O Christmas Tree!

I used to have mixed feelings about Christmas trees. On the one hand, I felt that in an increasingly deforested world, it wasn’t right to grow plantations of trees only to cut them down for a few weeks of decorations. On the other hand, having an adorned tree in your living room with gifts underneath is a very happy thing to behold.

The solution for most is to either have a plastic tree, which is problematic unto itself, or have a live potted tree, a fantastic idea. Or as I like to do, just go and visit all the Christmas trees around town.

There are plenty of the traditional pine and fir Christmas trees. Moka loves them and this one is her favorite. She runs up to it every time we pass by and yanks at the ornaments.

Mitsukoshi tree

These next two are made of everyday objects. One is made of magazines and newspapers and the other is made of cork. There should be a movement to make Christmas trees out of recycled materials, like CDs, rags and euro bills.

paper tree

cork tree

My personal favorite was a brilliantly lit tree in Aqua City, an indoor mall by Tokyo Bay. The colors constantly changed and at regular intervals there was a light show accompanied by a lot of dramatic music. A little over the top but magical.

Aqua City christmas tree

Aqua City christmas tree

Aqua City christmas tree

But nothing beats the trees, alive and festive, in nature itself. Usually, the leaves change colors in late November here in Tokyo, but this year was very late. The colors have been peaking in the last week or so just in time for Christmas.

May your Christmas and the New Year be equally colorful and vibrant.

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Photos of the Week: The Zoo Storefront

A one year old notices things that escapes the attention of adults.  A child’s eye-level is closer to the ground.  Like the boar’s head and skull on the chair below that Moka strenuously pointed to, and then gravely stared at.

I wonder what the restaurant was trying to advertise with this display?  Do they serve a lot of gamey pork?  Is it an establishment where ‘men can be men’?  Are hunters and taxidermists welcome?  Is it a warning to those born in the year of the boar?  Moka didn’t seem interested in finding out so we moved on.boar's head Continue reading

The Earthquake

8.9 on the Richter scale.  That’s one way to get me back writing on this blog of mine.

Thank you everyone for your messages of support and well-wishing.  Everyone I know is safe.  I had friends walk for 2 to 8 hours to get home last night.    News reports showed all bicycles had been sold out in Tokyo. My father-in-law drove through streets with no working traffic lights. He said the traffic was slow but orderly with drivers hand-signaling each other at intersections.

We were most worried about Tomoko’s 90 year old grandmother.  She lives by herself in a small farming village near the epicenter.  But we got word that she was perfectly fine. And her village, inland and on high ground, was largely unscathed.  What a miracle! Continue reading

The Gulf Oil Spill at Your Doorsteps

tokyo oil spill

This is the Gulf Oil Disaster superimposed on a map of Japan if the spill had originated in Tokyo. The website, If It Were My Home, allows anyone to ‘bring home’ the catastrophe to their doorsteps to better understand the scale of the catastrophe. As you can see from the map, the spill would smother the entire Kanto region, stretching out past Nagoya, over to the other side of Honshu to the East Sea.

The oil could easily drift down to Kyoto and Osaka. Yokohama and Tokyo Bays would be thick with petroleum far out into the Pacific.

I was curious about some of the other places I’d called home. Continue reading