I don't have any interesting stories to begin this blog with, so I'll get right to the last few days I explored Okinawa with Anita.
Since the Monday we got back to Okinawa was a holiday, we went out salsa dancing again on Sunday night. When Monday's are a holiday, there are usually big salsa dancing parties on Sunday nights. Rocky and Charles took us back to Naha to try a different salsa club. I finally found out where all the military people hang out! It was a fun night. It was nice to practice salsa with Rocky and Charles, good practice.
We left the salsa club around 1 am and went to a pool hall in Naha to get some food. Mmmm, nothing like Japanese pool hall food, haha, NOT! Charles and I played a game of ping pong .We didn't stay out until 7 am this time, we got home and in bed by 4 am.
We slept in on Monday and decided to do some sightseeing. There are thousands of castle ruins in Okinawa and I'm still not sure which ones are the "best" to see. I found a sight with castle ruins in my guidebook, so I thought it was worth a try. At one point, we had to stop and ask a lady on the street which way to go. Luckily, we were not too far off track. The only information in English that I found about the castle is that it was constructed in the 15th century.
It smelled like camping which made me very happy.
A few minutes after arriving to the park, it got very cloudy and overcast, made for a great picture!
Nice view from the top!
We asked a couple walking by to take a picture of us...we weren't quite ready but good candid shot.
There were benches placed throughout the park, quiet and relaxing spots to rest.
After the castle ruins, we ate at an all you can eat pizza buffet. The pizza here is a lot different, super thin crust, not a lot of sauce and almost always has corn as a topping! I mostly stuck with the salad.
That Tuesday I went back to work. It was nice to see the students but they are so shy, only a couple of them ran up to give me hugs. The others smiled and started at me, waiting for me to hug them. As the week went on, the students had a harder and harder time following directions and staying on task. By Friday I was getting really annoyed.
Tuesday night I took Anita to sushi in American Village and Thursday night we went to karaoke with Rocky, Jessica and the kindergarten aide. We paid 300 yen each to sing in a private room for one hour. Anita and I had fun attempting to sing but I'm not sure if the rest of them had fun listening to us =) Karaoke is huge in Okinawa so it nice try it out.
Friday night, I took Anita to my favorite restaurant in Okinawa, Capital Steakhouse. It's within walking distance of my apartment and has the best food I've had here so far. A chef cooks your order on a grill in front of you. I've always had the shrimp dinner. All meals come with grilled veggies, soup, salad, rice, tea/coffee.
After dinner, Anita agreed that Capital is the best place to eat in Okinawa.
Anita and I explored the area around my apartment later that night. Our friend picked us up and drove us to the beach area 2 miles from my apartment. We hung out at a few bars, one karaoke bar and one martini bar. I had no ideas these bars existed, I'm glad I found them. Good spots for future visitors! One interesting thing that happened while we were out; military commanders, sergeants or some high up rank (they had fancy, pointy hats and were in uniform) would come into the bars, walk around a few minutes and leave. Someone in the bar told us that they are high ranking (something or others) who browse around the bars on weekends, making sure the military people that are out, are allowed to be out. I guess depending on your status/rank, you cannot be out past a certain time or be certain places. Interesting.
Sampling some authentic Japanese sake, the worker at the store told me this sake was good and that Americans loved it. It wasn't as good as I expected but decent enough.
We entertained ourselves with bubbles in the karaoke bar.
The next day (Saturday), we drove up to Nago to see the cherry blossoms. I invited Rocky and he came along for the ride and helped navigate. I wanted to eat at a restaurant called Pizza in the Sky. I was told it's a restaurant with a great view, that serves pizza. What more could you ask for? We decided to eat first, then see the cherry blossoms. Luckily, Rocky had been to the restaurant before, I would have NEVER found it. We went up windy, narrow dirt roads. It felt like we were in a scary movie at some points. After a few wrong turns, we finally found Pizza in the Sky, only to discover that they didn't open for another 45 minutes. We saw a little house turned coffee shop next to the restaurant and decided to get some tea while waiting. Anita and I shared a tea and Okinawan fruit drink. Rocky said the fruit drink is very healthy and is loaded with vitamin C.
Here's Anita getting her daily dose of vitamins.
We shared tea and the fruit drink, both were delicious.
The owners gave us this Okinawan appetizer. It's leaf's that are filled with a sweet, sticky potatoes. Good to try but I wasn't a big fan. You eat it by unwrapping the leaf and biting the potato part on the inside.
Rocky and Anita enjoying drinks while waiting for Pizza in the Sky to open.
View outside the coffee shop.
We walked over to Pizza in the Sky about 15 minutes after they opened and were told that it was full, so we'd have to wait a few minutes. UGH! We chose to avoid the wait by sitting outside to eat. It was surprisingly a small building but was very crowded
The famous view from the restaurant, I guess the drive and wait were worth it =)
This is the menu, a fan! Japanese on one side and English on the other. We each ordered a personal sized pizza. Each pizza came with corn, pepperoni, sausage and green peppers.
Rocky eating his pizza with chop sticks! *He didn't didn't eat the whole pizza with them. The pizza was good, the view topped it off. We left satisfied.
After eating, we drove up a rode lined with cherry blossom trees. This was the first official weekend of the cherry blossom festival and there were only a few tress that were fully bloomed.
The festival had lots of games, food and activities for kids.
We got a few good pictures.
The kids walking around were so cute and seemed to be enjoying themselves.
A worker tried to talk us into buying these huge cotton candies, no thank you! Anita told him that she would get way too hyper.
Okinawan donuts and pancakes filled with red beans. They looked just like the ones I had with my family in Little Tokyo.
Anita decided to go down the slide with the rest of the kids =)
After exploring the festival, we rested at home for a bit then went out to dinner. The parents of a student at my school run a restaurant out of their house. The mom grew up in Tokyo and doesn't like Okinwan food, so she cooks authenitic "Japanese" food. She opened up her restaurant to the teachers and a few parents from school. I was surprised to find that all the parents at the dinner were parents of my students!
Here are the kids playing outside before dinner. Five of them are my students, they were surprised but excited to see me. They looked adorable out of their uniform and in "regular" clothes.
This dish is teppanyaki. Teppanyaki refers to dishes cooked using an iron plate. This particular dish had cabbage, squid, soy sauce and a few other unknown items in it =) You eat it in small portions so it stays warm. The taste wasn't bad.
We also sampled yaki soba (fried noodles) and onigiri rice balls (rice in the shape of a ball, mixed with meat or veggies, this one was mixed with pieces of carrot). The noodles were my favorite, very light but bursting with flavor! We also had pickled ginger.
One of the moms gave us the same sweet potato dish that we had tried earlier in the day. I think this one is filled with yams.
It was fun getting to interact with some of my students and their parents on a more personal level. The parents were all so friendly and drinking, A LOT! Maybe thats why there were being so friendly =)
I drove Anita to the airport the next morning. We were both sad to say our goodbyes but know that we will see each other again soon. We created memories that will last a lifetime and I'm so thankful for her friendship.
XOXO
Kristen