Categories
Funny

Weird house

A really weird house is what I found the other day while wandering around Tokyo.

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This is the house from the other side of the street

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If we aproach you can see a fighter piece!

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It seems he/she also likes trains and boats.

Casa rara
Mickey Mouse clock no top of the vending machine.

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Stitch stickers.

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Batman stickers.

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Train posters.

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It seems it’s a piece from a XF-2

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And below the plane piece there was a cage with pigeons.

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Mousepads for free! These had even the price sticker on them (300 yen), but on the paper is written that you can take them for free.

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Perspective from the other side.

A fighter, a pigeon cage, freed mousepads, stickers, flowers… Surrealistic? While I was taking the pictures nobody was on the street, silence all around me, I could only listen the “guruguru” made by the piegons. And then, I listened how a zeppelin was flying just on top of my head! I felt like I was inside a Haruki Murakami novel.

Casa rara

Categories
Drinks

Oldskool Sprite

Sprite

Sprite

Categories
Traditional

Goemon

Goemon is the Japanese “Robin Hood”. He was a ninja who stole money and gold from rich people and gave it to poor people. I’m reading a book about his life and the most interesting thing is how he died. The legend says that Toyotomi Hideyoshi(One of the most important feudal lords in the history of Japan) troops killed Goemon’s wife, and he decided to avenge his wife death trying to assassinate Toyotomi.

Goemon entered into Toyotomi’s room at night while he was sleeping. But when he was almost next to him, ready to slay Toyotomi, he knocked a bell off the table. The bell’s sound alerted the guards and woke up Toyotomi. He was sentenced to death by being boiled alive together with his son in a caldron (troglodyte style?). Goemon was mighty and brave enough to keep his son outside of the boiling water the maximum time he could. Some versions of the legend say that the son survived, he was forgiven by the people who witnessed the inhuman effort made by his father in order to save him.

Goemon
Goemon dying and keeping his son alive.

Bath tubes/ofuros with caldron shape are called goemon-buro in Japanese in reference to the Goemon’s death legend. I’ve never bath in a goemon-buro but there are some of them in traditional onsens. If you are very interested in bathing in a caldron/goemon-buro you can buy it via web or you can even build one yourself.

Goemon

Goemon
This is how a goemon-buro works

There are many movies and novels based on this legend. But most of these books and films are only available in Japanese. What crossed borders and became a world-wide phenomenon were the Goemon video games, I specially remember the SNES and N64 versions.

Goemon

Goemon

Goemon

Links (Japanese but with interesting pics)