watching the food vendors set up and the men with push carts of produce. One of them just about ran over Michael. He was not about to yield to any pedestrian.
We visited the Busan Tower, an observation point in a park on a hill in the center of downtown Busan. The views from thirty storys up were spectacular. In every land direction we saw a city of very modern buildings surrounded by miles of high rise apartments. The skyscrapers, the container port, the shipyards were massive. Next to the tower, there was a museum of world musical instruments. It is a small gem. We especially (Michael especially) enjoyed playing various drums and marimba like instruments
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Korea was far less polite and regimented than Japan. It, too, is very prosperous. The Koreans are much more influenced by American culture. The shuttle bus back to the ship had a video of a Korean Shakira singing and gyrating over and over.
Our visit was much too short to make any real judgments. I would, however, like to go back and see more of the country.
Friday, October 8, 2010
Japan: Tokyo, Osaka, Nara, Kyoto and Nagasaki
We finally arrived in Tokyo Wednesday, September 29. Michael has posted accounts at http://cbu-nrt.blogspot.com that give a good account of our day in Tokyo and later visits to Osaka and Nagasaki. Because the Silver Shadow arrived late, our Tokyo tour was limited to five hours including lunch. Lunch on a tour is always at least an hour and a half affair. A visit to a Shinto shrine, a Buddhist temple, lunch at a pretentious western style hotel, another Buddhist temple and a brief stop in the Ginza shopping district probably did not give us a very complete nor accurate picture of Japan's capital city. It was fun nonetheless. Our Japanese guide was probably the most interesting part of the tour. Her comments on life in Japan, Japanese customs, history and even her personal life showed a completely different perspective from westerners that was most interesting.
Michael and I were able to walk around the pier neighborhood the evening we arrived in Osaka. The amusement park at the pier had what was claimed the largest Ferris Wheel in the world. Tokyo had two smaller ones. We took a tour of Nara and Kyoto the following day. We visited a Buddhist temple and a Shinto shrine in Nara. Following an hour drive to Kyoto, we had lunch in another pretentious western style hotel. The hotel had more of a Japanese flavor as the restrooms were Japanese and the meal was prepared and served in Japanese style although using western ingredients,. We finished our tour with a visit to another shrine and temple.
By the time we visited Nagasaki, Michael and I had both seen enough temples and shrines to last for awhile. We took our own tour of Nagasaki using public transport and walking. No temples were included. We visited the A-Bomb hypocenter memorial and the nearby Peace Park. We then walked several miles around the city. We had a good time at the Dutch Slope tourist area. I even bought a souvenir purse that may have been made in Japan. Most everything in the shops had "Made in China" labels if one looked closely. Even the tee shirts with Japanese sayings.
Tokyo and Osaka are modern. One could think one was in New York or even Singapore except that the Japanese drive on the wrong side of the road. Nara, Japan's first capital, and Kyoto, the capital until the late nineteenth century, were spared destruction during World War II. They have a "Japanese" look, as there is a mixture of traditional and modern architecture. They also have a lot of temples and shrines that are world historical sites. Nagasaki after WWII. was, of course, entirely rebuilt Nagasaki has a mixture of styles and neighborhoods. Some of the historical areas were rebuilt to look like Disney characteratures of the way they once did. Other neighborhoods are entirely modern.
Observations:
Japanese technology is not as wonderful as they would like us to think. The computer heavy immigration processing broke down and caused excessive delays. The tour guide in Tokyo had problems with her sound system. Even so, technology is everywhere. The toilet in the Tokyo hotel was equipped with electronic controls allowing for two kinds of washing and three kinds of blow-drying! Even the squat toilets in the Buddhist temple in Nara had electronic sensors for automatic flush. The electronic billboards in the Ginza district were huge and glitzy. All of Tokyo was awash in multi colored neon after dark.
Japanese society is very polite and formal in ordinary interactions. This contrasts with their very violent Manga comics and video games. Everyone is encouraged to fit in and act just likes everyone else. Harmony is sought in everything. Yet one wonders just how far they have come from their militaristic past when all the police salute one another crisply and seem to enjoy directing people. They tend to motion extravagantly to go or stop. There must be a lot of suppressed frustration.
Compared to Korea and China, Japan is clean and orderly. The people are polite. I do wonder, though, what the current generation of young adults will be like in twenty years. They have grown up during a decades long recession. A number of them dress outrageously, dye their hair multi colors or blond and affect an air of detachment (cool.) It is impossible to say how these cell phone wielding young people will interpret traditional Japanese values. That is not to say there aren't legions of well behaved "salarymen" working late and filling the bars after hours. At least they all appear friendly to westerners.
I spent a mere four days in Japan and did not really have a chance to see the countryside. I don't know if these initial impressions will hold up with more experience.