Categories
Murakami travel

Spring Riding in a Carriage

Last Sunday, the 9th of March, I dusted and oiled (off and up, respectively) my Air Friday and set off toward the Asahi Super Line. This is a winding, scenic mountain road that is closed due to snow in the winter. One of my dreams here in Japan is to go on a spring ride on a closed-off mountain road once it is passable with a bike but before the road has officially been opened to traffic. I read a Hokkaido ALT’s blog about a similar experience up there, and it sounded awesome. Well, there was still a ton of snow, even a guy taking his snowmachine down the road. It was a wonderful ride nonetheless, maybe 30km roundtrip in about 3 hours, with lots of stops, including one at the Jomon no Sato (縄文の里)which is sort of a history museum from the Jomon period (14,000 BC to 300 BC).  I tried to buy a coffee from the vending machine but it was shut off for the winter.  The guy at the front desk was very nice and made me coffee, even though I had no intention of paying the 400 yen to go look at a bunch of thatched huts and broken pots by myself while daylight was slipping away.  Apparently I was the first person to show up all day.  It made for a nice chat, and I learned a few things, including how most of the artifacts in the place were unearthed during excavation for the two giant dams on the Miomote River a kilometer or two back in the mountains.  Here’s a nicely staged shot of my bike and the enticing view back into the Miomote River valley.

Biking in Asahi

Ok, there was no carriage, but there was riding and it feels like spring to me.  That and an eagerness to flaunt my knowledge of Japanese literature led me to title my post after Yokomitsu Riichi’s depressing short story.

Categories
elementary JET

To Mr. Sean Teacher Sensei

My 4th and 5th graders at Iwafune Elementary surprised me yesterday with some very nicely made thank you cards. It was their last class before they become 5th and 6th graders. The teachers, to their credit, encouraged the children to use romaji (roman characters) to write to me, and strangely pepper the messages with English words. Here are some of my favorites.

Syôn Sensei E

senseino osieTe kuLeTa EiGo, TanosikaTTaDesu. LokunenseiDemoYoLoSikuoneGaisimasu.

-You

teacher先生へ

ぼくは. IlikeEnglish withになりました。

Thank you! シィーユーアゲイン

-Ohno

Categories
Alaska English JET Middle School Murakami

License Plate English

I did a hastily prepared worksheet today with four classes, from first grade to third grade (junior high 7th through 9th). I got the idea from a feature on the Anchorage Daily News website showcasing reader submitted vanity plates. The goal was for the students to figure out the meaning of real Alaska license plates. For example, “SNOMAN,” “IXLR8,” and “LVWNTR.” They then had to create six-letter plates from “Murakami” and “I love English,” then create their own personalized plate. If they wrote it on the board, they could get a sticker. It was an amazing success. I was astonished at how quickly they understood the concept, and how creative their own vanity plates were. Click the image below to see a whole gallery of my third graders’ creations.

Study Hard

Categories
Murakami

Snow Jumping

Chris coaches me on a 15-foot castle jump.

Categories
Uncategorized

Barack Obama

I’ve been watching the elections back in the states more fervently than I would like to admit. It’s ridiculous while at the same time very exciting. In 2000, I would have been extremely excited by a McCain nomination. Now, with the incredible promise of Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, I find myself being far more critical than I really think I deserve to be. After eight years during which many people like me would have voted for almost anyone should it mean Bush leave the White House, it’s sort of bewildering to have two intriguing, historical options.

As a young person who remembers watching Bill Clinton’s 1992 victory on television, remembers the paltry, cynical divisiveness of those years, I cannot envision a Clinton presidency as healthy. Barack Obama is right in characterizing it as more of the same. Mrs. Clinton is razor-sharp, dedicated, and she would make an excellent president. But she would perpetuate the rule of our country by two families into a third decade. 2008 is an opportunity to start fresh. A Clinton-McCain race would only offer a choice between which side of the argument you want to continue. Barack Obama represents new energy, and at 46, would be a pretty sharp contrast to McCain at 72.

Categories
JET Middle School Murakami

Globpdate

Sick with a cold.  The fault of munchkins.  Fluids.  Doctor’s waiting room.  Indifferent supervisor.  Motherly, doting, caring supervisor.  Pills.  Throat throes.  Voyager episodes.  Hoarse Skype calls.  Lack of antibodies.  Lack of active verbs.

Categories
travel

Russia

There are a lot of words to describe the past 38 days. School mishaps, successful performances as a very late rabbit, ski trips, contracting decisions, snowstorms. For the sake of brevity, I will focus, briefly, on the important.

I went to Vladivostok last weekend. I flew Vladivostok Air from Toyama on a Jakovlev JAK-40 jet. I had a great weekend. I saw Katya, met her family, became ludicrously drunk with vodka, and experienced a tiny bit of Russia. I’ll probably go back this summer to help dig potatoes.

Plane

Categories
travel

Winter Break

I actually had a hard time teaching 6 year olds how to say “eyes, ears, mouth, nose” today. Over the past two weeks, I climbed so far out of the groove of work that I’m still settling back in.

Hawaii, Shanghai, Ferry

My winter vacation was excellent. I didn’t realize that much could be done in two weeks and still be called a vacation. I met my parents in Hawaii and relaxed for a few days, read a few books, went snorkeling with some spinner dolphins, hiked to a 1200 foot high waterfall, mucked around in the jungle with Sienna and her boyfriend and his brother looking for some nonexistent springs, went golfing, jumped off 70-foot cliffs into the ocean at the southernmost point in America, body-surfed on a green sand beach, drank good beer, and generally had a good time.

Categories
travel

Break Time

Two more days of school left before I hop on planes and boats through Hawaii, China, and back to Japan. If anyone is going to be on the big island of Hawaii from the 22nd to the 28th, Shanghai from the 29th to the 2nd, or Osaka, Kumamoto or Tokyo from the 4th to the 8th, let me know.

It may be a while before I update with anything interesting. In the meantime you can check out my photos from the past couple months, which I just finish putting up online: Photos.

Categories
JET

Musical

For a while now, I’ve been participating in a play called “Alice in Japan” (highly modified version of Alice in Wonderland).  It’s put on by the ALTs of Niigata Prefecture to raise money for charity.  In the spring, we will travel to Papua New Guinea and build a school with the proceeds made from the musical.  I am playing the White Rabbit. We’ve been practicing now for a month or two.  We had a rehearsal this weekend in Joetsu and we actually got a lot done.  I’ve included a video of us doing the final dance,  “We’re all in This Together” from High School Musical, as well as the musical website.


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