Crossing Honshu (1) Planning and taking action

in #travel6 years ago

After traveling Japan for over three times on my own - I had been to Osaka, Tokyo and Fukuoka - it felt like it was too ordinary to visit a big city again. Just then, my eyes ran over a Facebook post informing of the long holiday week celebrating Chuseok, or the Korean Thanksgiving day. I thought, this is it! I immediately began planning a new trip. 

일본으로 자유여행을 떠난 것이 대학 입학 후에만 세 번. 오사카, 도쿄, 후쿠오카를 차례로 여행하고 나니 대도시 여행은 조금 진부하게 느껴지기 시작했습니다.  마침 길고 긴 추석 연휴를 미리 알려주는 페이스북 카드뉴스가 눈에 들어왔습니다. 이거다! 싶었습니다. 당장 계획을 짜기 시작했습니다. 


At first, what I thought of was traveling from Kagoshima, the Southernmost prefecture of Kyushu, to Soya, the Northernmost prefecture of Hokkaido. However, everyone who heard my plan said I was mad, and I had to admit that I didn't have neither enough time nor budget. Instead, I soon came up with an alternative plan that was surely more feasible, but still challenging enough. I decided to travel from Fukuoka to Osaka, crossing about half of Honshu, the main island of Japan. 

처음에는 규슈 최남단인 가고시마 현에서 홋카이도 최북단인 소야 현까지 여행하는 일정을 짰다가 주변 사람으로부터 미쳤냐는 소리를 듣고 시간도 돈도 없다는 사실을 인정하기로 했습니다. 대신 좀 더 현실적이고 매력적인 대안을 마련했습니다. 후쿠오카에서 오사카까지, 혼슈를 반 쯤 횡단하는 코스였습니다. 


<The approximate course I took for the trip>


Then the first day of the trip came. After arriving at Fukuoka International Airport, I immediately went to Hakata station to take a Shinkansen to Hiroshima. I ride the bus line 2 whenever I go to the downtown from Fukuoka International Airport, because the bus station is right in front of the terminal exit. It might be better to take the subway because it comes more often, but you have to take a free shuttle bus to the domestic terminal, so it depends on your schedule. In both cases, it costs ¥260.

드디어 여행 첫 날이 다가왔습니다. 후쿠오카 공항에 도착하자마자 바로 하카타 역으로 이동한 후 히로시마 역으로 가는 신칸센을 탔습니다. 저는 후쿠오카 공항에서 시내로 이동할 때마다 국제선 출구 바로 앞에 있는 버스정류장에서 2번 버스를 탑니다. 지하철을 타려면 국내선까지 가는 셔틀(무료)을 타야해서 귀찮긴 하지만, 더 자주 운행되기 때문에 스케줄에 맞게 이용하시면 됩니다. 


<One of the Shinkansen entrances. There are some useful facilities inside.>

<The well-known chocolate croissant from il FORNO del MIGNON. You should definitely try it.>


The train I took was Nozomi (のぞみ), the fastest train service running on Sanyo Shinkansen. It took an hour and ten minutes to reach Hiroshima, and cost ¥8750 including the seat reservation fee. 

이날 탄 열차는 산요 신칸센의 최고등급 열차인 노조미 N700계입니다. 히로시마에 도착하는 데에는 8750엔, 대략 1시간 10분 정도 걸렸습니다. 신칸센은 처음 타봤는데 엄청 조용하고 좌석도 넓어서 KTX보다 쾌적하단 느낌이었습니다.  


<Just before on board. The last stop of this train was Shin-Osaka.>

<Inside the train. it was really quiet and comfortable.>



[To be continued / 다음 편에 이어집니다]

Thanks for reading :) @cherishmey

Sort:  

Welcome to Steem Community @cherishmey! As a gentle reminder, please keep your master password safe. The best practise is to use your private posting key to login to Steemit when posting; and the private active key for wallet related transactions.

In the New Steemians project, we help new members of steem by education and resteeeming their articles. Get your articles resteemed too for maximum exposure. You can learn more about it here: https://steemit.com/introduceyourself/@gaman/new-steemians-project-launch

Cheer Up!

  • from Clean STEEM activity supporter

Congratulations @cherishmey, this post is the eighth most rewarded post (based on pending payouts) in the last 12 hours written by a Dust account holder (accounts that hold between 0 and 0.01 Mega Vests). The total number of posts by Dust account holders during this period was 5327 and the total pending payments to posts in this category was $555.24. To see the full list of highest paid posts across all accounts categories, click here.

If you do not wish to receive these messages in future, please reply stop to this comment.

Hello @cherishmey let welcome you on board steemit is a great experience hope you enjoy it

Thank you! I sure am looking forward to my future steemit experience :)

Welcome to Steem Community ! As a gentle reminder, please keep your master password safe. The best practise is to use your private posting key to login to Steemit when posting; and the private active key for wallet related transactions. In the New Steemians project, we help new members of steem by education and resteeeming their articles. Get your articles resteemed too for maximum exposure. You can learn more about it here: Steemit education
if you will be fine,if you have any questions, please contact us my dear @cherishmey ))

와우 여행기가 기대됩니다. 저는 올해 규슈 전역 한바퀴 돌아보는 것으로 만족하고 왔는데요. 팔로우하고 챙겨보겠습니다. :-)

규슈 너무 좋죠! 이부스키에서 모래찜질하는게 제 소원입니다 ㅎㅎ 팔로우 감사합니다. 맞팔할게요!

Hello there! :)

Congratulations @cherishmey! You have completed some achievement on Steemit and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :

You published your First Post
You made your First Vote
You got a First Vote
You made your First Comment
You got a First Reply

Click on any badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard.
For more information about SteemitBoard, click here

If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how here!

This all sounds so foreign to me. Once I get my U.S. citizenship I might go to Japan though. Do lots of people know English there?

Unfortunately, nope. It's okay for the big cities and some famous tourist attractions but most of the Japanese cannot afford to speak in English. If you really need to speak in English, try 'Wasei Eigo' - it's a form of Japanese expression based on English. It's way better for them to understand.

What do most Japanese learn for their second language?

They have to learn English in schools by law, but they mostly study the language for the big university entrance exam which mainly consists of only reading and listening. This is a common situation in most of the East Asia countries.
To me, it seems like Japanese are especially exclusive to English, as they encourage using Wasei Eigo on TV broadcasts, even to people who can speak English fluently.

I'm from India and I now live in US. So I see a big difference in developed countries and my home country. I never realized that Japan is developed but not "westernized" until I read this. I actually though Japan was pretty much still developing country like China until I read this as well, because I had visited China with my cousin once. It's quite interesting how Japan is so industrialized but it still retains its own culture. In India people somehow equate being "westernized" with being "modern" and they are giving up the traditional stuff.

Ahhh, yes. I wasn't aware of the difference between the two concepts (western and modern) before you mentioned them. I actually was kinda tired of the modernness that I could feel in big cities, and that's why I planned a trip to visit small towns. and after the trip I was deeply impressed with the traditional feeling. But I heard that even the older in Japan are worrying about losing the cultural identity. It's a shame that many people don't really care about preserving their own culture these days... :(

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.30
TRX 0.11
JST 0.033
BTC 63968.82
ETH 3136.80
USDT 1.00
SBD 4.28