Tokyo Disney on 2 Weeks’ Notice: Hightower Halloween Costume!

another great installment!

I am looking forward to the Kyoto report to see how much can really be done there in a day as our plans right now are are 2 jammed packed days there. We only have 12 more days until we leave for Japan!!! I can hardly wait!!! Because of you I am also going to visit the 100% chocolate cafe and I also read all of the Rough Guide too it had better info and maps than the other travel books I bought.
 
Hey there!

I really liked this installment, even if the whole fish market thing made me want to become a vegetarian again. :sad1:

I just made a subconcious (sp?) decision that if we ever get to go to a Disney location other than WDW (this would include DL, DLP or Tokyo Disney or Hong Kong) we will hire you as our "tour guide" (and you know I'm serious! ;))

I'm enjoying all the photos!! There's one of Patrick that totally cracked me up (the one where he's in the capsule looking thingy playing with the buttons).

Keep up the good work! :goodvibes

ETA: This was my 1,000th post!!! How ironic that it's on your TR!! :)
 
Thems some big fish. I used to have fish phobia and couldn't even look at them but luckily I got over it or that update would not have been good for me!
 

I know what you mean about your evening. I have no doubt how great it was. Sometimes the simple things are the best.

I kinda like the Barbie store lol
 
I don't quite want to imagine the smell in the fish market, but oh...the fresh tuna....YUM!!

I can completely understand how that was your "best" night in Tokyo. Sometimes relaxing in the hotel is the best kinda night. :cutie:

Woo-hoo...Kyoto! Can't wait to see your awesome pics from there. :goodvibes
 
What a wonderful tour, Carrie! I was excited to see the fish market and the fact that you ate sushi there - Samantha did that one, too - but you got better pictures and a more complete report! Kudos!:thumbsup2

It's so great how you've seen the historical, artsy, touristy and now industrial parts of Tokyo - very thorough! Your last night sounds wonderful - just the right "wind down" in a busy trip!

Consarn that Samantha Brown! :furious: She's always beating me to EVERY travel destination! :rotfl: Well I'll bet *she's* never ridden Haunted Mansion at Walt Disney World and Disneyland on the same day. (And if she has, I don't want to know about it! :lmao:)

:lmao:
I love the auction pictures! I would never go there with my family (they would smack me upside the head) BUT now I am SO craving some sushi... thanks a lot... :laughing:

You guys are really brave souls to do all those things and I would have died to eat sushi that fresh.

KUDOS to you!!! :thumbsup2

Venus fort? Is there a Mars fort right across the street? :upsidedow

:rotfl: That's a good one! Yeah, it was pretty silly. I was expecting it to be all pink and glittery and, I dunno, different! But it was just a dumb mall...

It took me awhile, but I have finally read the entire thing - what a wonderful TR! All the details make it so real, the pictures are stunning, and love your sense of humor! :)

I was in Tokyo a few years ago for work, but just for a few days and I didn't have time to see much - I have always wanted to go back on a holiday...

I am using your TR and pictures to convince my husband that this should be our next big holiday! Or at least in a couple years, once we have been able to save enough

Hooray! I'm so glad you made it through the while thing so far—I hope it really does help convince your husband. :thumbsup2

Love the update! I am glad that Patrick was excited about eating the freshest sushi! That fish auction was very interesting. And there was some really big fish there! Thank you for those great architectural pictures! They have the most interesting buildings.

You know I tried to find some kind of architectural tour of Tokyo—either self-guided or the real kind—and came up empty-handed. Someone could make a mint off carting foreigners around to look at all the craziest buildings in one day!

Oh my the Barbie store! I showed DH and he just sighed and said "find out how we get there" :rotfl:

:rotfl2: SO funny! Just to warn you, though, there are not a lot of actual Barbies there (I was disappointed, anyway)—it's mostly Barbie-inspired clothes and accessories. Although I 'pose I could just go to Toys Sure "R" Expensive if I wanted to see a whole mess of Barbies... :rotfl:


Another fabulous installment! Our trip is in about a week and a half, I'm so excited!

Oh my gosh—have SO much fun!:hyper:

another great installment!

I am looking forward to the Kyoto report to see how much can really be done there in a day as our plans right now are are 2 jammed packed days there. We only have 12 more days until we leave for Japan!!! I can hardly wait!!! Because of you I am also going to visit the 100% chocolate cafe and I also read all of the Rough Guide too it had better info and maps than the other travel books I bought.

Yay! I hope you enjoy 100% Chocolate Cafe! We only had 1 jam-packed day in Kyoto, so to me 2 days sounds fabulous. And since you can't swing a dead cat without hitting a temple or a shrine, anywhere you go will be a cultural experience!

Hey there!

I really liked this installment, even if the whole fish market thing made me want to become a vegetarian again. :sad1:

I just made a subconcious (sp?) decision that if we ever get to go to a Disney location other than WDW (this would include DL, DLP or Tokyo Disney or Hong Kong) we will hire you as our "tour guide" (and you know I'm serious! ;))

Congrats on your 1,000th post! I would TOTALLY be your tour guide—what fun! I wonder if that could actually be my job some day.... :scratchin

WANT FRESH TUNA NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

awesome update. as always.


KIM

:lmao: Glad you enjoyed it!


Thems some big fish. I used to have fish phobia and couldn't even look at them but luckily I got over it or that update would not have been good for me!

Whew! You know, you're the second person I know who has a fish phobia. I never knew there was such a thing, but now I feel bad for inflicting my shots of ginormous headless fish on the world!

I know what you mean about your evening. I have no doubt how great it was. Sometimes the simple things are the best.

Definitely! As an uber planner, I tend to lose sight of that, so I'm going to make a concerted effort not to on our next trip. :thumbsup2
 
I don't quite want to imagine the smell in the fish market, but oh...the fresh tuna....YUM!!


:lmao: Since everything so fresh, at least it wasn't that bad fish smell. But who knows, we may have come outta there smelling like fishmongers and been none the wiser! That may explain why we had a car on the monorail all to ourselves... :cutie:
 
Ok, so I just spent over 4 hours reading your trip report and I could seriously sit here and read for 4 more hours. This report is amazing. I can't wait to find out what happens next.
 
You're in luck—what happens next is coming up.... now! :goodvibes
 
Although our entire trip was planned at the last minute, our Kyoto trip was planned at the VERY last minute. Every night while I was planning, Patrick would come home with another story about how he'd mentioned our upcoming trip to someone and they'd exclaimed, "Oh, you HAVE to go to Kyoto while you're there!" This made me very anxious and grumpy. For one thing, geographically speaking, this is like telling someone that if they're going to Los Angeles, they have to see the Monterey Bay while they're there. Granted, using the bullet train cuts the trip down to about 2 hours and 15 minutes. But mostly I felt like here I was planning my buns off and some random stranger was second-guessing my itinerary (which did not have time in it for a side trip to Kyoto).

So I explained to Patrick that if we did cram a trip to Kyoto in between our Fish Market/Odaiba day and our trip to Studio Ghibli, it was going to cost a bundle and we would not be having the kind of relaxing, well-paced vacation that he declared he wanted after our crazy-go-nuts Christmas in Walt Disney World.

Since he was OK with this and I was definitely curious about the bullet train, I started pricing out our options for seeing as much of Kyoto in one day as we could. Again, I am not one for organized tours, but it seemed the most efficient way to cover a lot of ground, so I went back to the web site of Viator, the company that organized our Studio Ghibli tour. The offered two half-day tours and one full-day tour, plus tours that included tickets on the bullet train (henceforth to be referred to here as the "Shinkansen" cuz it's easier to type), but only for a half-day tour.

I thought about buying Japan Rail passes, but since this was the only place we were going outside of Tokyo, and they don't work on the Nozomi (the Shinkansen with the shortest trip), and I didn't want to feel obligated to mostly ride the JR line around Tokyo to save money on subway fare, I skipped them.

We decided to make up our own tour by buying tickets for the morning's first train (6am) and taking the full-day tour, which picked up from a hotel across the street from Kyoto station at 8:40am. The Shinkansen was to arrive at 8:11am, which seems kinda tight, but these are Japanese train schedules we're talking about here! (Tip: http://www.hyperdia.com/ is a fabulous site for Japanese train schedules—we couldn't have planned this trip without it, especially since you can't actually purchase your shinkansen tickets until you get to Japan.)

I’d expected this to be one of our more intense and hectic touring days, but it actually ran quite smoothly. We got up around 5am and went downstairs to the Shinkansen tracks to hop the first train to Kyoto. We brought the bento boxes we'd bought the night before, but we could have bought food from a mini mart on the platform too.

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Riding the train was so much fun—it was crazy to see the scenery whip by at 185mph! I knew that we should sit on the right hand side (as you face toward the front of the train) so that we could see Mt. Fuji if it was visible that day. I guess some days the air isn't clear enough. So we were very excited when we began to catch glimpses of it!

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It was also nice just to be out of the city for a change of scenery.

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As an extra-special treat, Mt. Fuji was covered in snow.


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(Sorry, there are gonna be a lot of Mt. Fuji pix cuz Patrick let me have the camera…)

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The train was moving so fast that every moment brought a new and different view of the mountain.

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Now THAT's a new and different view of Mt. Fuji!
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We got off the train at 8:11am, just like Hyperdia said we would, and made our way down the street to the Kyoto New Miyako Hotel, from which our tour—and all tours in Kyoto, it seems—departed. The lobby was bustling with tourists and tour guides, but our table was fairly easy to find.

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We passed the 20 minutes til the start of the tour by taking this picture:

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The weather in Kyoto that day was lovely—not too cool and not too hot—which was a bonus because the day before they'd had a freak snowstorm! Patrick's brother and sister-in-law had been in Kyoto that day on their Copy Carriatrick But Do Everything First Tour and got a shot of it:

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Our tour was operated by JTB Sunrise Tours, and it turned out to be HUGE—three whole buses full of people lumbering down city streets choked with other tour buses. Fortunately, we only had to worry about sticking with our bus and its guide.

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The guide stood or sat at the front of the bus and spoke into a microphone as we went. Her English was fairly easy to understand, and she even got us engaged in a little friendly competition with the other buses to see if WE could all be present and accounted for after each stop so that ours was the first bus to leave for the next stop. She was also good about not doing too much drive-by sightseeing as we moved between stops on the tour. But there was a bit of the "If you look out to the right you'll see the famous—quick, look to the LEFT! There's another famous…"

This structure may or may not be famous
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Kyoto was the imperial capital of Japan for centuries (remember that marker on Nihombashi bridge measuring the distance from Tokyo to Kyoto?) and it's a huge tourist destination today because it retains numerous original structures of historical significance due to the moratorium on bombing there during WWII. As a result, you cannot swing a dead cat without hitting a temple or a shrine or a castle in Kyoto, and tourism has become a huge industry. (Dead-cat swinging, on the other hand, has seen a steep decline.) It also clogs the streets with buses and the sights with photo-snapping yokels like us.


There were three stops planned for the morning tour and three for the afternoon tour, with a catered lunch in between. Our first stop was Nijo Castle, the residence of the ruling shogun for about 250 years until power was restored to the Emperor. I confess to being childishly disappointed to discover it wasn't a big stone castle like you think of—it was more of a low wooden house.


Where are we? Who knows—just follow that tour flag!!!
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We weren't allowed to take pictures or wear shoes inside. We left our shoes in cubbies and were lead to the back of a mass of people shuffling along the bare corridors past empty, open rooms. We'd have to pause occasionally to wait for the group in front of us to finish and move on, and at one point some official got snippy with our poor guide about where we were allowed to go next.

None of the rooms had furniture, so the focus was on the paintings and tapestries on the walls. It was neat to see depictions of animals the artists had never seen before, like tigers, and see the difference in the rooms reserved for friends and those set aside for enemies and frenemies. But the part we loved were the squeaky floors! The place was a cacophony of chirps and squeaks as the crowd moved along what are called “nightingale floors.” The sub floors contain wooden bits and nails that scrape against each other as you walk on the floor above—the aim being to alert the shogun to intruders. The parts of the castle reserved for friends and confidantes didn't have nightingale floors.

Maybe I don't have a very good imagination, but I wished they'd at least scattered some reproduction furniture—or floor pillows or something!—in the rooms to give you more to look at. The best room had some faceless mannequins representing the shogun and his wives/assistant ladies.

After we got our shoes back, our guide took us to the garden for a few minutes.

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I'll bet this says, "Take only photos, leave only footprints"
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All told, we had about 30 minutes at Nijo Castle before we were whisked off to the next sight, Kinkakuji Temple, better known as the Golden Pavilion.


Classic!
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Oooh! Another Slumming Celebrity Sighting! I think ol' Leocarpo DiNardio is advertising stubble…
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I think the tour guide said they light this mark on the hillside on fire every year to celebrate something!
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I was kind of surprised – I expected Kyoto to be like Santa Barbara or Tuscany or something — a quaint old town full of historic sights. Instead it was a regular gray, industrialized, telephone wire-crossed city with picturesque sights crammed between the cinderblock buildings.

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Our next stop was the Golden Pavilion (Kinkakuji Temple), and it was neat. I think it may have been my favorite. We all piled off the bus in a gravel parking lot and walked to a big gate, where we waited for our guide to come up to the front and pay our admission.

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If I'd paid attention to that map I might not have been so surprised at what we eventually saw, but I was trying to decide if I wanted to spend ¥600 to ring the ginormous bell out front….


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Leftover snow!
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We started at this gate…

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… and followed a winding path to suddenly come across this huge gold-leafed temple on a serene lake with mountains and forest all around. Gorgeous!

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The story here is that this amazing gold-leafed temple was built in the 1300s and managed to withstand time and war for hundreds of years (including one war when all the other buildings on the site burned down) only to be torched by a disgruntled monk in 1950! It was rebuilt in 1955, though, and freshened up in 1987 and 2003. I don't think our pictures quite do it justice, so here are a few from Wikipedia Commons:


After the fire…

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Now!

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Thanks so much for the thread and pictures. My family has really enjoyed it. Now my dd is trying to convince us to go there for her 13th birthday. lol I think we're too American to go there. :cool1:
 
Unfortunately, we only had something like 15 minutes of free time to see the whole rest of the area, which included a winding path up a hill clogged with tourists who shuffled from sight to sight snapping the obligatory pictures. Here are the obligatory pictures…

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I wish they'd let us go inside the temple!
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According to Viator's web site, Kinkakuji has "the world's most authentic and exquisite Japanese garden." I'LL be the judge of that!
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Hmmm…. Looks authentic…
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…And exquisite!
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We were almost late back to the bus cuz I had to find a restroom (hello, pit toilets!) and they don’t include extra time for bathroom breaks on the tour. But the real reason our group was hurrying was that our third stop was the Imperial Palace, and they might not let us in if we were late. Gulp!


"All of you did very well, except for Gigantor with the tiny bladder…"
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This was our first experience with an Imperial Palace tour. We were also scheduled to see the one in Tokyo on the last day of our trip, and we found they are a big deal—like touring the White House, maybe, since the Imperial Family actually lives in the various palaces part of the time.

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Outside the palace wall, everyone from all three tour buses had to form a big line that was exactly four people deep.


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Some official-looking guys stood around being official…


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At last we were allowed inside the gates to gaze upon…. Wait a minute, are those portable toilets?

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I'm afraid I don't have much commentary for ya this time. My journal gives a one-sentence account of the Imperial Palace tour: "We got in and walked around more big empty buildings and saw another lake."

How about some more pictures?

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I wish I remembered what this is—a sample of the roofing material maybe?
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I dozed off for a minute there—are we still looking at pictures of the Imperial Palace? …Oh, yes, we are….


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No idea…
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So long, Imperial Palace!
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Nice knowing ya, Imperial Palace Wall!
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THERE! Now you never have to actually GO to the Imperial Palace in Kyoto…


Off to lunch!



We had no trouble finding our bus. It smelled like the number on the flag.
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We wanted to know what this building was… Unfortunately, Gigantor lost her question-asking privileges when she held up the bus with her thimble bladder!
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Did he mean to take this shot?
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So, when you take a JTB Sunrise Tour that includes lunch, they dump you off at the Kyoto version of a port excursion on a cruise—a big building full of vendors hawking all the usual Japanese souvenirs (they give it a thin veneer of culture by calling it a “handicraft center”). I mean, I don’t think anyone BUT people on tours actually shops here. But they also gave us a big buffet lunch, which wasn’t bad. Years of throwing elbows at Disney buffets gave us the edge as we dodged the bottleneck of tourists getting free "I survived a Kyoto tour" stickers or something and dashed upstairs to the lunchroom to open the buffet.


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Our view from lunch.

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When we finished, we started at the top and worked our way down through 6 floors of tchotchkes and gewgaws. Supposedly there were handicraft demos and hands-on demos too, but we never saw those. It wasn't as terrible as I'm making it sound—everything was neatly displayed and some of it seemed to be of good quality. It was just so weird to find basically everything you can get at Japan in Epcot (minus the anime stuff… and the food…) all in one building.

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I finally found a coin purse I liked (in this trip report I've spared you the Saga of the Coin Purse) and an ingenious invention—a fan holder to keep my ubiquitous Epcot fans from getting munched in our backpack.


OK, I'm only halfway through all the pictures we took that day, so I'm going to stop and do the rest of the day in a separate installment. But I promise we're nearly done with this trip report!

Up Next: Palace, Temple, Temple, Shrine, Palace, Temple, Shrine—We Must Still Be in Kyoto!
 
Thanks so much for the thread and pictures. My family has really enjoyed it. Now my dd is trying to convince us to go there for her 13th birthday. lol I think we're too American to go there. :cool1:

No such thing—listen to your daughter! :teeth: Granted, going there does seem to intensify one's Americanness, but as long as you're not an *ugly* American it's kinda fun! Plus, the Japanese love American stuff! :rotfl:
 












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