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OTARU/SAPPORO

 The New York Times this morning published 8 charts comparing President Donald Trump's performance with that of this predecessors.  Here are three of them:



Doing very poorly.

I am the only person I know in Hawaii with a roots link to Hokkaido.  My father's father, Kenjiro, came from here.  I have made several trips to Akita in northern Honshu, Otaru (where Kenjiro was born), Sapporo (where the population was only 1,256 in 1872 when he was born) and Utashinai.  One thing I learned in this effort is that Kenjiro is a name given to a first son.  I am named after him with Kenji, which stands for second son, which I am.

  • On another, I actually started in Akita, from where Kenjiro's parents came, caught a ship to Otaru, took a train to Sapporo, where the family stopped for a while, then a train to Asahikawa, then bus to Utashinai, where they settled,  Can't imagine how they got from Otaru (3) to Sapporo (1) to Utashinai, for the first railway line connecting Otaru and Saporro did not occur until 1880.  On this map, Utashinai is a long taxi ride to the east (left) and slightly south (lower) from Asahikawa (6).
  • Here is a photo where I'm standing at the gravestone area of the Nakayama family, Kenjiro's mother link.


About Otaru:

  • Otaru in Ainu means river running through the sandy beach. There are seven rivers running through the city.
  • Current population of 107,432.
  • Is a 25-minute drive from Sapporo.
Sapporo.
  • With nearly 2 million people, the largest city in Japan north of Tokyo.
  • City began in 1869,
  • Hosted the 1972 Winter Olympics, the first held in Asia.
  • Annual Snow Festival draws more than 2 million.
With that, our ship arrived in Otaru, here it is, just about May, and there was snow on the mountains.
We left on the tour of Otaru and Sapporo at 8AM, and did not return until 3PM.  Saw a lot of Sakura trees in blossom on our way to our first stop, the Sapporo Okurayama Ski Jump Stadium, which remained from the 1972 Winter Olympics.  We caught the Ropeway to the top and back.  I've been to Sapporo numerous times and did not know this attraction existed,  It was, with lunch, about the only highlight for the entire tour.  We were told that the cherry blossoming had recently started, so the peak was yet to come.


There is also the 1972 Winter Olympics Museum here
Some Sakura up here,
Scary escalator that takes you up and down,
Something about the traffic of Saporro, but it took us a long time to finally get to our lunch site.  Called Kirin Beer Garden, it is an all you can eat and drink Genghis Khan restaurant, for around $35, if we paid, but this came free with the tour.
It's a grill your own place.  Running out of food, order more.  Same for drinks.
Absolutely great. We were finished by 12:20PM and had more than 3.5 hours remaining, with half a dozen sites I've previously been to that would have been worthwhile.  Nope, they immediately drove us back to Otaru, and sent us off shopping at an enclosed neighborhood.  No doubt Oceania got paid a fee to do this.  What a waste.  Worse, I couldn't find my Pocket 3 video camera in my coat pocket.  Found the tour guide, and called the restaurant.  Nothing there.  So we walked back to bus, hoping the camera had fallen around my seat.  A few photos, where the seafood market was the only place of real interest.  Most startling was a black asparagus,
A $16 meal.
Note the black asparagus.

Got back to the bus, and my camera was sitting on my seat.  What a relief.  Back to the Riviera.
Soon after we returned, lecture on Japanese Cinema, and how Hollywood kept copying Japanese films, mostly by Akira Kurosawa,

Next Enlish Tea Time, featuring the Amadeus String Quartet.
Came back to my room, and took nap from 5PM.  Finally got out of bed at 10AM.  I have never slept 18 hour in one day in my life.  At this point, only had walked 6058 steps for the day.  Of course missed dinner and breakfast, so went to an Italian lunch.
Tomorrow, at sea.  We got as close as 100 miles from Russia, so tomorrow, I might focus on that country, for the lecture series continues with Adam Tanner and his experiences in the Soviet Union.
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