February 26th, 2007
Tokyo Shopping - Hundred Yen Shops
Sprinkled here and there (building codes seem to involve structure more than content or activity in Japan) and very commonly around Tokyo, wonderful 100 yen shops – sometimes 99 yen, maybe a competing firm – offer resident and visitor a wild array of basic items. Almost everything is for sale for the basic fee plus a small consumption tax, which means these are the dollar ...
Posted in Shopping by tokyoblogger1 -
February 22nd, 2007
Getting around Tokyo in the train system is one of the most convenient things and also one of the most maddening things you can experience in Japan. Let me give a couple of pros and cons:
Pros
You can get anywhere in Tokyo riding the subway/train system.
Trains are always on time so you know exactly when it's going to pull into the station.
Most train announcements have English now, so it makes it ...
Posted in Attractions, News by Archived -
February 17th, 2007
Tokyo – Day Excursions - Hakone
Less than a hundred kilometers from teeming Tokyo, Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park, internationally famous for hot springs (including Owakudani), hiking and outdoor activities, majestic natural beauty and fabulous views of nearby Mount Fuji is deservedly one of the most popular destinations for visitors and Japanese alike. Well served with and by mass transit, including on Lake Ashi, the big park offers tourists a range of ...
Posted in Attractions by tokyoblogger1 -
February 13th, 2007
Here's what I love about this country. You DON'T have to tip!!! That is such a relief as I hate to calculate how much someone's tip should be worth. In the US, oftentimes I get a waiter who provides lousy service, but you don't want to deal with the hassle of giving a bad tip so you grudgingly put down 15% even thought you want to give zero. To my ...
Posted in Attractions by Archived -
February 12th, 2007
EuropeByAir--While in Tokyo, pick up your EuropeByAir FlightPass, FlightPasses are valid for flights solely within Europe and are sold in countries outside of Europe to non-European residents only. Aigle Azur Airlines based in Paris , France has recently joined the EuropebyAir FlightPass program. Further information and a Route Map are available at www.EuropebyAir.com.
Bill Wolf, President of EuropebyAir stated, "Continuing forward with our expansion plans to add new and exciting destination ...
Posted in Attractions by tokyoblogger1 -
February 10th, 2007
Mori Art Museum -
The Smile in Japanese Art: From the Jomon Period to the Early Twentieth Century.
Through May 5: All About Laughter: Humor in Contemporary Art, show continues through May 5.
Lucy Birmingham Fuji, art reviwer with Japan Times, pointed out in her coverage of this show with two parts, “Funny and dark, the Mori laughs” that "The Smile in Japanese Art," subtitled "From the Jomon Period to the Early ...
Posted in Attractions by tokyoblogger1 -
February 8th, 2007
1) Bring money! Some restaurants and shops only accept cash and even a few places that accept credit cards only accept Japanese credit cards. Cash is good, but you'll get a better exchange rate if you carry travelers checks. I always recommend exchanging at least half of the money you're going to spend at the exchange counter at Narita airport. Otherwise it's sometimes hard to find exchange places around the ...
Posted in Attractions by Archived -
February 6th, 2007
In Tokyo,whether you are resident or tourists there are various Japanese native
foods and theme park is fameous.The attraction of theme park is we have the opp
ortunity to taste many kinds of foods in place.Head to,Ikebukoro gyoza shops,conveniently located at the heart of Tokyo.
Here,over 15 gyoza shops are ready to serve you without delay.Apart from gyoza,beer
and juice are available.Prices ranges from 450yen to 600yen.
Nerest station:JR Ikebukoro.
Address:3-1-3,Higashi ikebukoro,
sunshine city.World import-mart 2F,
Namco namja-town.
Telephone:03-5950-0765.
Open:10am-10pm.(daily)
Addmision:300yen ...
Posted in Attractions by tokyoblogger2 -
February 2nd, 2007
Zojoji Temple & Tokyo Towers
Located adjacent to one another, the enormous Tokyo Tower, taller than the sort-of-similar Eiffel (but because of its improved construction methods, weighing in at half the tonnage) forms counterpoint to the Zojoji Temple, main center for the Buddhist Jodo sect in the Kanto area. Originally built in about 1393, the temple was moved to this location in the 1590s presumably because of the transition during which ...
Posted in Attractions by tokyoblogger1 -
February 2nd, 2007
Electric Town
Akihabara, abbreviated a bit to “Akiba,” is a brightly lit shopping district which rose from the ashes of a region prophylacticly razed following a WWII conflagration in order to buffer the Imperial residence. Thus the “Autumn Leaves Field,” or Akihabara – named for all that was visible on the site then – of today hosts a shopper’s warren, including the Japan Rail station, more properly and fully known as ...
Posted in Attractions by tokyoblogger1 -