I visited my first Japanese barbers today and was again astounded by the differences between what is normal in Australia and what is normal here. The only similarity between this barber and the barbers I have been to in Australia was the red, white and blue pole out the front of the shop.
The tinted dark windows and profusion of black marble on the exterior of the shop should have been an indication however the first thing that really caught my attention was when I entered the reception area, looked across the shop floor, and felt like I was in a cigar bar.
The shop was all wood paneling, black marble, black leather chairs and acid etched glass. The waiting area was fitted out in those large club style couches that it’s very easy to get lost in - huge - more than a herd of cows needed for each couch. The actual shop was mainly subdued lighting with a series of spot lights on the chairs and the mirrors with smoked glass dividers between each work station. The barber’s chairs were full grain leather, fully electric and included a great massage function that they ran for the entire 30 minutes it took for the haircut.
While sitting and waiting the only "weird" thing (maybe I've already been here to long) of the visit happened. That was watching an old guy, who obviously goes in there every day to have his shave and facial, being laid out flat on one of those amazing barbers chairs, having hot towels applied to his face, shaving lather applied to face (his whole face) and then a shave with a straight razor. The barber working on the old guy started by shaving his chin and then proceeded to shave his forehead and between his eyes.
When it was my turn I was escorted to the massaging (did I mention that the chairs massaged you?) barber’s chair had myself wrapped in three towels and two smocks, then had water misted on my head and a warm towel wrapped around my head followed by a head massage. From there the haircut preceded pretty normally until they finished with another 5 minute head massage to help me face the outside world and then escorted me up onto the street and waved me goodbye.
The cost for all this – about 35 Australian dollars.
8:48 PM |
Category:
Living in Japan
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Well I finally managed to get out of Tokyo and spend some time in the country. While the trip was solely work related it was good to see a little of Japan and to see some areas that I now want to visit later. We went to the city of Fukushima in the Fukushima prefecture, about 250 km north of Tokyo.
www.town.hirono.fukushima.jp/english/traffic.html
This was a trip of many firsts with the trip on a one of the Japanese world renowned bullet trains (shinkansen). It’s a strange feeling, to me at least, sitting inside a train doing a couple of hundred kilometres an hour across the flat lands around Tokyo but one look at the people around you in the train and you realise that you are the only one and the people around you think that it’s just another day commuting.
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Shinkansen.jpg
Fukushima is only 100 meters above sea level with a rainfall in excess of 1000mm but the mountainous land around the city rises very quickly and there are many ski resorts scattered through the hills that surround all of the major river valleys. The big buildings in the picture below belong to one of the many fine beer brewers in Tokyo - Kirin.
While the river valleys look a lot like some of the lower rivers on New Zealand’s east coast there is a distinct lack of any sort of fish life (I was caught leaning out the window looking for fish) as the entire substrate of the river has been removed and used for building and there is nothing left for the invertebrates that the fish require to survive. Those invertebrates that have not been eliminated following the removal of the substrate have had to endure generations of pollution going into the rivers that has also resulted in fish kills.
Luckily there are programs to restore the lower rivers to their former state and the pollution levels have been reduced markedly. The Fukushima prefecture (towards the south in the mountains) is renowned for its fishing in high mountain streams that are surrounded by virgin forest. Now I have another place to go and another thing to tick off the list.
12:37 PM |
Category:
Fishing,
Out and about
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I finally managed to make some time to go exploring some of the fishing shops in Tokyo. My first shop was the Sansui fishing shops in Shibuyu.
There are actually 4 shops spread around the block each of them the size of a large tackle store in Australia and specializing in its own area. There is a deep sea fishing shop (only 1 floor), a fresh water shop (3 floors), a bass and plug shop (2 floors) and a fly and lure shop (2 floors).
Like a lot of shops these guys weren’t all that happy about someone taking photos of their merchandise so I had to be a little careful.
I went down to Shibuyu with the intent of finding the fly fishing shop and managed to walk out of that shop after a couple of hours of looking at some of the most crazy gadgets that I just managed to resist (there were a lot of things that I just needed and started to wonder how I had managed to live without them in my vest).
I then headed to the freshwater shop and spent way too much time there. There was a whole wall containing an array of 2 piece bamboo rods like the guys were using in the local pond (along with the rod holders and the floats). Sorry for the quality of the pictures – a little rushed in taking them.
3:50 PM |
Category:
Fishing
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