Kanoya Homestay
A tale of the rose gardens, my first onsen and some of the cutest kids ever
08.10.2008
89 °F
Hi everyone, it's been a long time hasn't it! Or in Japanese "isashiburi da ne." Sorry, I'm not very good at keeping everything up to date, but I've been having a lot of adventures in the last few weeks and I will attempt to blog about the more interesting ones. I hope everyone is doing well; and Lauren if you get to read this, I hope you're having fun in France.
About a month ago I had the opportunity to experience a home stay in Kanoya-shi, just a short ferry ride away from where I live in Kagoshima-shi. We started out Saturday with a lesson in cooking Japanese food. I pretty much did what I was told and discovered that Japanese people keep their kitchen knives VERY sharp. After that we had a mini-masturi and the host families dressed all the foreigners in crazy looking coats and headbands normally worn by taiko drum players. Sadly I don't have an embarrasing picture of myself to share but here's a link to give you the idea.
http://www.japanesekimono.com/happi.htm
We danced around the room and played a traditional Kagoshima game in which two people have a certain number of sticks they hide behind their hand and then both guess the total number of hidden sticks. Normally the loser then drinks a shot of sake or in kagoshima, shochu, which makes him even less likely to guess correctly the next time. Since we were playing with children the punishment was a shot of green tea. One really cute kid kept winning but wanted to drink the punishment so we ran out of tea quickly.
After the party I went home with my host mother and her two kids, a twelve year old girl and a eight year old boy. We made sushi for dinner and I had my first taste of natto, a food made from fermented soybeans that looks like snot and smells like gym socks, delightful. It so bad really, it had a kind of nutty,spicy, salty flavor. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Natto_on_rice.jpg
K, my host family's little boy and I read each other bed time stories. Mine in english and his in Japanese.
The next day I went to a museum wih K. He was so cute!! We tried out all kinds of cool virtual reality games and then figured out how to cheat and the high score on all the virtual reality games. After that we all went to the famous Rose gardens. Here's a picture of us at the gates.
The roses were mostly dead since we went in August, but it was the best giant playground I've ever seen. A huge slide, a couple of riplines and you could even ride around on go carts. There was also a tower we could look out of to see all the famous mountains around the city.
After the rose gardens my host mom drove us out to my first onsen, a Japanese hot spring, for feet only. It was a gorgeous view with Sakurajima right behind us and the onsen was right on the beach. It was just a built up stone bench with water heated by the volcano flowing where you could stick your feet it. 
My host family drove me back to the ferry after that and waved at me from the port. If I had the option of living with them instead of living by myself in the city, I would. There are some parts of Japanese culture that just can't be understood unless your part of a Japanese family.
Posted by a.grace 21:01 Archived in Living Abroad | Japan Comments (1)


