There is a road of traditional shops leading up toward the gardens surrounding the shrine. Ise shrine is dedicated to the goddess Amaterasu Omikami, and is said to contain the Sacred Mirror used to lure her out of a cave. This is one of the most famous and important shrines, and, perhaps due to the possible posssession of the mirror, highly inaccessable.
Taiko Drumming
Chad drinking delicious milk from an old-fashioned milk bottle (the bottle became a souvenir...). He is next to a maneki neko (a lucky cat).
Chad, me, and our friend Mia (a coworker).
Chad drinking delicious milk from an old-fashioned milk bottle (the bottle became a souvenir...). He is next to a maneki neko (a lucky cat).
Chad, me, and our friend Mia (a coworker).
There was a really neat tobacco store. Chad bought some matches made out of old playing card boxes. These types of playing cards used to only be used by Yakuza (a picture of the matches, later). Here, Chad is smoking out of an old-time pipe. For 100 yen, he got a nice little smoke session.
Sardines, smoked and then fried. I don't know why, but I always thought sardines would be really gross. At many of the shops lining the road toward Ise Shrine, they had free samples, and to my surprise, the Sardine sample was DELICIOUS. Chad, who often doesn't care for fish, said it was the best he's ever had.
Here's the guy who was making the sardines. He was smoking a cigarette at the same time, which is kind of funny.
Chad really wanted to buy one of these hats before we leave Japan. He wasn't joking--yesterday he bought one when we were in Iga (and so did the rest of us! More on that trip soon).
Mia is teaching me the proper way: you only scoop water once. Then, you wash your left hand, then your right, and then tip the cup up so it washes the handle of the cup.
Loads of giant koi! Some of them were close to 2 feet long! There were some amazing colors, but it was difficult to capture much with the camera we were using.
There are beautiful gardens all around the shrine. On New Year's Eve, the prince and princess of Japan come to Ise Shrine and walk through these same gardens.
We wanted to take a picture of these neat floral arrangements for some greenhouse owners we know ;-)
MMM! Dango, or Japanese dumplings, made of sticky rice. These ones were soy sauce flavored. If you've ever watched Samurai Champloo, the characters eat these all the time. Delicious!
The restaurant is famous for its fresh, raw tuna. Chad and I both ordered a set. It was SOOOOOOOOOO good!
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