October 26/27 O-ame (heavy rain)
Up on the semi-exposed platform at Ueno
station, thunder boomings and even a
lightning flash! A little rain in Japan
is nice, makes for scenic reflections of
the neon in the street; but this deluge
was ridiculous. The wind shredded
my cheap umbrella; a new one was on my list
since I heard the Japanese of necessity make
great brollies - as it turned out, that's what
became my first purchase. But I'm getting
ahead of myself.
Getting There
My trip began in California, in the late wee
hours before dawn. I closed and locked my door,
shouldered my black back-pack and set off in
the silence, strangely muffled by a weird,
smelly fog. My first destination was the
Mountain View CalTrain station, as usual
I'd ride those clunky rails up to the
Millbrae station and take their free shuttle
over to SFO (San Francisco International).
Heard a train whistle as I approached the station,
hoped this wasn't mine but instead a southbound
train, but I got close enough to see its headlights
pulling out in the fog - due to new San Jose
Light Rail trolley terminus, the CalTrain station
had been moved back a bit and temporary plastic
construction fences barred my usual way; I knew
another train would be along soon, compressing the
schedule dangerously, but the notion of breaking
into a run to catch this express were suppressed -
I couldn't see where I'd be stepping in the gloom
and had no intention of foolishly twisting an
ankle or something at the very beginning of the
trip. Apprehensive, I arrived at the airport only
to find my scheduled LA flight's time had been
moved up, I'd missed it; but so had everybody
else as it'd been cancelled. More schedule
compression - I'd be arriving at LAX further
inside the scheduled two hours before arrival
time suggested for international departures;
but since I wasn't checking luggage I wasn't
seriously concerned. So everybody settled in
to the 737 and - surprise! Just before gate
push-away, a sudden intercom announcement,
difficult for me to understand in my terrible
middle seat way aft - this plane was unsafe
and we'd be transferring to a spare aircraft,
positioned for just such a contingency two
gates down. (I was flying United Shuttle,
which has almost hourly flights running
between SFO-LAX.) Orderly, yet mildly hysterical
exit, tedious line-up in the terminal, then
reboarding. At the end of the jetway, I begged the
friendliest-looking (and as it turned out, senior)
flight attendant for a seat change,
explaining my situation; just before we pushed
away (again) she gestured at me from up front
and I moved up to a seat right by the door.
(Actually, I exaggerated to her, said my flight was
a half-hour earlier than it was scheduled; as I
disembarked I confessed to her my real departure time.
She said that was okay, "People lie to me all the
time!")
Rode the "A" LAX Shuttle bus around the loop,
and walked upstairs at the Tom Bradley International
Terminal. (Now that he's dead this name isn't so
annoying - kinda neat, actually; since I'm reminded
of the one time I saw him in person, standing up on
the platform with Muhammad Ali at the starting
line of the LA Marathon in 1993.) Breezed
through check-in with Korean Air, even had time
for a brief phone-chat with Shari (a local call,
there) just before boarding was announced. Looking
around the gate area, I couldn't believe it - this
would be the usual 747-400 we'd be flying; where
were all the passengers? But you see I've been
conditioned by the deplorable bus-like state
domestic flying's been reduced to - not only were
we flying about one-third capacity, but there was
actually generous knee-room ("pitch" in the flying
vernacular) between my legs and the seat in front.
Just before I found out about this pleasant
detail, something new was encountered - security
personnel in the jetway, and right at the end, a
bomb-dog which sniffed each passenger and their
carry-ons.
First Night
Twelve hours in the air, and it was still mid-afternoon
when I got off the plane. (Flying west is weird,
travelling that far - especially since the date
line is crossed - suddenly, it's tomorrow!) At
Japanese customs in Narita, the officer had me
open my pack for inspection. (Unusual, in my
experience.) He deployed a laminated plastic
sheet with line drawings of six categories of
contraband - drugs, plants, guns, swords, I
forget the other two - he kept pointing
meaningfully at the drugs section (with
its cannabis leaf) - finally satisfied, he let me
go. Inside the business section of the terminal,
swarming with people (Welcome to Japan!) I
located the exchange counter (hmmm - they moved it)
and bought yen with my cash, according to my plan,
even though I noticed my traveler's checks would've
received a slightly better rate - wonder why?
Counterfeiting? Then downstairs, where I purchased
a ten-dollar (¥1000) Keisei Limited Express
ticket from a no-English machine, and onto the
train, feeling smug since mine were the only round-eyes
visible (my countrymen all boarding the twice-as-expensive
but only a little faster Keisei "Skyliner" into town,
or the even more expensive Japan Railways (JR)
NT'X line). As the train slid towards Tokyo, the
skies darkened and it began to rain.
At Ueno seventy-five minutes later, upstairs and
outside, and down the street to the huge, adjacent
JR station. Bought a ticket from another machine
and passed through the automated turnstile, upstairs
again. First ride on the
Yamanote,
south a couple stops to Kanda, where I caught a
subway to the vicinity of the Tokyo Green Hotel.
By the time I located it and approached Reception,
I was soaked; and of course, exhausted, although
the second wind was kicking in. Change of clothes
up in the room, and back outside, walking over
to the edge of near-by Akihabara, where a rack
of umbrellas sitting just outside a brightly-lit
store beckoned. Although both brollies were made
in China, this new one was sturdy - obviously built
to Japanese standards, and unlike that flimsy thing
I got at home, had an ingeniously clever mechanism. The
rainstorm, which seemed like it might've been tapering
off, resumed its fury. I stood under an alley overhang
waiting for another break so I could locate a
restaurant. Alas, no obvious prospects nor energy
for this - I went back to the hotel, pausing at the
7-11 across the street to stock up on something/anything
to make a meal, which I ate in my room while watching
weather-related news on the TV - some areas were
enduring flash floods. Instead of the usual wieners
and half-smokes rotating up by the 7-11's counter,
a steaming, compartmentalized vat of various foods
was bubbling, including octopus tentacles - this was
something I'd see in all the Japanese
kombini (and I
imagine it was a seasonal, cold-weather
offering) - it was oden, but I never tried
ordering any there, since that seemed too
challenging (although oden is tasty).
|