
I freaked out a little bit because I didn’t know what to do or if it would be okay, but everything turned out fine. About 3 hours later it was completely dry and clear again.

Picture of it cleared up.
I guess that brings up a good point about the climate of Osaka. It is really, really humid. Being from Georgia one wouldn’t that that it could get worse than 90 or 95% humidity, but boy was I wrong. Osaka’s humidity is a different animal. You step outside for even a minute and you are sweating. The people of Osaka carry around towels during this time of the year to wipe the sweat off of their faces, that is how bad it is.
Our first destination was Osaka-jo, or Osaka Castle. Basically it is a huge castle that Osaka is famous for. We took the loop line to the castle’s park. The park is huge and surrounds the different walls of the castle with bridges over the moats. The park is free to enter, the castle, however is not.

One of the outer walls with a moat.


Our first view of the castle.

Bridge and castle.
We crossed the bridge into the actual castle grounds. For some reason I really like huge, old, stone walls. I don’t know why. Some of the walls made me think about these guys who lived on my hall in Rutherford last year. They are really goofy, fun guys and they like to climb stuff. One day they climbed up the outside of the parking deck (though this was the year before). They got in trouble, but not that much. Anyway, I think they would have loved these walls.

See? They are totally climbable; they would have gotten in trouble.

Our first view of the entire castle. Too bad the weather wasn’t better, I would have liked some blue sky.

Composed a little differently.

Don’t you just want to climb the walls? If you look closely, near the bottom of the wall on the left side there is a person standing there. That should give you some scale as to how big the castle is.

We went into the castle and found out that it had been renovated in the 90s and turned into a museum. I mean, it kind of killed the whole old castle aspect that the Matsuyama castle had, but it was still cool in its own right. The museum was all about the war in which Tokugawa and his armies stormed and then eventually took Osaka-jo. The coolest part was that you could go to the top and see all of Osaka from the castle.



They had the fish things too, though this castle’s were gold.




We left the castle and then saw a gaijin pidgin. It was a white pidgin, is what I was getting at, so it was kind of like me.

Cool view of the “crystal tower”.

Weird bug.

We also found this cool fountain on our way to the train station. We sat and watched it for a while.
We decided that our next destination should be the aquarium since it was supposed to be really neat, so we started in that direction. Near the station I noticed a Mos Burger out of the corner of our eye.

It was a red Mos Burger so I didn’t see it at first. Sneaky Mos Burger, very sneaky. Naturally we had to eat there.

We made it to the aquarium. It was 20 bucks to get in, which wasn’t so bad considering that it was really cool.


They even had their own waterfall.

AND PENGUINS!

There were also baby penguins.

I tried for a while to get a good shot of one jumping into and out of the water. This was one of the better ones I got.

This aquarium was another example of something we had noticed at the Ueno Zoo. All of the animals were really active. We decided that either Japan gives their animals some kind of crack to make them active or America sedates its animals. I think it is the latter, personally.

I have eaten one of those, teehee. They are kind of chewy.

A weird fish.

Herro!

Shark and its friends.


This is why my pictures look weird; I was shooting through a couple feet of acrylic.
We left the aquarium at about 6pm and since it was so late we headed back to the hostel since it was almost dinner-time. Our original plan was to go to the Hiroshima style Okonomiyaki restaurant near our hostel, but when we got there we found out that it was really expensive. We decided to go to the Sushi place across the street from our hostel, it wasn’t a kaitenzushi so we had to figure out how it worked, but it ended up being delicious. Some of their stuff was cheaper than kaitenzushi, which was nice.
After dinner we just hung out in the hostel. I checked some stuff online and then I think we went to bed earlier than usual since we were wiped.
1 comment:
haha, wow. I'm surprised how bad the humidity is in Osaka compared to the other places you have been.
I doubt the functionality of the fancy roof fish. Also, if you were making a castle of any kind, wouldn't you want it to be as known scalable as possible? How many unsuspecting nobles got ninja'd because of a short sighted building design XP
Whatever they are giving these animals, I'm sure you could find some in a alleyway across the street.
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