![]() |
Tree of Harmony in the Malaysian Pavilion |
![]() |
![]() |
Resting space |
![]() |
Expo from on top of the grand ring |
![]() |
Pokemon themed displays that were the Pokestops. Fun! |
![]() |
From on top of the grand ring at night. |
Thoughts on faith, life and a fair amount of sewing. Soli Deo Gloria.
![]() |
Tree of Harmony in the Malaysian Pavilion |
![]() |
![]() |
Resting space |
![]() |
Expo from on top of the grand ring |
![]() |
Pokemon themed displays that were the Pokestops. Fun! |
![]() |
From on top of the grand ring at night. |
We were pretty keen on going to see sumo while we were in Japan. This national sport is so iconic and different that it just seemed like a must do. Unfortunately, the tournament in Tokyo only lasts three weeks and the locations in other cities (Nagoya and Osaka) didn't match our time line. We did our research and attempted to get tickets, but they sold out in about an hour of opening.
You could get resale tickets from sites like Klook, but they were easily four times the price, and for a back row seat, it just didn't seem worth it. It seemed like our chance was over and we just had to be content with the sumo we saw back in May at a local festival. By chance, my friend David travelled around to Osaka and told me about a sumo show he saw there.
The Sumo Hall Hirakuza Oaska put on a sumo show experience that was as good as we were going to get. We only had two and a bit days in Osaka before we flew home, but I was pretty determined to fit it in. We booked a night session that included a bento dinner to enjoy while you watched.
The show had an introduction section (explaining the rituals and history), sumo training and a match. The training was impressive, since the sumo are so flexible. Then they had people from the audience "fight" the sumo. The whole thing was very staged, but it was oh so fun. When they announced at the start that people from the audience could sign up for the raffle to fight the sumo, Sophie leapt up immediately and joined the line of men who were putting their names down.
![]() |
Sumo getting ready for their match. |
They took her and three other guys back stage to get ready (into ridiculous, puffy sumo suits) and then the competition began. The three men went first, each choosing a sumo to fight and before being thrown to the ground. When the second guy went down, I turned to Steve and said: "Sophie's going to win this."
Sophie got up and they asked her name and where she was from. The cheer from the crowd when they heard Australia was huge. She was quite cautious at the start of the match, but the sumo she fought was so fun and great with her and the crowd was cheering so much, soon she was pushing away to try to knock him down. You can watch the video here.
Rachel's reaction when the match ended was pretty fabulous.
We were pretty proud of our Sophie for getting up and giving it a go. What a way to finish up our time in Japan!
This is the story she tells everyone when they ask how was Japan and what was the highlight.
Got to say, it was a pretty big highlight for me too. So fun!
For those paying attention and playing along at home, yes, we are actually back in Australia, but I'm still wrapping up Japan posts! Bear with me, there aren't too many to go (I think).
After the week of touring around Hiroshima with my parents (I really do feel like we saved up most of the Hiroshima highlights to do with them and then smashed them out quick smart), we had about five days left in Hiroshima, and just over a week left in Japan. Most of our Hiroshima list was done, and we weren't feeling particularly energetic about trying to find new things. Even though it was our "last few days", we were also just doing life.
Pretty much the only thing the girls really wanted to make sure they got one last go at was karaoke. I love how confident they are and how much they enjoying singing along now. I think we will miss our karaoke sessions in Australia.
The other thing they did was a live call in to their school in Australia to compete in the Talent Show Finals with their Soran Bushi Dance. They had recorded their entry when we were in Shodoshima, and were so proud to have made it through to the finals.
The second half of our time in Hiroshima began with a final round of visitors from Australia. This time, my parents flew in to actually stay with us for a whole week. They had wanted to come earlier in our stay, but their own travel plans gave them very few options.
The first few days they were here were very rainy. Lots of night time downpours and then on and off during the day. We managed to get home from Hiroshima station with all the luggage safely, but the next day was not as smooth. A huge storm in the night, which woke us up at 2am when lightning cracked across the sky and the sound echoed off all the mountains around us put the whole region on landslide alert. There wasn't any immediate risk, but the update notifications made sleep pretty tricky.
On top of that, sometime in the morning a tree came down on the main train line and Steve's way into work was actually out for the entire day. I had been planning on taking my parents and the girls out to a transport museum, for the day, so it wasn't a huge problem for Steve to work from home. What was a factor though, was that since the main train was out, everyone who usually caught that had switched to the smaller line, so the wait time was enormous.
We did join the line for a while before aborting and going the opposite direction to a department store shopping area. Definitely not my activity of choice, but in an effort to be out of the house and away from the train, the options were slim.
We walked through an area apparently famous for kendama (a Japanese traditional wooden cup and ball game). Kendama mascots everywhere, and the manhole covers also reflecting the kendama icon. At the shops the girls got new school shoes since they had both grown out of the ones we bought with us from Australia. I don't know if any of Sophie's Australian clothes will fit when we return. My mum got various things from shops for people, but mostly we just bummed around killing time though.
The next day we again tried to get to the transport museum only to find (after an hour of train travel) that it was closed! I don't think I will ever understand the way Japanese businesses decide to randomly close midweek. We again pivoted to a shopping alternative, since we'd already come north of Hiroshima, and I took my parents to a second hand store called Book Off, where my dad found a good quality train for his set up at home. At least the train trip out was fun, seeing the mountains and rivers of Hiroshima from a different view.
That afternoon we came back home via Hiroshima City because my Uncle from Sydney had decided last min to fly in and join us for the week! He must have loved his visit to Tokyo in June so much that he had to come back again before we left.
The next day, Steve took some time off work and all of us met on the train and took the ferry over to Miyajima for the day. Again, the weather was cloudy and threatening rain, so not the best. The heat and humidity were also quite high. This was my first visit to Miyajima though, and I really enjoyed it.
It turns out my Pa-pou (grandfather) had been stationed here after World War 2 for 18months, on guard duty and helping with the clean up. My mum has pictures of him (her dad) at these very statues in uniform.
The island has lots of little shops and things to see down by the shore. I wish the weather had been better, because I was keen to go on the ropeway up to Mt Mizen and then walk back down through the forest, but it really wasn't worth it with all the clouds and the walk in the heat wouldn't have been fun. Instead we wandered around dodging the occasional deer and enjoying the food. Steve had some beer from Miyajima Brewery and the rest of us had momiji (maple shaped and flavoured cakes) with red bean, ice cream and strawberries.
The next day was Saturday, and we met in town to visit the Peace Park, Hiroshima Castle (rebuilt after WW2) and generally wander. Thinking about what is happening in the world and seeing the destruction of this building (known as the Atomic Dome) preserved after the nuclear bomb was dropped on Hiroshima in 1945, was pretty confronting. Are we as people destined to just repeat the cycle of war again and again? Will we always be sweeping away the rubble after the destruction to rebuild?
There are no real answers, and I hope the answer is that we will learn from our past. In the grounds of Hiroshima Castle, there is a eucalyptus tree that survived the bomb and is still growing, 80 years on. So I guess there is life to come.
My parents and I have all been to the museum in the Peace Park before, and were not keen to relive the experience. I also didn't want to take the girls in, since I remembered finding it a bit scaring when I went as a 17 year old in 2003. Steve and Yianni went in and the rest of us went home via a hobby shop so Dad could get some specific train tracks for his set.
We finally managed to get to the transport museum the next day, which was fun. The kids areas were probably aimed at some slightly younger kids than ours, but still enjoyable. Our last day together had the best weather yet, and we took a train south, just over the boarder to Yamaguchi Prefecture to visit the Kintaikyo Bridge at Iwakuni. This was a recommendation from someone Steve worked with and it was so cool.
![]() |
Manhole covers of Hiroshima dedicated to the various types of okonomiyaki |
Our final bit of moving around before we settled in Hiroshima for four weeks was to travel from Imabari, via Okunoshima and stay a night in Onomichi. This would take us from Shikoku back to the mainland of Japan (Honshu). Even though Shikoku is a seperate island, it's actually connected to Honshu a several points with enormous bridges. From Imabari, the Shimanami Kaido is a bridge/road that passes over six small islands in the Seto Inland Sea and finishes in Onomichi.
I've added it as a little bridge icon on the map above, but it's a bit hard to appreciate it from that. None of the smaller islands that it crosses over are shown at all. It's a popular cycling route and I can see why. The view as you drive over the bridges is stunning.
![]() |
A better shot of the islands and the roads and bridges connecting them from here. |
We will get to that in a bit, but first, it's always best to drive with four working wheels on your car.
Next up: Hiroshima!