Friday, October 13. Explored parts of Yokohama. Motomachi, where we briefly lived in 1983-4. It was an upscale area back then, and it hasn’t changed. Very nice shops, just one step down from Rodeo Drive quality. Very international.

Yokohama’s Chinatown, which was never much, but today it seemed shrunken. Masses of high school students for some reason. Glazed strawberries and grapes on a stick were popular.

Yamashita Park. Beautiful then, more so now. Statues, lawns, flowers, yoga, joggers, etc. The view is different due to extensive land reclamation. Very futuristic buildings and bridges. But the old ship museum is still there, giving me a memory anchor. At the northern end is a very new restaurant that has a pool to soak feet in. It also has a little kids’ play area. An unusual place.

Further north is the new, huge and incredibly beautiful cruise terminal. Grass on the roof.

Next was The Big Red Warehouse Buildings. Originally customs houses, now full of shops. In front was a large tent housing Yokohama’s 20th annual Oktoberfest! Full of people. At least twenty different breweries surrounded the drinking area with a raised stage in the center for the Bavarian band. I spent some time there, amazed with the crowd. Drank a bit.

Headed to the train station but detoured for short cable car ride (“Air Cabin”) that provided nice views of the city’s amusement park, maritime training ship, and tallest building.

19,000 steps under clear blue skies. A nice day.

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Thursday, October 12. No photos. Confirmed once again that fresh Japanese bread is my favorite. Thick slices and incredibly soft.

Just meandered around the local train station’s shopping area. Many things remain the same (Mister Donut is still here in a prime location) and some things are different. Very few things really. Japan isn’t into change. The glazed pastries still look too good to be real, while the fake food displays don’t look fake.

Had my traditional lunch in Japan: Bolognese spaghetti in a little restaurant that was clearly a hangout for the local university. I exceeded the average age by 50 years. It was exhausting to watch the cook remain in constant motion for an hour. Thanks partly to a favorable exchange rate, the meal cost only $12. Clearly, this is NOT Norway.

Dinner was just gyoza. Only my mom-in-law can make it so good. Bottled Sapporo beer, which Yoriko had to search for. All the craft beers have pushed out the traditional brands.

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Tuesday-Wednesday, October 10-11. This adventure begins with a short stay with Yoriko and her mom in Japan. Yoriko left two days ago to “prep(?)” the house for me. After four days I’ll depart on the actual Adventure to Southeast Asia; Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam. To illustrate my sibling diversity, my older sister will be on an ocean cruise in the same area while my younger sister is spending several months in Australia. My brother will be the only sibling staying in the USA.

I booked a basic rental car to get to LAX, but Budget used me to reposition a Chevy Camaro back to the airport. Reminded me that I am NOT a sports car enthusiast. Felt every bump on the road.

Splurged on a surprisingly low-priced upgrade to Premium Economy. Got access to the OneWorld lounge. Very nice. The flight was okay, but JAL’s food is not to my liking. It was just as well as I pigged out in the lounge.

Japan’s entry procedure has gone high tech. The process goes smoothly if you use their online application. By the looks of the number of manually prepared forms that were apparently rejected (“please go back to the counter and do it again”), they’re serious about it. Lots of help to use the QR-reading kiosks.

Very nice taxi. The van had a rear view monitor instead of a rear view mirror, but with the classic shape! Very cool. My mother-in-law’s house is unchanged. Cluttered with remembrances of the past.

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In July we went on our third Portugal Cruise. Because I’d reported on this location before, I decided to take a vacation from reporting on an adventure. Following Portugal we spent four days in Zurich. I’d gotten used to not spending the evening typing a blog post, so I didn’t.

Portugal went as planned and it was still great fun. The river is a great escape.

Zurich was fun too. Terribly expensive. Did a self-guided day trip to the top of Mount Pilates. Visited the Lindte Chocolate Factory and massive gift shop. Climbed to the top of yet another church. We skipped a planned trip to Lichtenstein due to weather. Etc.

My next trip will be Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam.

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Sunday, May 28. Tied up in Breisach. Took bus to the Black Forest. Beautiful scenery, but we made no stops to view. Our destination was a pure tourist stop with various shops. Being Sunday, it was crowded. One storefront had a building-sized cuckoo clock. Cuckoo clock demonstration, glassblowing, Fruit wine, etc. The only redeeming demo was on how to make Black Forest cake. Very entertaining. But, though we were told we’d be able to taste the cake, as soon as the demo was over we were rushed back onto the buses. It was a worthwhile bus ride but it could have been so much more.

Our last dinner on board served black forest cake, made for 175 people. Small pieces that did not look at all like the demo’s result. I had seconds, but still felt short-changed.

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Saturday, May 27. This was a busy day. It began with a small group to climb the Strasbourg Cathedral. Unlike every other morning excursion who took a bus, we set off on a one mile walk to the tram station. Probably because there were only eight of us. Our guide led the walk, talking all the way about Strasbourg’s history of shifting back and forth between Germany to France. (Strasbourg is now part of France, but I’m classifying it as Germany.) The guide provided enough details to suggest that a test would follow. During the entire morning he made one joke that I can remember. It was clear to me that there were other places he wanted to be on a beautiful Saturday morning.

The Tram was very new, which has contributed to a significant reduction in vehicular traffic. (The plaza around the Cathedral had once been a parking lot.) The old town of Strasbourg is, well, old. Very nicely preserved. The cathedral is beautiful, inside and out. It has a multitude of sculptures, a celestial clock and some inventive oddities.

Our climb was night and day different than Cologne’s. No elevator. 323 steps up, mostly via a circular staircase. Except for a momentary stop to look down after 100 steps, it was a non-stop climb to the rooftop. I’m clearly not at risk of a heart attack. The top had a few nice exhibits and a sweeping view of the city. But we had no view of the interior and no behind-the-scene looks. The single steeple towered above us. The climb down was circular and non-stop. Not much of a tour.

The guide continued the tour down several streets, which were crowded with antique markets and people. (Saturday.) The walk followed the “non-stop” theme. It ended when the guide essentially ran out of things to say, giving us free time. We wandered back to the cathedral to begin a long walk to the buses. It was a revelation to see the city at 9AM (empty) and noon (masses of people). The complete lack of interest by the guide was countered by the beautiful city and obvious vibrance of its citizens.

After lunch on the ship we depart on what was titled “Wine Tasting Excursion”. Total disappointment. One winery, which prided itself on making a new age wine. Maxi-organic. Which meant that what we tasted might not be representative of the Alsace area. Four tastings, including one sparkling wine and one red, in a region that’s known for its white wines. No wine cellar, no walk in the vineyards, not even a visit to their normal tasting room. We tasted while seated on too small benches among their steel tanks. Fortunately the wine rep was excellent and the two white wines were very good. Unfortunately, that was the whole show. We didn’t visit another winery. Four hours of excursion, one hour at a winery, four tastings.

The rest of the excursion was devoted to a small village. The guide called it a small version of Strasbourg, which I found especially silly, since we had spent the morning in Strasbourg. Overall, the afternoon was not worth the price or my time.

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Friday, May 26. Most of the day was cruising. Nothing special. Some towns, many industries. I napped for much of the morning.

We docked in Speyer and had a short walking tour. It’s main claim to fame is it’s cathedral. A few busy tourist streets. Pretty parks. An interesting miniature gold course without turf. The town is one of the many traditional starts to the Camino de Santiago “Way of St. James”.

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Thursday, May 25. Too many photos. Massive statue on the river’s edge. Spitting child tradition is from Napoleonic times when illegitimate children resulting from French soldiers being housed in the city. Offspring were treated poorly, resulting in their disrespectful conduct.

The river has a huge number of castles on both sides. Lots of small towns. Vineyards.

Had dinner off the ship in Rudesheim. Nice time. Fun entertainment, though the music was nearly all American.

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Saturday, May 20. (Out of order. Oops.) Our only day in Denmark. The last two cruise ships had to bypass the port due to weather. Busy little old town. Large fishing fleet, shipyard and marina. It’s at the northernmost tip of Denmark

Perhaps because the town only hosts about 60 cruise ships per year (and many of them are German), English is a foreign language. Nothing in English. I’ve been in places in China with more English. And expensive, more so than Norway. We did the morning walking tour and strolled a little, but made a fairly short day of it. Struggled to find a pastry shop!

Lots of interest things to see. Discovered morning swimmers in the 50 degree sea. It was surprising to notice (through a telephoto lens) that many swimmers were naked. The northern edge of this landmass is creeping its way towards Norway, by about 40 feet per year. Their old lighthouse is now far too south to be useful. Their older lighthouse, a blazing caldron on a swivel, is lit once a year. Very pretty small houses (as usual), many painted yellow. So many in fact that the town is limiting anymore houses to be painted the color. It’s actually officially designated Skagen Yellow.

Being a Saturday and at the tail-end of a religious holiday week, the town was bustling. Cars and boats from several countries. Many old cars. It was a quiet town; no blaring music from restaurants. A old Swedish chapel is near the port, traditionally thought to discourage Swedish sailors from going after the Danish girls.

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Wednesday, May 24. Failed to take photos of many things. Also, we were asked to not post photos of the day’s (and possibly the trip’s) high point: An inside tour of the Cathedral Cologne, the world’s tallest cathedral.

The day began with a quick bus ride across the Rhine to the west side, then assembling into groups for a walking tour back to the ship. Our guide was excellent. There were a great many topics to discuss about Germany and Cologne, spanning from Roman times to the current day. He included a long explanation about the war from Germany’s view which I thought was very well and carefully presented. Pointed out many remaining remembrances of the city’s wartime damage. The effort to retain damaged parts while not highlighting them was impressive.

Stores selling Eau de Cologne were common. Bars selling local beer (Kolsch) were more common. The beer was not special, but the tradition for serving it was cool. Small glasses, refilled automatically, with the count marked on the coaster. We were never more than a few blocks from the Cathedral, which was massively impressive. It’s size was hard to perceive from the ground.

After the tour we shared a great lunch of potato soup and the German equivalent of bangers and mash. Plus beer. We returned to the ship by walking across the train bridge, with it’s famous mass of locks attached everywhere. The tradition is to throw the lock’s key into the river to represent unending love. I had to laugh at the small number of combination locks.

Shortly after our return a small number of us set off again to the cathedral. The ship surprised us by arranging pedicabs, which resulted in us having more time to experience the cathedral. It was absolutely amazing. We used a construction elevator to go one-third of the way up, then used it again for the second third. The tour went both outside along the edge and inside, overlooking the interior. Sometimes we could look either way at once. We toured old unused sections of the church that had become storage areas, walked through the gigantic “attic”, including a fully equipped tool shop and sculpture reconditioning area. It was all just incredible to see how much open space was available. Most of the areas we visited weren’t built until the nineteenth century, so, unlike Notre Dame, the structural material was metal.

We did the last third of the climb via stairs, including a very ornate circular staircase. This only brought us to the central, lower tower. The two main towers are climbable, but our guide said the view from their tops are highly screened off. Our view was more than enough (250 feet). Sadly the clouds darkened the scenery. But overall the tour was superb.

After the tour we had some more beer and apple strudel. We also found that the Information Office had the best gift shop.

It was a full but most impressive day.

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