Well, it`s my last night in Japan and this post comes from a bedroom in the Toyoko Inn near Narita Airport - a giant chain hotel where the corridors feel like the interior of a spaceship, and for all you would know, outside a nuclear war might have got under way...
Very different from the place I went to last Friday with Koujisan, Yuuka`s Dad: Nakanosawa Mori no gakko (forest school) is in the mountainous part of Niigata region, where people still live in harmony with the land. Bears, deer and Japanese monkeys (nihonzaru) roam wild in the thick forests composed of many different tree species. Number one (certainly for Koujisan, whose dream is to publish a photobook of them, though I can`t tell his wife) is the natual cedar, or shinrensugi. Shinrensugi may live for aeons and often their trunks develop in weird and wonderful ways, even separating into different branches which become equal partners in trunkship, allowing them to grow on steep hillsides where other trees don`t find foothold. The oldest, called the shogunsugi (boss of cedars) is 1400 years old. In other words it was already venerable when Genghis Khan led his horde west out of Mongolia. Incredible! The shogun is treated with appropriate respect and is like a temple to the Japanese. I wasn`t quite prepared for the need to put a 100 yen coin in a box and say a prayer before mounting the wooden walkway surrounding its huge circumference, but I think Kouji forgave my impatience to get close to it.
Long live the Shogunsugi!
There are so many more things I could mention from the Morigako, but it would take more time than I have now.
Anyway, it gave me a taste for disccovering more of the natural wonders of this country, which are easy to forget in the highrise hustle of Tokyo. When I come again, I want to go skiing in the Niigata area, diving off the coast of Sado Island, see the wilderness of Hokkaido and the tropical beauty of Okinawa.
Will have to get a job to do that though!
OK, thanks for reading, and putting up with my numerous digressions (he cranes his neck to see if any seats might be filled in the gloom at the back of the theatre)... This is the end of my japan blog september 2009.
(But no doubt I will go on to muse on other topics on this very same page)
Sayonara!!!