Archive for the 'Japan' CategoryPosts relating to Japan and things Japanese Last week, Nils invited us to play at the river near the end of the train line that runs by his house, so Anthony and I scootered up there. It would be the first time for us to see Greg in ages... Sorry about the focus on the shot of Greg, but four-year-old boys pretend to not understand "hold still so I can focus." The shot reminds me of this hunky picture of Anthony when he was three and a half. Anyway, I think the last time we saw Greg was in the fall, when the kids went chasing around [...] View full post » It was fairly warm in Kyoto today – 36°C (98°F) in the shade – but the humidity was uncharacteristically low, so it was fairly pleasant if you were in the shade. At least, I think so... I never left the air-conditioning of the house! 🙂 I did notice from the living-room window a guy fishing in the little river. He was there for hours. I also noticed the cherry tomatoes that Anthony and Mommy planted in a pot on the veranda were moving along... Someone found a cool way to walk the dog... We took the opportunity to enjoy a [...] View full post » I'm sort of left speechless, so no further comment, except to note that the side-view mirrors seem woefully underaccessorized, relatively speaking. View full post » It's been a busy few days, photographically speaking. The other day Anthony went swimming in the river with Greg. This evening I had one photo-op event with noh musician Riko-chan's daddy, and another with Yoko-chan, whose daddy arranged for my recent visit to a Japanese high school. On the way home, I spotted the most amazing (not in a good way) car in the parking lot of a convenience store, and had to whip out the camera then as well. Much photo-processing awaits. This post is about Yoko-chan, one of Anthony's kindergarten friends. She performed today at the Kyoto Brighton [...] View full post » You know the old saying "If you want it to rain, wash the car"..., well, something along the same lines in Japan might be "If you want someone to hack up your street and leave it a bumpy, jumbled mess of uneven bone-jarring patches, pave it." A stretch of Teramachi St. near Anthony's kindergarten was, for years, one of the worst streets in Kyoto. It was paved recently, but before that – I really should have taken a picture – there wasn't an inch of the stretch I used that was original. It was a literal patchwork of years of [...] View full post » |