We arrived on a glorious Friday and checked into our Ryokan (traditional Japanese inn). We had some lunch 0-hanami style (picnicing under the cherry trees at a nearby park and after some ice cream (soy for me) trekked out to Nanzen-ji and enjoyed the grounds, a quiet garden and ancient aquaduct.
We then retired to our ryokan and had tea and then private baths. Dinner followed and then Mom, Max and I crashed on our comfy futons while Rich took Mark out for a drink in the Geisha district.
Day two we had intermittent light rain but we covered Ginaku-ji and it's amazing gardens and sand gardens, and the gorgeous Heian Shrine gardens. Lunch was a ramen noodle shop (inedible for me as the broth was either chicken and pork derived and turned my stomach.) So for dinner I made everyone go to a vegetarian buffet place. We then toured the Nijo-jo castle with its gardens and cherry trees illuminated by spotlights.
We then took a cab outside of the main city to Ryoan-ji, site of one of the more famous zen rock gardens. We contemplated the ripples in the sand as deeply as is possible when accompanying a 2-year-old, hiked through the gardens and grabbed some lunch.
On the way back we saw the gardens of the Imperial Palace where Max ran into a tree and scraped his nose while chasing a girl. Then he crashed in the stroller and got an hour of shut-eye while we made our way back to the hotel to grab our bags and cabbed it to the train station. We made our train with only a few minutes to spare but once on board it was pretty smooth all the way back to Tokyo, a trip that lasts just about 2.5 hours on the shinkansen (bullet train).
1 comment:
Glad to see you enjoyed Kyoto...this was my favorite part: "Max ran into a tree and scraped his nose while chasing a girl"
Post a Comment