Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Japan Travel Tips 2017_Japan Travel Tips

Japan Travel Tips 2017_Japan Travel Tips

Japan is a country full of oriental charm, and it is also the first powerful country in Asia to achieve full industrialization. Several frictions in history have made the people of China and Japan have a grudge, and they have become a country that hates each other and has If you like each other’s country, let me share with you the latest version of Japan travel precautions in 2017. 1. Japanese Food

Before departure, I don’t bother to buy any portable WiFi for traveling abroad. Because I have been to so many developed countries before, there is WiFi everywhere. There are some in Japan, but everyone has a password and everything costs money. The Japanese are very strict about personal privacy issues. I once wanted to see if the salesperson had scanned my payment code, but he even refunded it. I walked a few steps to the cashier opposite. It was so exaggerated that I couldn’t believe how Japanese people understand personal

space so far? How can they still fall in love?

On my first day in Japan, I had a meal of pork chop rice. It was similar to the one I bought in the shopping mall in Tianzifang, Shanghai, but it was very different from the one I had in Wuhan. There are not many green vegetables in Japan, so just a cup of barley leaves. Tu Chan and I are often hungry because the fixed meals are not as good as the big bowl we had in Wuhan. We lie down every day just for fear of getting hungry again before we even take two steps.

The pork chop is alternately fat and thin, obviously a little fatter, and the sauce is very sweet. How about some cabbage to make vegetables?! In fact, after the first meal, I wanted to go home. I guess my dad saw it. When the food comes, I will buy a plane and go back immediately. I am just trying to survive. I am quite timid. I said good things to people before getting on the plane and also brought the cucumbers and peaches my mother bought me to the hotel. I didn’t know how to cherish them and ate them in two days. I regret it very much. Yeah! In the remaining days, I found that I couldn’t afford fruit at all. An apple cost 35 yuan, a bunch of grapes cost 150 yuan, and a watermelon cost more than 300 yuan. I am a person who can skip meals and eat fruits. Congested.

Pork Chop Rice 2. Japanese Attractions

For various neon attractions, there are many brochures that can tell you where to go and what to expect there. Various printed brochures Language, designer dogs like us will pick up a lot of people’s brochures wherever we go, as if they are collecting rags, hahaha, just kidding.

There are a lot of free-range deer in Kasuga Shrine. Then if you buy a biscuit, they will follow you and nod to you before you even open it. To be honest, you don’t If you like animals, don't get close to them. For example, for people like me, out of curiosity, a male deer chewed a hole in my clothes like grass, which would kill me. I called my mother right away. My mother saw the photo I sent and said: Are these animals free-range? Are they like native chickens? Running all over the mountains? To be honest, I don’t understand the Japanese people’s belief in animals. I don’t really understand, but I actually said that hearing crows crow when you wake up in the morning is a good sign. A little scared.

Kasugashe

There are many scenic spots, but I don’t really feel much about them. I will regret one day if I go there, but I will regret it all my life if I don’t go.

The Kinkakuji Temple in Kyoto is a place that all children in Japan from kindergarten to high school must visit, regardless of belief. According to the English translation, it is a temple of the Rinzai Sect Shokokuji sect, the most representative famous garden in Japan's Muromachi period. I didn't see much of Brother Ikkyu, but it is said that the scenes were all shot there. In Kyoto, Japan, it is at the foot of the Imperial City and is very neat.

Kinkakuji Temple 3. Japanese climate

Japanese streets are very clean because the volcanic rocks from volcanic eruptions are mixed into the street pavement, so they can absorb dust. Japan has a maritime climate and is prone to dust. A rain washed away the dust again.

Hmm, there’s not much to say, it’s just very clean. If you go this season, the hydrangeas after the rain are really beautiful!

Hydrangeas

What the hell? Car track four, tram

When you arrive in Japan, you must I want to experience a train, JR, etc. It's a little faster than the subway, but the scenery is pretty good. But it is very expensive. It cost 960 yen for us to go from Ueno Park to Ginza in Tokyo.

Speaking of prices in Japan, they basically go up to 500 yen. Taxis are not affordable, and fruits are not affordable. I went to eat at an authentic Japanese restaurant and had my favorite Tamagoyaki. Very satisfying. There are also Japanese medium-rare grilled skewers and deep-fried dishes. There is a little bit of each, so I won’t give you more. Then I ate a meal worth 200 yuan by myself, and then I walked out. I went to seven

eleven next door and bought two large chicken steaks. Tu Chan also knew that I couldn't eat enough. I ate a lot. She spent every day exchanging Japanese yen and RMB, feeling tired.

Tamako ware

Fried squid 5. Japanese fruits are super expensive

Every day I send photos to my parents saying that I am playing in the countryside, sometimes Mount Fuji, and sometimes again It's a hot spring in the mountains. When did my dad say we should go into the city? In fact, I am in the city every day! However, there is not much difference between the city and the countryside. Except for the higher buildings, there is nothing else. If you want to eat fruit, you can only look at it and think about it. So, my dad bought me a basket when I got home!

Every day I looked at other people’s apples, thinking about inviting Japanese people to my house as guests, and saw watermelons rolling on the ground, and baskets of grapes. All kinds of fruits are piled up in the house. Do you think our family is super rich? Hahahaha.

Just kidding, it's all relative. 6. The Sea of ??Japan

I like the sea, I really like it! Although I am scared to death every time I see the sea water, I feel like I am suffocating. When I see the transparent jellyfish, I want to die! But there is someone who particularly likes the sea. Hai wanted to jump into his arms without reservation, but stopped again when he was far away.

Looking at the sea in the countryside

The Japanese can speak English. I think they are either immigrants or postdoctoral fellows. If they speak English, they don’t understand! Sometimes I feel that I am not learning the language at all. It's forced. If you don't tell or ask, you will never dare to speak or communicate with others, and you will always live in your own circle, even if you go abroad. I learned a lot of Japanese when I was young. Now that I use it, it doesn’t feel unfamiliar. It’s a bit simple and I can speak it a lot.

I am also stupid, which is why I don’t like to go to a country where I don’t speak the language and can’t communicate. But now it seems that I walked around Tokyo with a map for a day and found it back at night. It shows that my language is not clear and my expression must be in place. My dad also wants me to master Japanese. It seems that I still need to learn a lot.

Many people travel to Japan from all over the world, and you can meet people from more than five countries almost every day. I will be exhausted every day. We meet people from Asia, Africa, Europe, America, and Australia every day, but I found that it’s definitely not just the Chinese who purchase on behalf of others!

Japanese hotels and supermarkets also do a good job of detailing items. Small is crushing. I'm a person who doesn't pay much attention to details. But, yes. Except that the hotel is smaller, everything else is available. I remembered the hotel where I stayed in Canada with Diudiu. As I watched this, I probably didn’t even want to go in.

Small hotel 7. Japanese instant noodles

Everyone says that Japanese instant noodles are delicious. They are terrible. I bought a bowl of instant noodles. I ate it all night and didn't finish it. It was so delicious! I couldn't finish it. Not to mention it was super expensive and tasted terrible.

Instant Noodles 8, Japanese Geisha Kabuchō

I don’t really know what to take pictures of when I go to Tokyo. I took pictures of high-rise buildings and Geisha Kabuchō. In fact, these things are in It is legal in developed countries. When I played abroad before, people saw that I was not wearing shoes and asked me if I wanted to have sex. It would scare the baby to death, so I have to wear shoes wherever I go!!!

< p>Exposed to the sun on the streets of Tokyo

Tokyo

I went to Uniqlo on the 13th floor to buy some clothes. This is a specialty. Tu Chan arrived at Mount Fuji and asked me what the specialty of Mount Fuji was. I pointed to Mount Fuji and showed her: This is the specialty of Mount Fuji.

My memory of any place is not very clear. Once my life returns to its original point, I basically forget all about it. After I came back, my mother said, Japan in the morning, Wuhan in the afternoon, Yichang in the evening, Is your gap huge? Are you feeling lost? In fact, for me, no matter how much I like or want to stay in any place, it is not home. Maybe I think differently from other people. I think I won’t come back if I can go out. If there is better development outside, then stay. Most of the education I received was traditional education, and my parents were not far away. Even if I want to read and hold these beautiful things in my eyes and in my memory, I must keep them in this way, because my life is really too tight.

That’s it, that’s it. In short, Hong Kong people say: Japan is for shopping, Europe is for vacation. Now I understand a little bit. Some things in American countries are cheaper in Japan, but some things are not necessarily cheaper. I still prefer things from European countries.

Write it here: My grandparents’ generation experienced the entire Anti-Japanese War. My grandfather was born in 1931 and my grandmother was born in 1937. They are both suffering people who have experienced the baptism of war. According to what my grandparents told me, there were no major battles on our side. The Japanese grandfather had been lying on the tallest tree on the mountain opposite to where my grandma lived. After three months, I would go to the village to eat a little bit of food, in exchange for Japanese towels, toothbrushes and toothpaste, and rice. Grandma also taught him how to read and write Chinese, and would occasionally come down from the tree to help with the farming. The Japanese and the Eighth Route Army always came to my grandma's house for meals at "staggered" times. The gun was fired once. There must have been incidents in history where the Japanese burned, killed and abducted Chinese people. In my opinion, it has nothing to do with me. I appeal to everyone to be rational and patriotic.