29.8.10

Weird arcade game ever : Dad get´s tired of the family and tips over the table !

From ゲム
From ゲム
Choosing the character From ゲム
From ゲム
From ゲム

Tamagotchi turns into a Maiko!

From tamagotchi mochi
Una 'maiko' es una aprendiz de geisha; esta palabra se compone de los kanji 舞 (mai) que significa "baile" y 子 (ko) que significa "niña". Es la maiko, con su blanco maquillaje y peinado y kimono elaborados, quien se ha convertido en el estereotipo de la "geisha" para los occidentales, en lugar de la verdadera geisha. - Maiko (まいこ, マイコ?) is a Japanese word for dancing girl and is an apprentice geisha. Maiko is also a feminine Japanese given name.

Delicious summer lunch : Soumen ( cold ramen ) ≠( ̄-( ̄)モグモグモグ

From food / ryory

28.8.10

Japan Trip part II - OSAKA 大阪 - yaki Anago pretz ( eel )

the first thing we did : Buy Unagi pretz!
From osaka
Pretz (プリッツ, Purittsu) is a Japanese snack made by Ezaki Glico. It is stick-shaped and similar in texture to a pretzel (hence the name). Unlike Ezaki Glico's other popular stick-shaped snack food, Pocky, Pretz is rarely sweet. Popular flavors include salad, "roast" (which despite its name, is a flavor composed of butter, honey and coffee), tomato, honey mustard ("American"), corn, pizza, butter, bacon, maple syrup, melon, spicy chicken ("Beer"), and cacao. Special flavours can be found in other countries such as larb in Thailand, pineapple in Hawaii, coconut in Guam and Saipan, maple in Canada, abalone in Hong Kong, and green tea, green pea, plum salt in Japan.

Japan Trip part I - Aunthentic China shop in KOBE 神戸市

From china
From china
From china
From china

Japan Trip part I - China food town in KOBE 神戸市 and shop

From china


Typical food shops
From china
From china
From china
From china - Pand & pig dumpling
From china
From china

7 am : Breakfast in Tsukiji market , Tokyo - Chirashii + tataki don

From food / ryory

26.8.10

Japan Trip part I - KOBE 神戸市 - More Architecture WTF

From kobe
From kobe
From kobe

Japan Trip part I - KOBE 神戸市 - Frank Gehry´s Fish restaurant from the 80s

From kobe
From kobe
From kobe

アイル村 Todaaaay! nya



More! モンハン日記 ぎりぎりアイルー村 ☆アイルー危機一髪 Monster Hunter diary: airu mura anime!


25.8.10

Japan Trip part I - Futuristic real boat prototypes from the 80s KOBE 神戸市

From kobe
From kobe
From kobe
From kobe
From kobe
From kobe

Houses in the street - Kobe

Japan Trip part I - KOBE 神戸市 - Petit patio Kitano



3 vending machines + 2 tables + 5 chairs = petit patio kitano

Japan Trip part I - 1995 Earthquake in KOBE 神戸市 - real samples and memorial









The Great Hanshin earthquake, or Kobe earthquake, was an earthquake that occurred on Tuesday, January 17, 1995, at 05:46 JST in the southern part of Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan.[1] It measured 6.8 on the Moment magnitude scale (USGS), and Mj7.3 (adjusted from 7.2) on JMA magnitude scale The tremors lasted for approximately 20 seconds. The focus of the earthquake was located 16 km beneath its epicenter,on the northern end of Awaji Island, 20 km away from the city of Kobe.
Approximately 6,434 people lost their lives (final estimate as of December 22, 2005); about 4,600 of them were from Kobe.[4] Among major cities, Kobe, with its population of 1.5 million, was the closest to the epicenter and hit by the strongest tremors. This was Japan's worst earthquake since the Great Kantō earthquake in 1923, which claimed 140,000 lives. It caused approximately ten trillion yen in damage, 2.5% of Japan's GDP at the time. Based on the average currency conversion rate over the following 500 days of 97.545 yen per USD, the quake caused $102.5 billion in damage.



Japan Trip part I - Eating Kobe beaf in KOBE 神戸市 - ñam









Japan Trip part I - Kitano ( America mura ) KOBE 神戸市 - Architecture WTF!


*Kitano-chō (北野町?) or Kitano Ijinkan (北野異人館) is a historical district in Kobe, Japan, which contains a number of foreign residences from the late Meiji and early Taishō eras of Japanese history. While the term ijinkan (異人館?) can refer to any foreign residence of this period in Japan, it usually refers to those of Kitano given the number and high concentration of those that remain. Ijinkan districts exist in other locales (notably Yokohama and Nagasaki), but due to war and natural disasters, these districts are not as well preserved. While some of the houses still serve as residences, many are open to tourists, making Kitano-chō one of the principal tourist attractions
in Kobe