Hi all! We got some furniture last week and the apartment is looking much homier now! The sofa and table came as is, but the kitchen cabinet, a bookshelf, and a TV stand came in flat boxes and I put them together myself while Braden was at work. I was pretty proud of myself for managing it, but boy was my right arm tired when I was done.
I got a small oven from a yard sale page on Facebook, so I can bake now. It's also a microwave (those Japanese sure are inventive when it comes to space saving devices). A couple days ago I bought a washing machine and it's coming tomorrow (yay for not having to walk uphill with a bag full of laundry). All we have left to get for now is a TV and a car. The car is going to be a lifesaver around here. The buses only run once an hour most of the day, and they're often late... or early.
The kids and I have done a lot of exploring recently, mostly in the big Urasoe Park behind our apartment complex. The park is huge, and we still haven't seen all of it. Last week while we were walking we saw some wooden steps going up a small cliff with some stone masonry set into the hill, so we went up to investigate.
Google called it the 'Iso High Tomb'. There was an explanatory placard nearby but it was all in Japanese. I found an English explanation on a sign elsewhere in the park.
It says: "This tomb was made from a cave in the middle of a cliff and the front of which was sealed with stone masonry. The entrance to the tomb is large and of an old style, and it is said that Esonoyononushi, the father of King Eiso and three Aji (local rulers) are entombed here." The kids thought it was pretty cool and asked me if a zombie or ghosts would appear haha.
Speaking of ghosts, Urasoe park surrounds a pretty massive cemetery. We walked by it today on our way through a different part of the park. Okinawan cemeteries are really different from the ones on the Japanese mainland, which are all concrete and consist of many small monuments all crammed together in a tight space. The cemetery in Urasoe was full of small stone buildings with monuments out front, all lined up in rows like quaint ghostly houses.
We saw one that was particularly large and even had its own stone courtyard of sorts. Taran bravely went in to investigate.
Another interesting thing we did today was walk down a cobblestone road that is more than 300 years old. I was following the Google maps navi trying to find a nearby shopping center, and it took us to a really rough, stony road that went very steeply down into a ravine, over a small stone bridge that traversed a narrow river, and then very steeply up out of the ravine (apparently the King who had it built did not believe in switch backs. Only the shortest route was good enough for him XD).
We found an explanatory placard at the bottom of the ravine giving a little history of the road and the King who was known to traverse it frequently. The final paragraph says: "In the valley where the Makiminato River flows, an approximately 200m long and 3m wide stone paved road remains. The road in this area was called 'umadukerashi' (umakorobashi) as the slope was so steep that horses often collapsed from exhaustion. The bridge over the river was rebuilt in the Taisho and Showa periods."
All in all it's been a pretty interesting last couple of weeks. I found a couple of Japanese tutors for the kids, and we made some new friends at the local LDS church. One of the families had us over for dinner a couple nights ago. They have five kids and Clara and Taran had a lot of fun playing with them. Their little girl Noa, who's four, wanted to follow Clara everywhere, and Taran was in awe of their eleven year old son Riku and his set of battling tops. I'm going to try and find some for Taran's birthday next week.
Well, that's all for now. We're hopefully going car shopping this weekend or sometime next week, and I hope we'll have one by the time I make my next post. 'Till then!