The Jukebox Clan Does Japan

I'd seen Mazda offered a tour of their Hiroshima plant, but it was unavailable through last year. Then around Feb they announced tours would restart in April. I kept a close eye on the web page and was able to get places in the English langauge tour the week we were in town.

This was a lot better structured than Toyota - a proper tour with a narrative, plus a peak at the assembly line. Having said that, you weren't allowed to photograph the line - and at the time we passed by, it was stopped for some reason. But at least we saw it - and could see engines being readied to be placed in CX-90 shells.

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It was about two hours all up, and was interesting enough that you didn't need to be a petrol head - although it helps!

FWIW, I'd say I definitely enjoyed this more than Toyota.
 
After Mazda, we slipped in to the city for dinner.

We headed to Okinomimura, a multi story food court dedicated to selling okinomiyama

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Another victim of over tourism, we started on the 5th floor, only to discover all the stalls there were pre-reserved for tour groups. Perversely, the okinomiyamas were being pre-cooked and plated up before they even arrived, which kind of defeats the whole purpose of going, and seeing the theatre of the dish being prepared... or getting one customised to your taste. Oh well.

We found a place on the 3rd floor that had spare seats, and the head cook welcomed us in.

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Soon the place was full, and our amusement for the night with a group of middle aged Brits, who customised each 0f five orders to within an inch of its life - no spring onions on one, no seafood on another, add cheese to two... eventually, we could see the cook and his assistant totally lost track of who needed what, and these okinomiyakis had to have autopsies done on them to determine whose was whose. The sheer exaspiration on the cook's face as he was trying to sort this out was priceless. I'm sure we bonded over an eyeroll!

Well fed, it worked out the tram was the most direct route home, so we trundelled out to the last stop on the #2 line, Miyajimaguchi Ferry Terminal. It feels like the slow way there, but with no train connections needed, and no walk from the JR station, arriving at the tram station right next to the ferry terminal was a blessing.


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By the time we hit the island, we were in need of more drinks, so stopped in at the Lawsons. The collection of umberellas left behind after a rainy day just felt like such a perfect metaphor.


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Moving day tomorrow. Our last hotel in Japan; Destination, Osaka...
 
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Oliver admits that he doesn't remember his 2008 visit to Japan - he was only 7 at the time - the memories he has are vauge, and reinforced by the photos of the trip we have.

But I love that he "gets" the joy in recreating some of those photos 17 years on...

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Levon isn't as sentimental, but I do hope one day he, too, will understand.

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but time is a finite resoruce when you are travelling,
Especially when able to travel with family


I defy anyone not to get emotional.
I'm enamoured by your amazing thread @jukebox333.
While travel is often a box ticking exercise and your journey is well trodden by others, your thread consistently comes back to the human connections between you and your family and the community you are visiting.

Isn't this the reason we travel?. You thread reminds me of Mark Twain: “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime.”

The reason that there is pushback against tourists in many places, is that tourism these days often lack those human connections.
 
Especially when able to travel with family



I'm enamoured by your amazing thread @jukebox333.
While travel is often a box ticking exercise and your journey is well trodden by others, your thread consistently comes back to the human connections between you and your family and the community you are visiting.

Isn't this the reason we travel?. You thread reminds me of Mark Twain: “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime.”

The reason that there is pushback against tourists in many places, is that tourism these days often lack those human connections.


Thanks very much!

There have been so many small, almost inconsequential, interactions I haven't mentioned - a random Tokyo businessman help Wen and I get a Suica card issued from a machine, a woman serving in a combini taking great joy in counting my change out in English, then being blown away when I thanked her in Japanese, the coffee shop owner on Miyajima, the worker at the ferry terminal who was visibly relieved when Levon and I at the head of the queue to board didn't rush the boat... time and time again, the five of us had the most wonderful, gentle, interactions with everyday people here in Japan.

It made all five of us all dispair for the behaviours of the selfish tourists, totally oblivious to themselves and their heavy footprints.

But I have felt such great joy in doing what we have done, and the way we have done it. Like my Lapland trip, I hope a few AFF'ers can take little things away, and make good use of some of our experiences. It's a small "give back" for the help and generosity I've known here for over 14 years.
 
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