This I find interesting I because at my first school I remember seeing clay dolls and dishes in a glass case outside the teachers room that looked a lot like some Japanese artifacts I had seen in slide form while I was taking a Japansese Art History class at Lane Community College. Come to find out, these dolls and earthenware were the exact things I had been studying in college, and just some of the many cultural remnants that first came to Japan through the area I'm now living in! The curator told me about a few excavations that had recently been done, uncovering artifacts like clay tombs that are about 2,000 years old - around a nearby Iizuka elementary school.
Another interesting note he told me was about this group of three, pointy-looking mountains that are clearly visible from where I live in Iizuka. He said that in the 19th century, coal mining techniques were adopted from Europe - and these mountains are part of the result. Basically, the mountains aren't really mountains at all - they are made of "slack," which is the excess material that is left over after the coal is separated from the earth. I find these to be a little bit funny because when I first moved in, I thought "Wow, these mountains look kind of pretty..." and had even thought of posting a picture of the "nice view" I had in Iizuka. Now, after I know they aren't natural mountains at all, they seem really ugly and very unnatural looking.
The faux-mountains in Iizuka - remnants of the days when when it was a coal-mining town.
On a bike-ride to my first school, I noticed a cannibus-leaf air freshener in what looked like a family car, and was really puzzled at the incongruity. But, after seeing that the only selection of air fresheners in what amounts to the "Iizuka Wal-Mart" are cannibus leaf-style, I am really not surprised at all, and won't be surprised to see plenty more in vehicles with non pot-smoking Japanese families. The last picture I'm posting is of the selection of air fresheners at the local "Trial Supercenter," a big superstore and 15 minute walk from my house where I do most of my shopping.
Trial, where I buy most of my household goods...
Trial's selection of car-air fresheners...
4 comments:
That is frickin hilarious.
Just reviewed your last few posts. Sounds like you are adjusting well to the new adventure. Cool bike. And cannibus (?) I was wondering how you would know a cannibus leaf?
you are in our prayers.
it took me a few seconds to figure out what a cannibus leaf was, wow. Hmmm.... that's funny. and it sounds like you class on art in college was useful..... Maybe i should go back to Chemeketa... After i start work (soon)
Wow, see that kind of pink-ish tower behind Trial? That's where I used to live!
Before Trial was built it actually used to be a huge swimming center (complete with full size olympic swimming pools and water slides... too bad it was shut down by the time I moved in. If you ever head back to Iizuka, the BEST yaki-niku restaurant I've ever been to is just across the street. I believe the name is "Shichirinya".
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