Monday, October 17, 2011

Log housing with Wild Blossom

Friday was Brian`s birthday! And thanks to our great friends Nat, Kelly, and Rob, it was a surprise! I took 1 picture and then forgot all about my camera. But when we showed up we found them all in a row in birthday hats. Bonus: the waiters brought out sake and a plate of Camembert with a sparkler in it. Sparkling cheese!
We ate drank and made merry there and across the street at a delicious beer bar before eating CAKE, lots of CAKE. Carrot cake with rum and orange zest icing!!!!! And 4 sticks of butter!
Then Saturday morning, our friends Saga and Sanae picked us up for a weekend at "log house", as it was told to us. We met Saga and Sanae at a campsite in a nearby town in summer. They were there with their motorcycle team (team name - Wild Blossom!) but they live in Sapporo. We ended up spending that night hanging out with the team and ever since then have met up with Saga and Sanae at least once a month. This trip was with other members of Wild Blossom! (the exclamation mark is mine) to eat, drink, take baths, and make merry in a cabin a couple of hours from town. I can say with confidence that this is the sweetest Harley gang I`ve ever met. I was too busy using my phone as a dictionary to do much camera-ing. But you can get an idea from these shots.


It was a great weekend. The leaves are in full fall regalia now so the drive was lovely. The gang was awesome, as always. And on the way back we made a Costco stop which means pizza, red wine, and this time - a pumpkin for jack-o-lanting, were ours. I do so love FALL! But, we saw a lot of these little white fairy bugs at the log house, which our friends told us are called yukimushi (snow bugs). It`s a commmonly held belief that once you see them, the snow is only a week away. The snowboarding season is nigh!

Friday, October 14, 2011

Coming back to the blog - a trip to Yoichi

I had given up on the blog for a while, but now that I`ve also given up the abominable waste of time that is facebook, I`m coming back to the blog as a way to share photos. I may keep it photo heavy and story light unless I find myself with a lot of time on my hands, but it`s a start.

The following pictures are from a recent canoeing trip we took with some Japanese friends. We met Hachan at a brewery in town, and although he is about our parents` age, we have a lot in common with him and we`ve since become friends. He`s a member of an outdoor club which, rather comically, is called the Tipi Club. But the members are awesome and their trips are amazing. This last trip included gorilla camping under a bridge, then canoeing down a friendly little river that was full up with salmon heading upstream. And because of all the salmon (which are HUGE), the sky was filled with eagles. But we were the only ones on the river on a perfect autumn day and it was amazing. Take a look!



Also, Brian and I have both signed on to contribute to an online magazine that goes out to the expat community in Japan. We`re writing food columns and our first articles just came out. Once you click the link, click the large maroon bar with the pdf download to see it. It`s in the food section. http://ajet.net/ebullonline/oct2011.html

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Yotei One Lap and lots of projects

A few weekends ago we explored the quaint Niseko area with a bike ride around Mt. Yotei to raise money for PEPY. Mt. Yotei is a beautiful Fuji-esque volcano and PEPY is a nonprofit organisation with education and community development programs in Cambodia. Check it out at pepyride.org. Alastair did an amazing job setting everything up, hosting us, and throwing a delicious bar-b-que afterwards. You should try his grilled banana recipe - Cut a slit in a banana (with the peel still on), stuff it with chocolate, wrap the whole thing in tin foil, and throw it in the coals til it`s ooey gooey good.
Two weekends ago we hiked Sorenuma Dake and Sapporo Dake. I don`t recommend it. Do one and then the other, the connecting trail is horrendous. But the leaves were gorgeous and we had an amazing time in the hut at Sorenuma with a 70 year-old volunteer and his dog and his mandolin and his sake. The hut is open year around too (though not manned in winter) and you can cross-country ski up to it. That`s on the wish list once the snow comes. The snow wish list is getting quite long.
One weekend ago was Brian`s birthday and we had a great cookout by the river with lots of friends. The plan was to play tennis and whiffle ball, but we never got around to it. I never got around to taking photos either. But it was so good to hang out by the river with great people. The Sunday after the cookout we played a teachers vs. students softball game at my base school. It was so fun, but I`m so bad at softball and the girls team is really good and intimidating. I was scared to go in the outfield. Everyone was really excited to meet Brian though.

This past weekend we spent exploring Sapporo and hosting couch surfers and JETs. We`re getting hibernation ready cozying up our place and storing up food for the winter. The weather keeps promising snow, but it may be a week or so off still. I can`t wait for it to pile up deep enough for all the winter sports to begin. Especially now that we`ve figured out how to work our heater.

So weekends have been busy and fun, but the weekdays are starting to liven up too. School is really busy and I`ve started lots of projects. I`ve been going to cooking club and photography club at school, and the home ec teachers let me use the kitchen class room to make Brian`s birthday cake.


MMmmmm. We made omuyakisoba! That`s omelet topped stir-fried noodles. Yes that`s mayo on top. No really, it`s good.
Mmmmm, caramel apple spice cake. Did you know that butter cream icing is really almost entirely butter? I didn`t know. Now I know. And now I know how good it is. And now I know how bad marshmallow fondant is. But it`s so cute!

I`ve taken up felting, trying to get skilled enough to teach others how to do it in our BIG project. Brian and I are going to start hosting casual workshops at our house on Sundays on how to do various DIY projects, but we`ll also be having lots of other people teach workshops as well. We`re hoping we`ll build a nice little group of friends around these activities, both Japanese and foreign, and that we can all share the techniques we`ve learned along the way. We made a web page and we`re getting help having it translated. Next step is funding and fliers and materials. http://www.sapporodiyexchange.weebly.com/


Here are the rest of the photos from the past month. I still haven`t done a good job taking many. One day I`ll do a home and Sapporo round of photos. One day...


And here`s a freaky little Japanese something to finish off the post. Halloween`s just around the corner!

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Daisetsuzan

Fall`s come to Hokkaido. There`s that undercurrent of Fall excitement that only comes when the oppressive Summer humidity finally rolls away like some fat bully finished steam-rolling us all and we can finally breath again. The crispness and the cool and the electric blue sky and the smell of leaves all point to Fall. But we`re discovering that in Hokkaido there are heretofore never experienced Fall happenings that welcome the season. Strange and wonderful things pop up at every turn. Like the happy discovery that there is a national holiday on the Equinox - brilliant. And in the farmer`s market where we always buy our produce the price of fruit has plummeted (pinch me, I`m dreaming!), pumpkins and squashes fill the floor space, and there are beautiful, common vegetables that are uncommonly purple. I`d never seen a purple bell pepper before, but there it was, glowingly eggplant-purple in it`s basket as if nothing was wonderful about it at all. As if bell peppers had always been purple in the Fall. Potatoes too. I had seen purple potatoes, but not this purple. They have the usual purple veggies like cabbage and onions, eggplants. But there`s also purple cauliflower, purple asparagus, purple daikon like radishes and even little purple chili peppers. Our meals have been particularly beautiful recently, and Brian made the prettiest kimchi from the purple radishes.

There`ve also been a few small thanks-giving festivals to welcome the harvest season, and the salmon running season. We went to this little Ainu ceremony by the Toyohira River near our house a couple of weekends ago. To be perfectly honest, it was rather boring, even for culture vultures like us. But the 200 yen massive chunks of delicious grilled salmon were well worth it.

Last week there were two national holidays, one on Monday and one on Thursday, so Brian and I took the Tuesday and Wednesday off for a 6 day vacation to do some hiking. The onset of Fall in Hokaido means the near end of the backpacking season for a warm weather hiker like myself, and we`re not geared out enough to deal with snow and serious cold, both of which Hokkaido certainly gets. So we headed out to Asahikawa planning to do the "Daisetsuzan Grand Traverse" as lined out in the Lonely Planet.

We`d brought all our gear from home, but we still had to outfit a bit. We`d been using the Steripen for water purification in the States, but in Hokkaido there`s a nasty killer called Echinococcus (not bacterial, despite the name). This is a type of tape worm that gets in the water from fox feces, and being a worm/egg/larvae UV light and chemical treatments won`t kill it. So we finally bought a real water filter. Brian`s sleeping bag is only a 35 F bag so he got a liner as well. As we were told by pretty much anyone that we mentioned this trip to, people die in Daisetsuzan all the time, and it`s usually from exposure. No matter the time of year, have surviving hypothermia in mind when packing for this trip. We also bought maps, of course.

Choosing hiking food was a breeze in Japanese supermarkets because there are a lot of dried things available. We got noodles and dried sauce mixes, freeze dried tofu (which rehydrates most deliciously), gorp, oatmeal (with instant custard mix as a calorie booster), ramen, and CalorieMates.

We left Sapporo on a Friday night and took a bus from Sapporo Station to Asahikawa (2 hours, 2,000 Y one way) where we stayed with Megan. The next morning we took a bus from Asahikawa station to Asahidake, but because of bus times the earliest you can get there is around 10:45 - 11 AM and it gets dark around 5:45 in September in Hokkaido, so if we had that to do over again we`d take the bus out to Asahidake the night before and stay there in order to get going earlier. As it was, we were hiking by 11. There`s a gondola that goes half way up Asahidake that saves about an hour and a half (by our pace) hike up rather rotten board walks and poorly graded trails. But the woods and wetland there are beautiful and you won`t otherwise see many trees on this trip as the rest of it is above treeline.

Asahidake is the tallest peak in Hokkaido, and it`s a seriously tough climb. Extremely steep, almost non-existent switchbacks, and loose, shaley footing make the going tough. But the views are gorgeous and the camaraderie of the Japanese hikers is both energising and hilarious. Most are out for a day hike and are surprised to see hikers with large packs and especially foreign ones. Some highlights were an extremely animated woman gesturing to us about how windy and cold it was up top (many people were worried about us being warm enough as we sweated our way up the slope, but we had plenty of layers in our packs), a little boy who saw us, said hello very boldly, and then ran away screaming that we were cute, and a woman who offered to take our picture and then made sure she got one on her camera as well. We were photographed multiple times in fact. A rare breed of wildlife on the slopes of Asahidake were we.

The climb from bottom to top took nearly 5 hours, so we deviated from the L.P. trek and camped at the first campsite so as not to hike the last hour and a half in the dark. I do not recommend any hiking in the dark in Japan. The trails are not well maintained, often extremely narrow, washed out, steep, and overgrown. Especially on that trek many of the trails hug a cliff edge or follow a knife-edge ridge. Our last day we hiked for over an hour IN a river. The trail WAS the river and the river was the trail. I may or may not have cursed Japanese trails a time or two at that point.

Given our first deviation and the forecast for the next few days (freezing temperatures, rain, and then snow with gale force winds) we remade our plans that night. We decided we wouldn`t be ok if we got wet on the rainy, freezing day, had to set up camp that night and then had to hike in freezing, blustering snow the next day. We decided to hike all the northern half of the park and save the southern half for next season. We also decided to finish on the fourth day instead of doing 5 days to avoid the blizzardy conditions. That allowed us this gorgeous day of pack-less hiking in lovely weather. And this fox spotting!



This turned out to be a very wise decision. Though the distances in the LP outlined trek aren`t very long, the going is NOT easy. We`d hiked half of the Appalachian Trail, so we`re not experts or anything but we`ve got some legitimate experience, and I can confidently say that I`ve never seen such tough trails. They`re steep, very overgrown where there`s growth, totally exposed when there`s none, rocky, and not well marked. And the weather is tough. As one man (rather melodramatically) told us, "when things are good in Daisetsuzan, it`s beautiful, when they`re bad, it`s DEADLY!!!!!!!!MUAHHAHAHA!!!". Not to scare anyone off. The place is terribly gorgeous, and once you get past the first couple of huts, solitude abounds. Did I mention the stars? But overnight trips there should be planned with due consideration. Here`s a shot of one of the huts we stayed in - much warmer than our 3 season tent.




The hike was beautiful, and though not exactly what we`d planned, it was a great success. Our last day it was rainy, freezing, and the wind was gusting hard enough that I came close to being pushed down more than a few times. All that made the 2 hour soak in the hot healing onsen waters that much more wonderful. In the evening we hopped the bus back to Asahikawa and from there bussed back to Sapporo again. Then we had two lovely days to clean up our stuff and recover our legs before just a Friday at school.

Friday night we spent with Rob, Brandon, and Tamon at the Liebspiece Beer Club delicious all you can drink beer night. Delicious and hilarious, there`s a Japanese man forever in liderhosen, a group singing of some German prost song, and what must be the best and cheapest beer in Hokkaido. It inspired me to make some spicy mustard on Sunday with the seeds we brought from home.


The weekend was slow and relaxing. Saturday we cruised over to the Autumn Festival in Odori Park to sample some Japanese specialties, like this sea urchin.


Not bad, sort of sweet and fatty and oceany, but that`s probably the last time I`ll buy one of those. It`s better pre-cleaned in my sushi.

Sunday we did some painting and mustard making. And now somehow it`s Thursday again. Tomorrow is my welcome enkai (drinking party) with my base school, so I`m looking forward to being buried in mountains of sushi and welcoming drinks. And Saturday we`re heading to Niseko for a bike ride to raise money for education in Cambodia. Biking, exploring, and helping the kids? What more could you ask for.


Obviously I have lots of time on my hands today. That`s because it`s a holiday for the students, but not for the teachers, so I`m warming my desk. Warming my desk with me is this super awesome robot dinosaur mug filled with strange and not quite wonderful instant/drip coffee.

And the rest of the Daisetsuzan photos.