From Nagoya
So, my first ever trip to Japan has started pretty well. The flight via Frankfurt arrived on schedule and I arrived with all the luggage I was supposed to have too! I didn’t get any sleep on the long flight from Frankfurt to Nagoya, but then I never seem to manage to drop off on aircraft. I was quite jealous of the lady next to me, actually, as she slept soundly for most of the journey.
Here I am, then. It’s mid-afternoon local time but ridiculously early morning on my body clock. Travelling West to East is always more difficult, I think. Going the other way you can usually sleep off the jet lag pretty quickly, but going East-West and arriving in the morning (local time) means you’ve basically lost a night’s sleep. On a trip to Shanghai years ago I was in a similar situation, arriving at the airport in mid-morning to be met with a welcoming committee and taken to a very big lunch (complete with beer). When this was over, around 3.30 in the afternoon, my hosts suggested that I must be tired and took me to my hotel. No sooner had I unpacked my bags and put my feet up than I fell sound asleep; I didn’t wake up until midnight. So it was that I remained completely out of kilter with the time zones. It took most of my stay in China to get adjusted. I thus learned the hard way that if you want to deal successfully with the problem of jetlag then you have to stay awake as long as possible on the day you arrive…
I must seem like a complete wimp to those observational astronomers who not only go jet-setting around the world but also climb up and down mountains to get to observatories perched on their summit as well as working all night rather than day once they’ve got there. How they manage to cope with all that and remain (relatively) compos mentis when they arrive back at their day job is beyond me.
Anyway, despite lack of sleep the flight wasn’t too bad. I was impressed by the collection of classical music and jazz available on the in-flight entertainment system offered by Lufthansa, and there were even some decent movies on offer. I managed to see the first of Peter Jackson’s Hobbit movies, which I quite enjoyed though I found some of the set-pieces far too drawn out. I also watched, for the first time in ages, Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey…
First impression of Nagoya is that it’s basically an industrial city. My hosts tell me that the city was very heavily bombed during WW2 because of the important factories in the area. The campus at Nagoya University where I’m staying is fairly small but facilities seem pretty good. I’m looking forward to doing a bit of exploring at the weekend, when hopefully I’ll find some interesting historical buildings!
I was a bit worried about how well I would manage without being able to speak (or read) any Japanese. There are challenges, but the excellent Metro system is actually quite well signposted in English so I’m not anticipating too many problems sightseeing. Buying food might be another matter!
Better draw this rambling post to a close. Hopefully my brain will be up to writing something more substantial tomorrow..
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January 10, 2014 at 4:01 pm
I was there in 1986, the only country I have seen where men put on jacket and tie to walk the dog. I was most impressed with the social cohesion shown by the Japanese after the earthquake-tsunami-Fukushima reactor disaster just under 3 years ago. There would have been something closer to social breakdown and looting in some other affluent countries.
Phillip, you refused to consider folding the poster? And, changing the subject, you spent time at Jodrell so you might be interested in a fine biography of Bernard Lovell published a few months ago, Space Has No Frontier.
January 14, 2014 at 9:54 am
I wonder if this problem inspired Peter’s subsequent post about fitting a 1-metre Samurai sword into luggage racks as the diagonal of a suitcase?
January 14, 2014 at 10:17 am
Yes, it did actually!
January 14, 2014 at 10:56 am
You could disguise it as a samurai sword, then you won’t have any problems!
January 10, 2014 at 4:17 pm
Peter,
Peter Jackson had to cut Lord of the Rings to get it into three 3-hr movies; it’s 1000 pages long. The Hobbit is about a fifth of that, which is why he has to pad it out a lot to do the same. Money is the obvious driver, although I personally care a lot less if liberties are taken with The Hobbit than Lord of the Rings. And I have fun trying to imagine what JRRT would have made of dialogue such as
Dwarf: “Aren’t you going to search me? I could have anything in my trousers!”
Elf-maiden: “Or nothing.”
2001 HAS to be seen first-time on a big screen.
January 10, 2014 at 7:17 pm
Peter,
Have fun in Japan. I was there some years ago and had a great time. For various non-academic reasons I have some very close connections with Japan and find the people to be wonderful, the food incredible, the architecture amazing and the history enthralling (though it’s not often taught in the west).
Adrian
January 10, 2014 at 9:55 pm
I went to Japan. I flew in late one evening, stayed overnight in a hotel, then flew out again early the next morning. I was too jet lagged to have a look around.
I think I returned to Japan to change planes on the return journey.
That’s what happens when you’re travelling.