Saturday, March 24, 2007

Gift Melons

I was in Takashimaya, an expensive Japanese department store, the other day. In the basement of Japanese department stores they usually have a food floor. In these floors they usually have bakeries, delis, dessert counters, as well as people selling lots of crazy Japanese foods.
Anyways, I noticed a gift fruit section, so I checked out these melons. Melons are a common gift for Japanese people to give (no idea why, personally I think they're really overrated). Regardless, the one in the front right is 73 bucks. For one. Not for a whole crate of them. Just one.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Japanese Baseball


Baseball is huge in Japan. It is by far the most popular sport, with soccer coming a distant second. Personally, I find baseball to be incredibly boring, but I thought that because it's so popular here it would be interesting to see what the fans are like during a game.
Today was a holiday and there was an exhibition game in Kurashiki, about 20 minutes west of Okayama. Okayama does not have its own professional baseball team. The closest teams are in Osaka and Hiroshima, about 40 minutes by bullet train to the east and west, respectively. The game today was between the Hiroshima Carp and the Hanshin Tigers (from the Osaka-Kobe area). Both teams are extremely popular here, but the edge definitely goes to the Tigers. I went with my buddy, Aki, who is a huge Tigers fan. He brought a Tigers hat and hapi (sort of similar to a jacket) for me to wear during the game.
The fans are separated according to which team they support, so we of course sat in the Tigers section. Throughout the game there's a lot of yelling, cheering and banging of hollow plastic bats (like the one Aki's holding in the first picture), and almost everybody gets really into it. There's even fans playing drums and other instruments (trombones, I think) to get the crowd excited.
After the Tigers at-bat in the 6th inning, all the Tigers fans had these long balloons that they released at the same time, so there were literally thousands of these balloons shooting around the sky above us. To be honest, it looked like a sea of multi-coloured sperm, but I didn't mention that because I didn't want to ruin it for them. The Carp fans then did the same thing after Hiroshima had their 6th inning at-bat.
And when it was over, there was good news - the Tigers ended up winning 8-3.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

White Day

Valentine's Day in Japan is a little different than back home in Canada. On February 14th, women give presents to the important men in their lives (including friends). Then, a month later, on March 14th, the men reciprocate with equal or better gifts.
Anyways, this year on White Day, one of the kids at one of the schools I teach at brought a bag of these things from the picture to give to all the other kids, and I was also given one. I have no idea what the name is supposed to mean, but they are green tea-flavoured biscuits. Although I had very low expectations, due to the name, they were actually pretty good.

Sunday, March 04, 2007

Everybody's Favourite Drugstore

Love Drugs is probably the biggest drugstore chain in Okayama. I see them everywhere, and everytime I see one of them I still laugh my ass off.

Deeppresso

Although I don't drink coffee, I love the name of this coffee drink you can find in many vending machines. I'm not really sure what they think it means. I understand what they're trying to say with the second part of the name, presso, but I have no idea what the deep is supposed to mean. For some reason, I don't think it would sell as well in Canada.