Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Asahiyama Zoo



We visited the Asahiyama Zoo on Monday.  It is the most famous and possibly the best zoo in Japan.  It has unique ways for visitors to interact with the animals.  My favorite of these is this first photo where the young chimpanzee is watching the kid through the plexiglass bubble.  Usually it is the humans who watch the animals through the plexiglass, so this was a fun juxtaposition of normality.


We went inside to check out the rest of the Chimpanzee exhibit.  We found the adult male chimpanzee was becoming agitated possibly because of the zoo keeper next door who was sweeping out the other chimpanzee cage.  This agitated chimpanzee became more and more upset until all the other chimpanzee's ran away from him.  The end of the video is worth seeing.


The Red Pandas were my favorite.


The Red Panda exhibit has one of the unusual interactive features of the zoo where the animals can walk above the crowd on a bridge.  The crowd loved it.


Panda scratch.


A real raccoon dog.


The snow leopard likes to nap above the visitors.  Here you can see him walking down from his napping platform.  You can see that I (Kyle) am in the middle of the photo with the purple hat and purple water bottle photographing the snow leopard.


And here is my photo of the Snow Leopard walking down the cage.


One of the polar bears was enjoying the pool.



Watch out, he has a bear snorkel!  You can barely see him.


That joke was unbearable...



How to get rid of excess water.


The seals were sunning themselves.


Licking their flippers.


I seal no evil...


The king of monkey mountain.


Grooming at monkey mountain.


A face only a mother could love.


More meta-- I am on the right side of the photo photographing the giraffe.


I like how in this photo you can see the structure of the giraffe neck vertebra.  It takes large vertebra to make a giraffe neck.




And last but not least the orangutans.  They are Bre's favorite.  There was a mother and baby orangutan.



The little orangutan enjoys his climbing.


That's all for now,

-Kyle (and Bre)

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Zenibako-Tengu-yama


Another Hokkaido International Outdoor Club (HIOC) adventure.   We went out to Zenibako-Tengu mountain.  It was difficult to find the trailhead.  There were a few other cars parked in the parking lot.  We ended up climbing the mountain with a group of younger hikers.  They all had matching backpacks.


In the first photo the hiker in the foreground is a member of our group.  Everyone ahead of him is a member of the other group with matching backpacks.


I liked how the sunlight shone through the bamboo along the trail.


Bre and above her is Jack, a Australian and member of HIOC.


Here is a look back towards Sapporo.  There is a golf course in the foreground.


A ray of sunshine...


Aki and Jack enjoy a rest break from climbing.


Here is a view from the top.  I didn't get a photo of it, but Zenibako-Tengu Mountain has a clear view from the summit of Teine Mountain.  It is in the direction of Otaru as seen from Teine Mountain.


The cute beetle enjoyed some sunshine.


Our fearless leader Leon models his fine outdoor gear at the summit.  You may notice he has bear spray on his left shoulder.  There was a bear spotted on this trail a few days before we hiked.


Leon and Aki being silly.



Group photo.  The lady with the pink shirt in the front row asked to join our photo.  We had never seen her before meeting her on the summit!


I wanted to share my perspective from the summit.


Aki ran out of hands to hold his walking stick while buckling his belt.


A conference on the way back down.  You may notice that there were 15 people in the group photo, but you can only see 5 in this photo.  We separated into two groups on the trail.  Bre and I were in the fast group (no surprise if you know me.)  The others who are not pictured here were back in the slow group.


Bre and I tried a couple photos of us jumping.  They were difficult to get just right.  In this photo I captured Bre just before she jumps.


And she is airborne.


I gave it a shot also.  Up, up and away!

That's all for now,

-Kyle (and Bre)

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

BBQ on the beach with a surprise

On Sunday we biked to the beach with our friends Anton and Mami to have a barbeque.  It was warm and sunny in the morning, but by the time we were 3/4 of the way to beach it suddenly wasn't sunny anymore.  There was a park with gazebos near us when it started raining heavily and we took shelter until the rain cloud passed.  We decided that probably most of the rain was going to stay to the south of us by looking at the sky, and we continued on to the beach.


The view of the weather from the beach was very picturesque.  The waves were choppy, and we could see individual rain clouds that would pass by to the north, south, or offshore. 


The beach was mostly empty, likely because the first rain cloud that trapped us at the park drove a lot of beachgoers home.  We were surprised when a man on a horse rode by.  He seemed to be having a lot of fun.

We found an abandoned carseat on the beach and we put our tarp over it to sit on.  Kyle and Anton constructed a BBQ pit with abandoned metal trays as a wind break.  We brought our own charcoal,  metal grill surface, and tongs for the food, but everything else we found on the beach.

We cooked some meat on a stick, potatoes, mushrooms, tofu, and corn.

Not long after we got to the beach and started grilling, a really big rain cloud suddenly appeared to the north of us (the picture above is looking to the north-- the gray background is rain).  For the next 30 minutes or more, we got to watch lightning strikes in all directions in that cloud and listen to the roll of thunder claps from the comfort of our completely exposed position on the beach.


For a few minutes, the sun came out. 


The warm sunshine was appreciated, but it didn't last.  Not long after this picture, a big rain cloud appeared from behind the sand dunes and got us.  We had just started to cook chicken, but we abandoned it on the fire.  Mami had brought a small umbrella that Anton and I huddled under on the car seat.  Mami hid under a washcloth that she had brought (it kept part of her surprisingly dry) and Kyle built up the cooking fire to a warm inferno, but he was otherwise completely drenched.  It was A LOT of rain!  

The umbrella that Anton and I were under was good for a few minutes.  But then the rain was so hard, that the cascades coming off the sides completely soaked my legs and my outside arm.  After 5 minutes, Kyle, Anton, and I on the blue tarp on the carseat were sitting in large puddles of water... Mami, standing in the rain under her little washcloth, was actually better off than we were.

After about 10 minutes of downpour, I suddenly realized that we were sitting on a blue tarp!  We picked it up and huddled under it, over Kyle's fire for the rest of the rainstorm.  We still had body parts sticking out of the tarp getting wet, but we were better off.  Kyle's fire was provided some warmth.  Even though our particular rain cloud had a lot of water in it, thankfully it didn't have any lightning.  The sun came out during the rain, giving us a lovely rainbow.
Eventually the rain slowed enough that we decided we wouldn't be any worse off if we left the relative dryness of the tarp and biked home.  We left the uneaten, burnt and wet chicken to the seagulls and headed towards home.


The rain stopped not long after we started biking, thankfully.  We got home, took hot showers, put on warm clothes, and met up again at a ramen house for a hot bowl of noodle soup.

Something Kyle said during the downpour stuck with me.  He said that he couldn't remember a time that he had been so unprepared to deal with a rainstorm.  We didn't expect the rain because it was so beautiful and sunny when we left Sapporo, so we had no raincoats and only Mami's umbrella.  When we were at the beach we were many kilometers from the nearest place we could take shelter.
I think he was right-- I can't remember the last time I got so wet in the rain.

That's all for now,
Bre (and Kyle)