Time for the long journey home

Wayne was up again at 0-dark-thirty running the tub and clearing out his sinuses.  Something in the clinic was being passed around before he left, and it seems as though he shared some of it with me.  Thank goodness for Emergen-C, and for the 5000 IU vitamin C drink I found at Don Quijote.  We have been doing a lot of "mask clearing" on those three dives in the guise of blowing our noses.  Looks like his congestion is here to stay.

We did a final walk through Onno Village this morning, roughly a two mile jaunt.  We were going to need to get in walking, because we will be in transit for about 15 hours today, with a lot of sitting, and very little exercising.  Maybe a lap or two around Narita will be in store.  And in case you were wondering, the “bus” next to which Wayne is standing is not real.  It is a “K Car” with a VW logo on it, painted the exact appropriate colors!

Smooth sailing to return the rental car, and we wound up going over a bridge that looks like the Friendship Bridge in Palau.  It must be a common type of architecture in Japan.  Regardless, it was fun to ride across in daylight hours!

And now we are in the ANA lounge awaiting our 12:20 flight to Narita.  I was happily able to finish up the blog, and will post it when we get to Narita.  I will probably update yesterday’s entries with photos from our dives, but the gist will remain the same.

There is so much to see, to do, to eat here in Okinawa, I feel as though we didn’t even scratch the surface.  I told Wayne I wished Eliot was doing a Darien and spending two years here.  We could come back for two weeks the next time and get in so much more.  I really highly recommend this trip to anyone and everyone - it has been amazing.

Have a wonderful day!

Back in the water again

We got up this morning, but I slept in while Wayne went out walking along the beach at the resort.  He found it quite enjoyable, and I enjoyed the extra rest.  Then it was off to breakfast, and then to Maeda Point.

Maeda Point is also known as “Danger Spot Number Five” according to the AFN commercials.  Those of you who read this who were stationed overseas remember commercials like that, along with the OPSEC commercials...Some days the point earns that reputation, other days it is a beautiful place to dive or snorkel, as it was today.  The key is checking out the sea conditions before you gear up.  If the water is rough or foamy there is no safe place to don or remove your fins or even get a secure foothold. Two days ago, when the water was flat, we saw signs placed at the top of the stairs warning swimmers about the sea condition.  But two airmen who were coming up the steps said not to worry, the dive was good and conditions were fine.

We got there, and entered the paid parking lot.  It is 100 yen/hour.  We put together our gear, and consolidated our valuables into one backpack, which Wayne then put into a locker in the men’s shower room.  Of course, I managed to leave my compass and my mask inside the car, so he had to go back, get the keys, open up the car, and pay another 100 yen for the locker.  :p

Once we were geared up, it was time to hike down to the entry point.  There were a lot of steps.  A lot.  I can only imagine how much of a pain in the butt it was to get down when there weren’t any stairs.  We waded out to waist level, put on our fins, and swam out to the dropoff.  Our first dive was to the left, second to the right with the cave.  Towards the left side we saw a Heron Ardeadoris nudibranch, which was quite lovely; a cluster of at least 10 fire dart fish, if not more; a free swimming banded snake eel; and a number of ferocious anemone fish, bent on protecting their anemones!  They were reminiscent of the Hawaiian Dascyllus, which come out to attack if you get too close as well.

To the right, we started out looking for the cave, which is a very popular tourist site, but we veered away from the shore out a little further.  There we saw a school of what I think were pinnate spadefish, more anemone fish, and a juvenile bumphead parrotfish.  We wended our way to the cave, and there we saw an even more interesting group - dive instructors doing what appeared to be discover scuba diving dives!  The instructors were indivdiually holding two divers each, and guiding them to the cave.  Personally, I didn’t find the cave to be too exciting - as you go up to the top, there is an air pocket where you can take your reg out and breathe normally.  Having done chandelier cave in Palau many, many times, I’d already checked that block.

If you decide to dive here, it’s really easy.  You descend and go either right or left, and when you hit what you want to be your halfway point, turn around and come back.  Make sure you have more than a half tank left, there can be some strong current on your way in.

This was the first time we have done two shore dives in a morning in a long time.  We have taken to doing one long dive in the mid morning, and then enjoying a lunch out in the mid afternoon.  This was a bit of work :)

After rinsing gear, we brought the tanks and weights back to Torii.  I checked out the rental/fill prices.  A 100 fill card was $400, for either 32 or 36!  $4 per tank!  Rental was only $9/tank!!!  And weights were $2 per day.  You can’t beat that.  At all.  Lunch was at the beach cafe (really just a pavilion with tables and chairs served by a short order grill staff), and had a late lunch.  We were starving, and we weren’t let down with the food.  All in all, thumbs up for Torii Dive Locker, and Torii Station in general.

We got back to the resort, cleaned ourselves up, and took a nap at about 6 pm, setting the alarm for 7.  We had checked out the menu for the resort restaurant, and were looking forward to dinner.  Alas, no menu, only buffet style, with food I would very likely not eat.  We went out to another Okinawan food style restaurant, which Wayne predicted a) I wouldn’t like and b) wouldn’t take credit cards.  We will never know about a, but b was true.  So we headed back to our home away from home, and went to check out the Joyfull restaurant (yes, Joyfull!).  

We were pleasantly suprised with the menu, and definitely happy about the prices.  And they have an ordering system I wish more restaurants would have.  Instead of waitstaff hovering over you, when you have made up your mind, you press a buzzer, and they come and take your order, instantly sending it to the kitchen.  Your meal comes out in about 5 minutes.  Wayne had mackerel, I had steak, and we both ate happily.

Once again, two tired puppies are headed to bed.

Oyasuminasai!

Sweet dreams!!

To dive, or not to dive?

How can that even be a question?

Well, we had a date with a REAL whale shark today!  We went and checked out both the Kadena dive shop and the Torii Station dive shop.  While the Kadena dive shop had DIN tanks, Torii had two different things that really tipped the scales.  First, they rent nitrox tanks for $9 each.  Second, they feature a whale shark dive!  You have to make your reservations 24 hours in advance, and it fills up quickly, so once you know you are going to Okinawa, get in touch!

 

Annually, approximately 40 whale sharks are caught accidentally by Okinawan fishing nets. Before they are released, the fishing company holds them in a net enclosure, feeds them well, and offers divers a once in a lifetime encounter with them. Some of these whale sharks may end up in the Churaumi Aquarium or the Ring of Fire Aquarium in Osaka, but most of them are released back into the ocean after they have recuperated.

We had been worried that we would miss the dive, as 1 divemaster per four divers is required, but the shop manager blessed us with an additional divemaster (professional courtesy and good business), so we were on.

At 12:30, we received our briefing, which was a little humorous at times (do you know how to do a boat dive?  A back roll entry?).  We rented our tanks (it’s a one tank dive which lasts about 40-45 minutes) and weights.  At 1:00 we went tothe Yomiton Port, and joined a multitude of divers from Top Marine.  We loaded up our gear after assembling it (and it was HOT), and proceeded out on the 5 minute boat ride.  When we got out there, we did our back rolls in, and Wayne’s reel separated and headed into the net enclosure, where a 15’ whale shark was circling, getting fed.  Once his issue was resolved, we headed down to join our companions, inside the net.  Unfortunately, when we got down there, my camera screen went black, and the on/off and picture buttons wouldn’t respond.  Although I didn’t know it at the time, the new portable charger I bought for my Sony batteries did not work, and I had put in a dead battery.  :(  At least we had Wayne’s camera, which he shared with me.  While the overall experience felt a bit contrived, there was still a profound majesty about the encounter.  Watching the whale shark eat, and its gills move as it inhaled its food was amazing.  And there was a multitude of other fish out in the water with him (it is a juvenile male).  Of course, we didn’t pay as much attention to them…

Most of the residents stay less than a year, and they seem to enjoy interacting with the divers, frequently nudging them, and seemingly asking for attention.  Check out the information and video for the whale shark dive here.

We came up from the dive happy, and rented 4 nitrox tanks for tomorrow.  We will be diving Maeda Beach in the morning.

Then it was off to AJ Onna Biru Resort Hotel.  Arrival got off to a rocky start - we had pre-paid for the room, but needed to pay a double occupancy supplement.  I don’t speak Japanese.  The front desk clerks don’t speak English.  And add to that, the internet didn’t seem to work, so the husband was particularly cranky.  Luckily, a woman (manager I would guess) came out and showed the clerk the error of his ways.  She then gave us a D-Link wifi signal generator for the room, and off we went.

And the air conditioning didn’t work, it was off when we got in the room.  The manager came up to try to fix it, to no avail, so another gentleman came up and reset the unit.  We should be cool tonight.

From here, it was off to a final dinner with a freshly shorn Eliot, at a Brazilian steakhouse/churrascaria in Chatan (aka America Town).  It was nice, but not completely authentic - no sushi!  The drive to Nishihara was a wild one - I don’t think I’ve ever seen Wayne hit 120 km/h, but he did on the way to pick up Eliot!  The steak and pork and chicken were good, and the boys enjoyed their chicken hearts.  I think Mr. Keo would have appreciated that.  

We said our final farewells to Eliot at around 9 pm, and I drove us to our new residence for the next two nights.  It was a good day.

Oyasuminasai!

Pardon me, I have a date with a whale shark

Today marks our last full day with Eliot.  After an abbreviated morning walk and breakfast, we set off for the University of the Ryukyus to pick up Eliot, with the number to the Dive Locker in my pocketbook (to make a phone call at 10 when they opened).  When I Skyped him, there was no answer, so I bet Wayne that Eliot was still asleep at 8:45.

He wouldn’t take the bet.

We knocked on Eliot’s door to see a very tired, rumpled Eliot greeting us.  Turns out there was a party in the dorm that spontaneously started at the same time he came back from the gym last night.  ;)  Once he got ready and joined us downstairs, we went up to the Churaumi Aquarium by way of the toll expressway, stopping for breakfast.

The Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium is located within the Ocean Expo Park in Okinawa, Japan. It welcomed its 20 millionth visitor on 30 March 2010  and is a member of the Japanese Association of Zoos and Aquariums (JAZA). It was the largest aquarium in the world until it was surpassed by the Georgia Aquarium in 2005. The aquarium was designed by Yukifusa Kokuba and was opened on 1 November 2002.  It is made up of four floors, with tanks containing deep sea creatures, sharks, coral and tropical fish. The aquarium is set on 19,000 m² of land, with a total of 77 tanks containing 10,000 m³ of water. Water for the saltwater exhibits is pumped into the aquarium from a source 350m offshore, 24 hours a day.  Just before you reach the sculpture below, there is a cooling fountain which all of the children mill about cooling off.  So do their parents.  And so did we!

The main tank, called the Kuroshio Sea, is 115 ft long, 89 ft wide and 33 ft deep. It holds 1,981,000 gallons of water and features an acrylic glass panel measuring 27 x 74 ft with a thickness of 24 in.  Whale sharks and manta rays are kept alongside many other fish species in the main tank. The first manta ray birth at the aquarium was in 2007. As of July 2010, there have been a total of four manta rays born in the aquarium.  The aquarium holds 80 species of coral. It is one of only a few aquariums that keeps whale sharks in captivity, and is currently trying to breed them.  As you can imagine, I spent quite a bit of time looking at the tank below.

There is also a manatee tank, and a dolphin show outside in the Ocean Expo Park.  We spent our visit inside the aquarium, as we arrived in the heat of the midday sun.  After spending a few hours captivated inside the aquarium, we went up to the 4th floor to eat lunch, and were treated to a window seat where we were able to see the dolphin show.  And the dolphins were huge, so I’m wondering what species they were.  I would have gone over to the tank to see, but it was blazing hot, and my sunscreen was melting off with every second out in the sunlight.

There’s also a beach there, a native Okinawan village that has houses from various eras, the Oceanic Culture Museum, and the Tropical Dream Center, which has a huge variety of plants, to include 2000 orchids.  You can definitely spend several days here exploring, but I’d recommend doing it when it isn’t as hot as it was today!

We headed back towards Naha, first stopping off at Torii Station, looking to book ourselves on the whale shark dive via the Torii Dive Locker.  The Saturday boat was booked solid, and there was only 1 slot for Friday, but the store manager put us on the waiting list and said that if they couldn’t find another divemaster (must have a 1:4 diver:divemaster ratio), he would let one of the shop divemasters go as long as it wasn’t a busy day.

Then we went to Kadena again in search of a Twins baseball cap for Eliot, but no such luck.  He got a Tar Heels cap instead, an acknowledgment of his birth state.  We also filled up on gas.  Of course, that was after the difficulty getting on base.  Yesterday, all we needed to do was show our IDs, along with Eliot’s (unlike Torii, we didn’t have to sign him in and get a temporary badge).  This time we had to get him a temporary pass, and register the rental car.  We registered it through Sunday, but I don’t know that we will come back here again.

Dinner was at the same Meeri Indian Restaurant where we had lunch the other day.  All three of us enjoyed our meals immensely - we wound up bringing Eliot down with us because he had not brought home his toothbrush, and Wayne forgot to pack it this morning!  That, and it is good to feed him.  Eliot has lost a lot of weight this year, and although he said he really wasn’t hungry at lunch or dinner, he ate with gusto.

Tonight is the last night in Naha on this trip.  We have really enjoyed our time here in town, but we are looking forward to a change of pace at the AJ Onno resort in Onno Village.  A smoke free room and a smoke free lobby are what I am praying to find.  Only time will tell.  

Time for camera PMCS and bed.  Fingers crossed for a whale shark dive tomorrow.  I. Am. So. Tired.

Oyasuminasai!

Exploring Naha

Having turned in my one “assignment," I am now awaiting a little more guidance before working on my memorandum in support of the Department of Human Services motion to amend the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law in my case.  Hopefully, that will be in my inbox in a few hours, and I can go ahead and work it.  

That aside, we decided we would walk the Kokusai Dori before breakfast (well, I decided we would),and then we would head out to Shurijo Castle.

We went out this morning for a walk at about 6 am.  It was already bright, pretty warm, and very, very humid.  Walking along Kokusai Dori, headed south, the street reminded me of our neighborhood in the morning - everyone out in the early morning to get in their walks or runs.  Most of the shops were closed, and it was fun to get photographs while the streets were relatively quiet.  Except for the over whelming noise of the cicadas.  It was deafening. I can start to comprehend the distress of people on the Big Island, and in Kailua on Oahu as it pertains to the coqui frogs.  I don’t think I’d wish this on my worst enemy.

Kokusai Dori was the central point for black market trading after World War II.  It is lined with souvenir shops that are touted to be the best places to buy souvenirs.  I personally will be looking at the shops on base to see what they have to offer - the prices are a little high in the city.

We walked back down Kokusai Dori to the monorail station (trying to make up for the lack of exercise on my part yesterday, only got in about 5 miles total), and took it to the end of the line.  Shurijo Castle was very obvious even from the monorail line, a large, red presence in the center of a bustling city.

Shurijo is a World Heritage Site, designated in December, 2000, the 11th WHS in Japan.  It is praised for exceptional cultural and historical value because of its unique stonework and architectural design.  There is a huge amount of Chinese influence in the architecture, which is not surprising since the Chinese emperor would come for the coronation of the Okinawan kings, and there were Chinese delegates here on the island.  Shujiro Castle was the royal seat starting in 1406, under King Sho Hashi (he united the kingdom), and served as the heart of politics, foreign diplomacy and culture for approximately 500 years until King Sho Tai, the last ruler of the kingdom.  Sho Tai abdicated the throne to the Meiji Government.

 

The castle itself was reduced to rubble and ashes in the Battle of Okinawa in 1945, but was restored in 1992 as part of the commemoration of the 20th anniversary of Okinawa’s reversion to Japan.  Prior to this, the University of the Ryukyus was located here, but it was relocated further north as part of the renovation process between 1975 and 1984.  The renovation is particularly true to fact, and it is built above the rubble of the former castle.  Work is even now being done to fix the ramparts surrounding the castle.  

 

As we walked up the steps towards the castle, we were again overcome with the sound of cicadas - the loudest I think I have ever heard.  They can produce sounds over 120 dB, which is a level that causes pain in human ears.  Hearing loss in humans starts with sustained noise levels at 90 dB.  Can you imagine waking up to that daily?  A loud rock concert is typically only at 115.  We saw them flying all over the place.

We walked through the renovated castle, and it is magnificent (no pictures through the majority of it though), albeit rather with short ceilinged doorways.  Dad would not fit here.  :)

 

The Queen’s throne is on the second floor.  This floor was restricted to only women, and it is surmised that the means of communication between the first floor, where the king sat and heard petitions and conducted affairs of state, and the second was a bell pull.  There was no actual bell, but a mock up was in place.

The pillars on either side of the queen’s throne are Seiden Dai-Ryu Chu Ungyou (right hand of the throne), and Seiden Dai-Ryu Chu Agyou.  Agyou’s mouth is closed, and Ungyou’s is open.  If the dragons are like the shisa, Agyou is the male, and his mouth is open to keep bad spirits away from the home.  Ungyou would be the female, and her mouth is open and the female’s mouth is closed to keep the good spirits in the home.  Of course, there is another group of Okinawans who believe the opposite - the male has his mouth closed to keep bad out of the home, while the female has her mouth open to share goodness. 

The day continued on hot and muggy.  We went back to Naha town to the department store monorail station, and then walked to an Indian restaurant we saw.  $5 lunch plate with $3 beer, and a ton of water commenced.  It was good, and my head is stuffy, so I think I might want to go back for some curry this week.

We got back, and they hadn’t started cleaning our room yet (it was 1 pm), so we went down to the lobby.  I was working on my second assignment for the ICA case, and Wayne was reading.  The smell of smoke just permeates the lobby here, and my asthma is truly not happy about it.  But I don’t think that there is a single hotel in all of the Japanese and Okinawan islands that doesn’t reek of smoke.  Thank goodness our car is smoke free, or I would have to purchase some oxygen and a breathing mask!

We finally went back up to the room at 3 to take a small nap.  At 6:30, we woke up, groggy, and still tired.  I made some coffee (I brought a jar of freeze dried 100% Hawaiian coffee with me) and Wayne had green tea of the cold variety.  We headed back down to the other end of Kokusai Dori, and looked at the restaurants in the department store there.  A number looked very pleasant.  There was one just for Wayne on the 9th floor - an Okinawan vegetarian buffet.

Dinner was at a local sushi train restaurant, highly recommended by Eliot.  And Eliot was right, it was really good, without being really expensive.  It would not be hard to eat here for extended periods of time - my only issue thus far with Okinawa is the lingering cigarette smoke.  Ah, well.

Tomorrow we are off to the University of the Ryukus!

Oyasuminasai!