Hakone buying hash

Hakone buying hash

Hakone buying hash

Hakone buying hash

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Hakone buying hash

My sister and I both bought ekibens to eat on the train. I love the assortment of ekibens! After our stay in Kyoto, we wanted to stay overnight in Hakone to catch a glimpse of Mt Fuji. We had to catch a ferry which looked pretty spiffy and it took under an hour to get across to the other side of Lake Ashinoko. Unfortunately, it was far too foggy to see 10 metres in front, let alone Mt Fuji, so we were both devastated that we had traveled all that way to not see anything. We headed back to our ryokan, Ashinoko Ichinoyu, to relax and freshen up. Dinner was included in our accommodation and it was plentiful with a pot bubbling away with a broth made of mushrooms, cabbage and chives, steamed vegetables served in a bamboo steamer, sashimi three-ways, and slices of beef on a sizzle plate. Breakfast at the ryokan the next day included salted fish, a boiled egg, pickled vegetables, miso soup, rice and natto. What is natto? Luckily it was blue skies in the morning, so we took the cable car up again to get a shot of Mt Fuji. It was a very short trip and it was time to leave again. The small shop at the ferry terminal had a good range of snacks like these huge seaweed crackers. I purchased a box of wasabi Kit Kats to take home with me. I left with a Hakone Bakery curry doughnut — the doughnut was coloured with squid ink giving it a savoury and slightly salty flavour. We stayed in Yokohama for two nights as we wanted to do a day trip out to Kamakura. Did you know that Yokohama has the largest Chinatown in Japan? We had no plans that morning so we took our time strolling around. I saw these steamed buns with some rather sad looking pandas painted on them. These were large buns filled with pork mince. They were nothing spectacular and I remember thinking it could have used some vinegar dipping sauce. The bun had been placed in the steamer for too long so that the bottom was a little soggy too. We found a small brightly coloured ramen shop, which looked to be a chain store. We both purchased the No. You order via a vending machine and provide the receipt to a staff member who confirms your order, provides you with flavour options light, medium, strong , and ramen texture options soft, medium, hard. I went with medium for both. For an eatery we stumbled across, I was really happy with the quality. A thick chicken broth, 3 pieces of deliciously soft pork belly, a quail egg, a regular hard boiled hens egg and seaweed. Too bad i have no idea what the restaurant was called as it was all in Japanese. Not the cheapest ramen but good quality, fast and delicious. We had no planned sightseeing that day, so we wandered throughout the very large city. We walked by Yokohama Landmark Tower which turned out to be the second tallest building in Japan. We bought admission tickets and caught the elevator to the top. The views were lovely and we could see the whole man made island of Minato Mirai with its amusement park and ferris wheel, hotels and shopping centres. I was very happy to discover that the cafe at the top of the Landmark building sold Cremia. I had walked by a few cafes during my trip selling Cremia but had always been too full to try it. Time was also running out as we were reaching the end of our trip. Luckily, the Landmark Building cafe was one of the few places I had come across to sell a double serve! Much excitement! Cremia is a soft cream consisting of There was only a subtle hint of cheesiness and I could immediately taste the high quality of the soft cream. The way the ice cream is poured into vertical waves is based on an image of silk. The cone is different to your regular wafer cones. What luxury! Our accommodation was close to the Yokohama train station, which was large and filled with eateries so my sister and I headed there for dinner. We ended up splitting up for dinner as she wanted a burger, and I wanted to keep eating Japanese food. A very filling meal! It was just after Easter, so the gardens in between the buildings had been decorated with Easter decor. I ordered a crumbed pork cutlet with omelette and gravy. From Yokohama, we caught the local train into the small seaside village of Kamakura to see the Great Buddha Daibatsu. On the way, we passed a small shop selling fried sweet croquettes. I tried the m atcha cream croquette while my sister tried the sweet potato cream croquette. I loved the warm gooey creamy centres! We walked down the main shopping street Komachi Dori in Kamakura which had so many things to snack on! There was a dango shop selling all sorts of flavours including d essert dango! I could have filled up at this shop that usually has a queue out the door. I chose the strawberry dango which I much prefer to the savoury ones. My sister chose the chestnut. There was a nut shop shop that had so many different flavoured nuts and a massive sampling tray at the front. The famous Kamakura Hangetsu shop was also on this street. The shop is famous for its thin biscuits shaped in a half moon with different fillings and these are sold all over Japan. I purchased the six pack with three matcha and three red bean flavours. Peanut had recently been introduced too. I loved them so much! The wafer thin biscuits had a beautiful just baked taste to them with a thin layer of flavoured cream in between. So addictive that I bought a pack including the peanut flavour at the Haneda airport before I left to fly back to Australia. I savoured every bite. Perfect with a cup of tea. We watched a lady make kintsuba, a Japanese sweet that comes in lots of flavours like pumpkin, sakura, sweet potato, matcha etc with a few nuts covered in really thin soft batter. I chose the pumpkin but it just tasted like sugar to me. I saw a stall selling taiyaki filled with white bait. It was lunch time, and we joined the queue at a small udon shop, Kamakura Udon , down another alley off Komachi Dori. There was no English name over the blue flags above the door, but I managed to grab a business card on the way out with the Kamakura Udon website on it. The eatery was small with just a few seats around the counter. Peeking in between the white curtains leading into the kitchen, my sister and I could see the freshly made udon being stretched and pulled into shape. It was fascinating to watch. I ordered the Torijiru udon which came with cold Zaru udon noodles and a hot chicken broth to dip the udon into. There was a noticeable difference with the udon which was chewy but had the perfect amount of resistance in my opinion. I loved it! After our udon lunch, we found a little patisserie, Yukinoshita, down an alley off Komachi Dori. We chose the sakura tart with sakura mousse, some whipped cream and pistachio sponge inside. Very light and heavenly. I had to try the Bonsai — which was a matcha tiramisu with layers of matcha sponge and cream inside. We also tried a chocolate and raspberry slice and a sakura macaron. After afternoon tea, we kept strolling. Kamakura Chacha sold so many types of matcha soft serve and gelato. There were 5 levels of matcha gelato ranging from a light matcha flavour to a strong matcha flavour, as well as 4 levels of matcha soft serve. I was too full from the cakes to give it a try, but am really wishing I did it anyway. In the same alley as the udon shop, we found a cafe specialising in latte art. There was a sign at the entrance of the alley with photos of the latte art work. Out came a work of anime art. I was just blown away by how gorgeous it was! Yes it was an expensive coffee, and a bit watery for my tastes, but the barista has some mad latte art skills. The table next to us got a Hello Kitty artwork. From Tokyo, we did a day trip to visit the small town of Nikko, about an hour train ride away. Nikko is famous for making yuba — tofu skins made form skimming the top of boiled soybean milk and then dried. There were a few shops outside the train station and we passed by a stall selling fried yuba manju — a fried tofu croquette. The yuba was mixed in with the batter and I believe there was only one filling inside, red bean paste, but I was happy with that. The yuba manju were extremely hot, with a delicious crunchy batter and soft smooth red bean inside. A delight for winter. We headed to the tourist information centre and picked up a map of the town which pointed out several restaurants on the way to Toshogu, a famous Shinto shrine. We stopped about a third to half way to the shrine at a small restaurant that made yuba three ways. My sister and I both ordered udon noodles with the three types of yuba. The first piece of yuba we actually received two pieces of this was one long strip rolled tightly into a roll. It did just taste like tofu skin. Another piece consisted of yuba wrapped around what seemed like thick noodles. The final piece was yuba wrapped around soft tofu. The dark broth was delicious and provided the much needed flavour required. After lunch, we walked to Toshogu. Unfortunately, most of it was under renovation but we did manage to get a couple of good shots in. We also walked to Kammangafuchi Gorge. It took a while to get there but the serenity of the place was worth it. We had the place almost to ourselves with the sound of the gushing river on one side and the Jizo statues on the other. The top of the river held a small gazebo high up on the rocks — it took a bit of scrambling to get to it, but it had a lovely view of the river and some people were meditating. It was time to slowly walk back into the main city and head back into Tokyo. We did make one last stop at a tourist outlet when I saw tofu ice cream being sold at a stand. It actually tasted more like the Asian soy milk my parents would always buy growing up a lot sweeter than regular soy milk so it brought on some happy memories. And folks, that is it for my adventures in Japan! I hope you enjoyed going through it as much as I did. There is so much more to Japan that I would love to discover and taste. A country I could happily revisit again and again. Wasabi beer was on sale as well as cherry blossom beer. Yokohama We stayed in Yokohama for two nights as we wanted to do a day trip out to Kamakura. Kamakura From Yokohama, we caught the local train into the small seaside village of Kamakura to see the Great Buddha Daibatsu. The sign out the front showed the list of flavours and prices. The Sugi honey shop was very popular with the tourists. There were plenty of small cakes, macarons and pastries to umm and ahh over. Nikko From Tokyo, we did a day trip to visit the small town of Nikko, about an hour train ride away. Leave a Reply Cancel reply.

Monday, May 31—Hakone/Tokyo

Hakone buying hash

Dear visitor, if you know the answer to this question, please post it. Thank you! Note that this thread has not been updated in a long time, and its content might not be up-to-date anymore. What he is doing is illegal in Japan. Give him help to stop it, that's the best thing you can do for both of you. I believe though I am no lawyer you do not get arrested simply for not reporting. But really, help him quit it. By biased views I mean, seeing marijuana users as evil people, or not knowing the difference between hard drugs and soft drugs, or not knowing how addictive or not additctive marijuana is. Most Japanese people have these things all mixed up, but you probably don't, which makes his long story real short. In other words, I think he will listen to you if you tell him he should stop. If someone more ignorant tells him to stop, he would just think 'You don't understand. About the law, you can make an anonimous call to the police from a phone booth and they will answer all your questions. However, as far as I know, you won't get arrested just for failing to report that a friend is carrying marijuana. That said, if you two live together and if the police finds marijuana in his drawer, that would mean they found it in 'your house'. If he is arrested for carrying marijuana in Japan, that means he will practically be banned from the society, loosing his job and all, which eventually will affect your household income and reputation. If he gets a criminal record, he can be restricted from traveling abroad in the future, which means he can't be with you for any of your home-comings. A student can get arrested for marijuana and not only his school but the name of his club activity will appear on the papers and I'm not talking about the recent news. I've seen articles like that so many times. You never know how your name can end up next to his. Some people in Japan do get away with marijuana. But it's extremely important to know the risks of yours and those who may get involved. He should have patience. A pot-free law or a pot-free place of residence comes first. I don't know where he is from but if he is non-Japanese, then he should go back to his country as soon as possible and see to any drug specialist or medical center who can professionally help him get out of the terrible addiction. It is certainly a criminal offence in Japan to use that kind of drug and he can be caught anytime. After using the drug for a certain period, he will lose himself completely, damaging his whole life. You are to send him to a specialist before he use more of it. He must stop using it. I am not a marijuana user and don't advocate its use. However I work in the health care field and can tell you for a fact that doctors, lawyers, teachers, policemen, judges etc. Heroin, Cocaine and even the legal alcoholic drinks one can get in any bar in Japan are far far more destructive. Again I don't advocate the use of any drug, especially if it is illegal but hysterical claims like yours will not make a user stop. Uco mentioned that he cant travel abroad if he got a criminal record so im pretty sure with a criminal record that means he definitely cant get any kind of visa to my home country u. Can you be a bit more specific? But just by viewing this very thread, you can see that a lot of people do not understand marijuana, so if someone finds out that you're associated with a user, moreover a criminal, your reputation tends to fall. But also, a lot of City Halls shiyakusho can lead you to free consulting in foreign languages, and these consultants usually have the duty to keep your secrets. Still of course I encourage you to talk to him straight about quitting. If you try weed, your not going to jump into a car and drive it into a building and start killing people, for a lot of people its just a way to relieve your stress, get rid of a head ache, or just relax. I do realize some people use it for the wrong reasons but its not a harsh drug that will destroy your life. Sorry I went off the topic, but I hate it when people like Mamiko go and say weed will destroy your life. And it's perfectly normal and also expected for a girl to be concerned about what she will be facing with her future partner. Even if marijuana is no big deal, marriage is. I agree that some of the posters are overreacting about addiction which is a very normal reaction among the locals , and indeed a lot of people do smoke marijuana while being in Japan and face no problems. And those who don't think it's a big deal don't know it. According to the Japanese law ; \[People go to jail for possessing less than one gram of hemp and they face many social penalties too loss of job, expulsion from schools, etc. Theoretically you can go to prison for five years for a single joint. Larger quantities, cultivation or smuggling will lead to prison sentences of up to seven years. Smugglers caught with a few hundred grams to a few kg of cannabis are routinely sent to prison for years. Discipline in Japanese prisons is extremely strict and conditions are harsh. All foreigners caught with marijuana will be deported after having served their sentence, with a life-time ban on returning into the country even someone as famous as Paul McCartney wasn't re-admitted until 11 years later. Japan has a general policy of refusing entry to all foreigners with a criminal record on controlled substance violations. Otherwise, people will think you copied and pasted someone's opinion from another forum or blog, which is what it looks like you did. At Uco i wasnt refering to the original poster to returning to the reply by the person who clearly has no experience what so ever in the subject in hand and is mearly throwing usless information in amounst it. Now the reason for things as such to get such a bad rep is because people dont understand, people presume the worst and this isnt always the case. For example in School i was told 'Cannabis' was a bad bad thing, You would die if you take it, its highly addictive and it till ruin your life. Now non of this was true however people are being told this information all the time which i feel.. Each to their own at the end of the day tho, I choose not to do it not because im scared but because i dont want to. As far as telling him to quit goes I dont think its a good idea to tell him straight out to quit. He trusted you enough to tell you something that if it gets out can cause him to go to jail if he gets caught with any on him. If you wish he would quit ask him if he ever considered quitting, and see how he responds to it. Dont make him feel pressure to quit because that can only make it worse especially if it is an addiction. I know this because I have known quite a few people who used many types of drugs, and only seen them get offended, and upset, and really just not care, or listen when you tell them its best they quit. Supporting him, and being there for him when he is ready to quit if he wishes to without you making him feel like he should he will appreciate because you werent one of the people judging him, and making him feel like a junky for his choice like so many others probably would. I think if he doesn't do it on a daily basis, and can agree not to keep it in the house once you are married then it isnt really a problem as long as your comfortable with it. Its just my opinion, through what I have witnessed when it comes to this specific drug. But really my advice is to ask him if he ever considered quitting, and if he seems genuinely interested in quitting great, but if not dont pressure him about it because he isnt going to appreciate that, just be sure he can agree to keep it out of the house when you do move in with him if he refuses to quit. I hope everything works out the way you hope it will : by T rate this post as useful. It seems illegal drugs are controlled by the yakuza. They may be his source and if so, I would question how safe if is for him and you to continue this habit. Pot in japan is no joke tell him to stop now or move to a different country by caught in japan rate this post as useful. This character is read 'ma' in Chinese and represents two plants hanging upside down from the rafters of a drying shed. Note that only marijuana plants would be hung to dry in thus fashion, as cannabis grown for fibre is field-retted after harvest. Since the decline of cannabis cultivation, 'asa' has become a sort-of catch-all term for replacement crops such as jute, sisal, flax linen, as well as cannabis, making it a bit confusing. However in any dictionary or other languge resource, it is unmistakable that the asa character means cannabis. A character which refers to cannabis more specifically is 'taima'. This is the 'official' word for the plant used in the law that prohibits its cultivation. There is an amazing piece of linguistic proof that the ancient japanese were very aware of cannabis' enlightening uses. The japanese character for 'to rub' consists of 'cannabis' and 'hand'. Of course, you rub cannabis only to get hashish. Cannabis culture also lives on through family names such as Asada or Asahara hemp field and given names like Asako little hemp child or Mamiko hemp flower. Question Forum Bookmarked questions Ask a new question. I assume the two of you are living in Japan. Cici, I think your bf told you about his habit mainly because he thought you won't have biased views. He is addicted to it and I don't think it is easy for anyone to make him stop using it without a help of a specialist. I didn't post in details about your concern regarding residence status and things of that nature earlier because I was not sure of your you and your boyfriend's nationalities, but may I assume that you are non-Japanese and your boyfriend Japanese? Weed isn't so bad, not as bad as they make it out to be. I don't think 'the person who started this topic' intended to talk about the affects of marijuana in terms of health. The following shows a Japanese law against users of illegal drugs including marijuana if found. It would be a good idea to post a link to where you found your reference to the Japanese Law. I'm no expert on drugs, or the laws of Japan, but I do know mirijuana is one of the safest drugs out there when it comes to health related issues, it doesnt cause any of the illnesses many legal things such as ciggarettes, alcohol, etc does. I hope everything works out the way you hope it will :. I would be concerned about how he is getting the weed? I imported 8. Pot in japan is no joke tell him to stop now or move to a different country. After re-reading the webpage I posted a link to, I got a good laugh that someone named Mamiko which means Hemp flower is so against Cannibus! See what I mean? Not So bad. Uco is right. Japan and Cannibus. ATTN Mamiko.

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