The Abalone Connection: Shining shells across the sea.
Two abalone shells originally harvested off the California coast by Japanese divers and brought to Minamiboso as gifts. |
Our Return to Japan - So many anniversaries! This is the 50th anniversary of my first visit to Japan in 1965 while I was a graduate student at the East-West Center in Honolulu. I've brought many groups to Japan since, but in 1995 - 20 years ago, I discovered the Minamiboso area from which many of the Japanese fishermen immigrated to the Monterey Bay Region, and in particular, the abalone divers.
It was in 1995 that I met Kaori Mizoguchi who has been my friend and collaborator ever since. Kaori has brought many of her neighbors from Minamiboso to California, and we have brought many of our friends to Japan. However, when the yen became so strong that we could no longer afford to travel in Japan, we put our trips on hold. This year, as the dollar strengthened against the yen, Kaori and I began planning our return.
Thus, on this visit we will be celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Lydon-Mizoguchi partnership, and many friends await us in Minamiboso.
The Group - There are 33 of us all told. Most are from the immediate Santa Cruz County area, but we also have representatives from Castroville (!), Monterey, Boise Idaho, Portland, and Hawai'i.
This Blog - I will be attempting to make daily postings on this blog along with a photograph or two. However, though I value your opinion on many of the things we'll be discussing -- whaling, comfort women, World War II -- I won't have time to chat with you. Nor even read your thoughts about things. You'll have to be satisfied to "think to yourself" -- kind of like when the nuns at Sacred Heart School in Hollister told us to "read to ourselves." Whom else might we be reading to?? So, this blog is designed not to accept comments.
Day #1 – Fri., May 15 – Depart SFO on United
Airlines Flight #875
Day #2 – Sat., May 16 – Arrive Tokyo (Haneda Airport)
– We
are flying to and from the more centrally-located Haneda Airport as it will
offer us a better opportunity to experience the Sanja Matsuri on Sunday. Transfer
from airport to hotel – Tokyo Hotel is the Royal
Park
Day #3 – Sun. May 17 – Sanja Matsuri – The largest
festival in Japan. Then depart Tokyo for
for Tateyama. Check in to Tomiura Royal Hotel for first of 4
nights.
Days #4 – 7 – Segment #1 – Tateyama and Minami-boso
Using the
Tomiura Royal as our base, we will spend the next four days and evenings with
our long-time friends exploring this beautiful, rural and historic part of Japan. We will be highlighting several themes
including:
·
The abalone
diving history
that connects Tateyama and the Monterey Bay Region.
·
World War II –
2015 marks the 70th anniversary of the end of the war. We believe that we should celebrate the war’s
end and the seventy years of peace between the United States and Japan. We will
visit the place where Allied troops first landed in September, 1945 as well as
tour tunnel complexes and kamikaze aircraft bunkers that were prepared to
defend against an Allied invasion should it have occurred. We will be guided by local historians and
eyewitnesses.
·
Comfort women – One of the
stories that continue to haunt the World War II landscape is that of the women
who were forced into prostitution to service Japanese troops throughout
Asia. We will visit one of the few
(only?) monuments in Japan dedicated to the memory of these women as well as a
special support village currently providing support for ex-prostitutes.
·
Gaibo Hogei
Shore Whaling Station
– Over the past 20 years we have developed a deep friendship with Shoji-san,
the owner and manager of one of the few shore-whaling stations still operating
on the coast of Japan. Our visit there
will include the cemetery where the spirits of the individual whales are
honored and commemorated by the company.
·
Hiking and
Exploring -- Our
hotel is located on top of a stunning peninsula, and there’s a pathway leading
down to a pebbled beach that is famous for its seashells. And seaglass.
Matsuo Basho, Japan's most revered poet. We will be following part of his journey and reading his poems. |
Day #8 - Fri.
May 22 – Tateyama back to Tokyo –A day in Tokyo. At the conclusion we will venture over to
Yokoyama Stadium to see a Japanese baseball game.
Day #9 – Sat. May 23 – Tokyo – With the
assistance of some of our friends, we will be traveling throughout Tokyo on
public transportation to experience one of the most efficient and amazing
transportation systems in the world. We
have tentatively scheduled visits to the Tokyo Sky Tree, the Asakusa District
and, of course, the Basho Museum.
Day #10 – Sun. May 24 – Tokyo to Nikko – We now begin
shadowing Basho, though we’ll be doing it on a bus.
Day #11 – Mon. May 25 – Nikko to Yamagata and Sendai
– We
will continue northward, visiting the Risshakuji
temple where Basho wrote one of his most famous haiku and eventually
arriving in Sendai.
Day #12 – Tues. May 26 – Sendai – Two themes will
merge here – Basho’s continuing journey, and the Great Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami of March 11, 2011. We will be visiting the area that is
recovering from the tsunami and will meet some of the survivors.
Day #13 – Wed. May 27 – Sendai Area – Hiraizumi
Choson-ji Temple – strolling
around the site – this is a World Heritage site – lots of history. Then we drive to the port of Sendai and board
the Taiheiyo Ferry – overnight
aboard the ferry to Tomakomai, Hokkaido.
It is in this area that we leave Basho’s journey and continue on to
Hokkaido.
Day #14 – Thurs May 28 – Tomakomai to Biratori to Noboribetsu
– One
of the reasons for coming to Hokkaido is to pursue the story of the Ainu. We will visit the Ainu museum in Biratori and
then continue on, through beautiful Hokkaido to Noboribetsu, one of the most
famous hot spring resorts in Japan. We
will be staying in the Mahoroba hotel that has an in-house onsen.
Day #15 – Fri. May 29 – Noboribetsu to Hakodate – We will drive
through some of Hokkaido’s volcano country, stopping to hike and visit a
volcano museum on our way to Hakodate. In the evening we will visit the famous
Hakodateyama.
Day #16 – Sat. May 30 – Hakodate – A free day to
explore Hakodate on foot and public transportation. Plenty of guidance about where to go, what to
see.
Day #17 – Sun. May 31 – Hakodate to Haneda to SFO – This is one of those travel days where you get up and
leave Japan and arrive in San Francisco before you left. We will fly from Hakodate to Haneda, and then
board our late evening United Airlines flight to SFO that is scheduled to
arrive early evening, Sunday, May 31.
(see International Dateline for details…)