| Florence |
Dec 10th, 2001 11:26 AM |
Bonjour Karen,<BR>congratulations on your marriage. Is it really May 2003 or 2002 ? if 2003, mid-May will see the fantastic (I wouldn't call it romantic though) Kanda Matsuri that takes place on alternate years and Sanja Matsuri in Asakusa. Near the end of May, many traditional areas of Tokyo will hold small local "Flower festivals", like for example in Yanaka, where the local associations have food stalls, singing contests, flowers sales, etc. in Yanaka Cemetery during 2 days. Nothing sinister (except the zillion calories in the food), just good fun geared towards the neighborhood, but visiting foreigners are always welcome (and I might even be there helping with the preparation of "Takoyaki" with the Yanaka Kendo Dojo associatin).<BR><BR>There is more of traditional Japan left in Tokyo than what everybody thinks, although it is concentrated in Shitamachi, the "low city" and concerns mostly the areas peopled by laborers, merchants and craftsmen during the Edo period like Asakusa, Ryogoku, Ueno or Ogikubo, meaning there are less prestigious original buildings left than in Kyoto. I was just reading letters by French diplomats and tradesmen in the period just following the opening of Japan to the World ("le voyage au Japon" an anthology of French writings 1858 - 1908), and I've been surprised at how little the area around Asakusa Kannon temple has changed from that time. <BR><BR>In addition to strolling in Akihabara for electronics, all the main electronics companies have showrooms where you can try almost all their products (Sony on Ginza, Yamaha, NEC, Matsushita, ...). Great fun but beware: once in, you never know when you'll get out!<BR><BR>Get your hands on the book "Tokyo for Free" by Susan Pompian (Kodansha, isbn 4-7700-2053-8). It has a list of everything you can do, try, taste, and visit for the price of a subway ticket. <BR><BR>You can also consider the Tosho-gu festival in Nikko, usually around mid-May too.<BR> <BR>In Kyoto, around May 15 is Aoi Matsuri, a beautiful reproduction of past imperial processions, then Mifune matsuri (3rd sunday) a ancient boat festival on the Oi River. There are also lots of antiques, crafts and fleamarkets. <BR><BR>There is also the Hamamatsu (Shizuoka prefecture) kite-flying festival at the beginning of May, where some of the biggest kites in the world are flown. Not exactly romantic, but definitely something worth seeing.
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