Feeds:
Posts
Comments

I imagine traveling with my 3 year old tabby cat, Penny, is a lot like traveling with a small child- Of course I’m going to do it if need be, but it’s definitely not my favorite thing!

It took over 8 months to prepare Penny to travel to Japan. First, she need two back to back Rabies vaccinations, as Japan is Rabies free. Once she has both vaccines, she must not leave the United States for 6 months. There are a ton of forms to be filled out, endorsed by her vet, and the government offices in Olympia Washington. She also needs a physical saying she is fit to fly, and a carrier that meets FAA regulations.

To shorten the story, we got all of that taken care of. We left for Seattle airport with Penny in tow in her pretty new carrier. We check in for our flight and everything is fine until we tell them we’re traveling internationally with a cat. Suddenly the United agent says we don’t have enough time and should have been here an hour ago. So we ask if there’s any way we can still make this flight and she says we can, only if we have these certain forms filled out, and names 4 of the forms. Dan pulls them out and hands them to her. She tells us Penny needs to be microchipped and we pull out the form for that. After asking if she has any more brain busters for us, she claims she doesn’t even know how much it is for Penny to fly. We inform her it’s $125, and plunk down a credit card. That got her quiet quick! Penny got booked for our flight and we were on our way through security.

Minor ordeal. We got out our liquids and our laptops and took off our shoes, then I asked the security guy what to do with Penny. “If she’s not violent, you carry her through the detectors.” So out of the carrier she comes, and we walk through, and BEEEEEEEEP! I forgot to take her collar off. Whoops. Back through for another BEEEEEEEEEEEP! I left my cell phone in my pocket during all the hubbub of getting her through. Third time’s he charm and we get her back in her carrier, our shoes back on, our toiletries and computers back in our bags, and we’re off.

We take a shuttle to the international terminal, grab some food and board our flight. We are pleased that we have a two-seater by the window- Penny is a furry loving blessing to us, but we understand others probably don’t wanna be next to our shedding meowing little muppet. As we approach our seats a woman is stretching out across the two of them. She asks if these are our seats and we say yes and show her our tickets. She sat there for a moment looking disappointed, saying she was hoping to stretch out. She finally accumulates her things and goes back to her seat. That was odd. We settled in with Penny under Dan’s seat.

After takeoff, we brought Penny’s carrier into Dan’s lap so we could give her pets. The flight attendant came around and said unfortunately she had to stay under the seat 🙁 So back she went, and we took turns sticking a hand in and petting her.

She did great for the first seven hours. I imagine she calmed down and napped. Then she started getting antsy and moving around a lot. Dan took her carrier into the bathroom and let her out so she could stretch her legs. When he brought her back she had completely calmed down, and stayed that way for the rest of the flight. The flight attendant even gave her a pair of first flight wings!
Photobucket
We landed at Narita Airport in Tokyo, and went through immigrations. Then we had to take her to quarantine to be examined and go through the mounds of paperwork we brought. We were told that if everything was in order, it should only take an hour. So while Dan did that, I went and got our bags. Imagine my surprise when it only took 20-25 minutes! We went through customs and hit the trains. The first train to Nippori, Penny slept in her carrier in my lap.
Photobucket
Then the line for the one elevator in Nippori was way too long, so we made our way down the stairs to our train to Shinjuku with our giant suitcases and Penny in tow. On this train ride there were kids whispering “neko chan!” (kittycat) and pointing at Penny, and I think she enjoyed the attention. Finally we transferred one last time to ride to our home station, Roka Koen. The train was packed and we had to stand, but knowing we were so close to home made it not matter. We got off the train and waited for the elevator. We walked a block to our apartment building and let Penny into her new home.
Photobucket

She seemed confused at first, but while Dan ran out to buy litter and a box I set up her food and water. She immediately ate then drank which was good. Dan returned and she continued to explore the apartment as we unpacked. She ultimately settled into the top floor of her condo and surveyed things for a while 🙂
Photobucket

Well, I’m back in Japan and ready to update again! I’ll start by going back a bit to where I left off- Dan and I headed up to Seattle to visit friends and attend a wedding.

We arrived the afternoon of Sunday the 27th and settled into a hotel in Kirkland for the first few nights. Those first few days were pretty much all the same- Dan had to work long hours on the Microsoft campus, I spent time with my friend Kelsey, and we usually all met up for a meal or two throughout the day. Dan and I also had an opportunity to get some photos taken down at the Kirkland Waterfront, and we did that Tuesday. Here are some low-resolution proofs, in a week or so we will have the professional copies to share 🙂

Photobucket

Photobucket

Photobucket

By Thursday, our wonderful friend who has been watching our cat Penny, Sean, was going out of town, and offered us his house to stay for the remainder of our trip. So thoughtful! We packed up and headed to his place in Redmond. Thursday was A- Emily’s bridal shower and B- Stephen’s bachelor party. Dan headed down to Portland for the day/ night, and I stayed in Washington for Emily’s festivities. It was a nice luncheon with gifts and stories and pictures 🙂

Photobucket
Back left is bridesmaid Ashley, bride Emily, Kelsey, and Emily’s Aunt Gina, front left is maid of honor Brittany, bridesmaids Jessie and Olivia, and yours truly 🙂

By Friday Dan returned back to Seattle, but the traffic made is drive over 4 hours instead of just 3. We had dinner at a favorite Italian restaurant of ours, and called it an early night.

Saturday was wedding day! We arrived at Stephen and Emily’s venue early in the morning so Dan, a groomsman, would be at the rehearsal. That last for about an hour, then he and I headed back to Redmond for a quick bite to eat before meeting up with Stephen’s parents and sister, who would be getting ready with us. Everyone was due back at the venue for pictures by 3pm, so off we went! Many pictures taken and catching up with old friends.

The ceremony wasn’t too short or too long, very personal and uplifting. After we mingled and chatted with others until dinner, and then Dan and I led toasts for Stephen and Emily. The rest of the night was full of laughing, cake, dancing and many pictures.

The wedding party. Dan is in the back row, second from the right.
Photobucket
Emily’s vows to Stephen
Photobucket
Now that’s a good looking groomsman!
Photobucket
Stephen and Dan after the ceremony
Photobucket
Dan & I
Photobucket

We spent our last day in the States making a quick trip back down to Portland OR to return tuxes, the kegs for the wedding, and seeing our parents one last time. It was a blur of an impromptu trip but we had a great time!

Update From the US

Hello!

Pardon the absence. As many of you readers know, the morning the fire broke out at the nuclear plant in Sendai, we made the decision to return home for an extended stay. It was free to move our April tickets up a couple weeks, and Dan could work from the northwest, so why not? After deciding to leave town, we only had about an hour and a half to pack our bags for 3 weeks and get on the trains en route to Narita Airport.

The trains were packed with people heading to the airport, but luckily for us many people were headed to Korea to evade radiation and other devastation. We made it to Narita, boarded a plane, and before we knew it, our Wednesday began again, this time in Seattle Washington.

I spent the day with my friend Kelsey while Dan went to Microsoft and got his work setup situated. Then we ran some errands, checked into a hotel, and went to sleep for the night at about 6:30pm. Jetlag can be rough!

We awoke the next day and headed to the Japanese Consulate so I could get my visa for Japan rolling. Took care of that and we headed down to Portland. It was Dan’s grandpa’s 90th birthday, and we went to a really wonderful celebration for that. After that I saw some friends briefly before we, yet again, crashed ridiculously early for the night.

The following week has been a whirlwind of visiting friends and family, Dan working, and stocking up on beloved American hair care products (ok, that last one might only be for me :)). It’s been a challenge squeezing all our social commitments in, but I think we did a great job. We even fit in a trip down south to Corvallis!

Tomorrow (Sunday the 27th) we head up north to Seattle for the remainder of the trip. Dan will continue working, we will visit with friends, attend a wedding for a dear friend, and are having some pictures taken down by the Kirkland Waterfront.

We are set to return to Japan April 4th, hopefully with no disasters stopping us! And hopefully this will be the longest I ever put my blog on hiatus!

Making Headlines

Dan and I were in an article in The Oregonian. Check it out!

Oregonians in Tokyo

Dan and I had a great weekend together despite the craziness of Friday the 11th- his birthday, our mini celebration of dating for 2 years, and of course the big earthquake (which we’ve dubbed, “the birthquake”).

On Saturday Dan and I decided to knock some items off our to-do list: stock the fridge and organize the apartment. That decided, we were off to Saitama for Ikea and Costco!

This is definitely the biggest trip I’ve made in Japan so far as a resident. We train for 20-25 minutes to Shinjuku, then train another 20 to Musashiurawa, then another 30 min to arrive in Saitama. Because of the earthquake the trains were off, which meant a lot of waiting between rides.

We finally arrived very hungry. We walked over to Costco where pigging out ensued:

Glorious Costco menu
Photobucket

Yes! My favorite soda in the world; I delight in the crisp and fruity liquid goodness that is Lemon Fanta. Currently only sold in Europe, and at this one Costco in Japan (as far as I’ve seen).
Photobucket

I had a giant hot dog and Dan had a giant slice of pizza. Yum.
Photobucket

After our pigout, we decided to take care of furniture stuff first since all that could be delivered, and we weren’t sure if our refrigerated groceries could be, and didn’t want to carry them around. So we walked a couple blocks over to Ikea.
Photobucket

Sadly they were closed due to the earthquake. So we walked back to Costco, passing a closed shopping mall on the way. Once in Costco we shopped for all the delicious things we needed… and wanted.

28,500 yen (roughly $330 I suppose?) later we headed to the delivery department to see what they could deliver to our apartment. Turns out they could take everything for only 2000 yen ($25)! Well, everything except a take-n-bake pizza, a little box of cookies and a pack of muffins.

Delivery Dept
Photobucket

Dan filling out address forms for our grocery boxes
Photobucket

Having turned into a day-long endeavor we headed home. Our train got stuck at one point for a half hour, but other than that it was pretty uneventful. Luckily we were able to sit 2 out of 3 legs home, since we had some groceries to carry.
Photobucket

This morning (Sunday) we woke up with no plans for the day. Dan and I decided to run out to Akihabara, Tokyo. We were on a mission- I was going to find a case for my Droid Desire phone (haven’t been having any luck in our neck of the woods), and Dan was going to meet up with his friend Brent to sell some playing cards. At some point all three of us would have a lunch so delicious, I will give it its own Food Adventure entry 🙂

We rode out to Shinjuku, then to Akihabara, traveling for about 35 minutes. For those unfamiliar with the area, Akihabara is somewhat of Geek Haven- it is a town well known for selling electronics, many arcades, anime shops and all sorts of card/hobby shops. It’s a very “techy” part of town.

Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Dan and I popped in a couple shops until we finally found one that had a case for my phone. Made that purchase and then met up with Brent for lunch.

After lunch we stopped in a hobby shop where the boys looked at some playing cards for a game called Magic the Gathering. We parted ways with Brent and headed home.

On our way home we found a juice stand we had never seen before. Now, I love pulpy juice. I joke to folks that “I love a juice I can chew”. This stand offered the pulpiest juice i had ever tasted, it was so delicious. Dan and I got a raspberry lemonade.
Photobucket

We returned home for a lazy evening. Cleaned up the apartment, made dinner, caught up on some shows. Due to some scheduled power outages tomorrow throughout Tokyo, Dan doesn’t have to go into work! No plans for our Monday yet 🙂

Survival Mode

All our local stores looked the same today.

The ramen aisle
Photobucket

The water aisle
Photobucket

With everyone still feeling distressed over Friday’s earthquake, the residents of Tokyo have taken to stocking their pantries in the event of another disaster.

Needless to say, Dan and I left the store with some sparkling water. And Pringles. Because apparently chips aren’t high on most people’s “need” list.

So, We Had an Earthquake

Wow. It’s crazy to think I have felt the world’s fourth largest earthquake. And on Dan’s birthday, to boot!

I actually spent most of yesterday morning out of the house and came home just in time for things to start shaking. I’ve taken up walking around town to A- learn my little town better and B- combat all the fatty food Dan and I have been indulging in.

After 2 hours of walking and exploring I came home and sat at my computer. A minute or two later Dan came online after just getting out of a meeting at work. We chatted about our days a bit, then felt a little shaking.

Now, earthquakes happen all the time here. It’s completely common for me to feel myself get jarred about a little, or look up and see the blinds swaying. They’re incredibly small and do not last long.

At first I messaged him saying, “shakey shakey”, to which he replied, “haha yeah”. Then we were still shaking after a while, a good deal stronger than the initial tremors. I messaged him, “I’m watching to see if these batteries are going to roll off your desk.” I didn’t wait for his reply though, because in an instant there was a huge jolt and crash, and I yelped and threw myself under my desk.

At the time it felt dramatic; I’m a skittish person known to jump or scream at the slightest surprise. I was going to get back up but we kept shaking. And it kept getting worse, and it was literally raining stuff around me. It felt like it as never going to end! I could hear Dan’s brand new flat panel monitors scooting their way to the edge of the desk and I wanted to hold them down, but I just couldn’t make myself move.

It did end though, sort of. We went back to tiny tremors. I crawled out and sure enough, the monitors were teetering on the back of his desk. Stuff everywhere. Nothing really damaged though. A bottle of perfume fell off my desk and landed on its bottom, but with such force that the top part of the bottle completely broke off. A bunch of the perfume spilled on Dan’s knocked over papers, but it’s not too bad. Our office is particularly fragrant now though!

Dan got a hold of me right away. Microsoft had been evacuated, and no one was able to make phone calls, but he got instant messenger to work on his phone. I told him everything was ok and he said he’d try to get home soon. Unfortunately they shut the trains down for the rest of the day, and it took him about 2/5 hours to walk/cab the 5 miles home.

Dan eventually got home, and we got everything picked up. And that’s the end of our story. But unfortunately a lot of people can’t say the same. Some people slept at Microsoft because they couldn’t get home, some people can’t get in touch with their families in Sendai, there were people running the streets and fighting over cabs and buildings with windows knocked out. I can’t begin to tell you all how lucky we are! That being said, here are some pictures of our minute damage.

Just a few things knocked over in the living room
Photobucket

Dan’s desk, and a bunch of things that fell off both our desks. Fort perspective, Dan usually keeps his monitors side by side, at the front edge of his desk. That’s a lot of traveling!
Photobucket

Yeah, we don’t normally keep this stuff on the floor!
Photobucket

There are arcades everywhere here in Tokyo. Some have actual video games, and some just have tons of crane games. After dinner one night, Dan and I pitstopped in an arcade we passed by.

Photobucket

So many cute crane games! You can win candies, charms, dolls, all sorts of random things.

Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket

Dan and I decided to do a purikura. Purikura is where you jump in a photo booth alone or with friends, and it snaps a few pictures of you. Then you come out and your pictures show up on a screen. You take a stylus and add graphics to the pictures. When you’re done, the machine prints a copy for you, and then you can email one to yourself. It’s pretty fun!

Rows of purikura machines
Photobucket

A shot of the machine where your pics print out, and you can email them to yourself. Next time I’ll have to take some pictures of Dan and I decorating our pictures.

Photobucket

Our finished pictures! Tada!

Photobucket

Good Morning

Yep, just another breakfast on this beautiful, sunny Thursday morning.

Except I can’t read my nutrition facts.

Sometimes I honestly forget I’m living on the other side of the world until I see or hear something that jars me into awareness.

Photobucket

So everywhere I go, men and women have charms hanging off their cell phones. Yes, you see these on occasion in America, but the majority of people here have these little charms dangling from their cell phones. Sometimes one charm, sometimes a bundle of like ten. It’s totally normal to see a businessman texting on a cell phone with a pink fuzzy bunny hanging from his phone. Lots of people have the famed Duffy the Disney bear hanging from their phone.

I got my first charm yesterday somewhat on accident! Dan and I were at the grocery store next to our apartment building and decided to stock our fridge with a couple sodas. I grabbed a 20oz Pepsi and it came with something wrapped in plastic at the top. When I realized what it was, I’m pretty sure I squealed.

Photobucket

A charm! An adorable star-shaped lime, with a little Snoopy hanging on the side. So cute!! Sadly my Droid, nor my American Blackberry has a little loop for me to hang my charm on, but since I don’t use the wrist strap on my camera, Snoopy is currently hanging there.

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »