To get to Nagasaki, you take a regular train to Takeo-Onsen station and then a shinkansen to Nagasaki. The whole trip takes about an hour and a half.
Got off at tram stop and was greeted by this sign for Ichimentei which I never had before. Gyoza, karaage and ramen. What else does one need to live?
It was 10 mins from opening and I cbf waiting so got one famichiki. I tried to pay using my suica but it did not work for some reason. I did not consider the most obvious reason why it was not working.
I love it when a tourist town has signs everywhere because I did not prepare anything for Nagasaki. All I knew was that I had to come where after watching Ryomaden because I wanted to see the history.
I hope the words stay true.
Wall clock from near the centre of the blast.
I think this was aerial photo taken by USA.
Remake of the church that was destroyed in the blast.
Because it was a 3 day weekend, it seemed like every primary school kid was in Nagasaki.
Each group had a guide showing them around the museum and explaining all the horrible things to the kids.
I love how Japan says 'other Asian nations were also dragged into the conflict and victimized in various ways'. Way to gloss over a lot of atrocities. At least better than Yasukuni shrine.
The atomic museum was very, very sobering.
I was getting very hungry and there was no eating place in nearby so walked back to Ichimentei.
Worst ramen I have ever eaten in Japan. This is garbage. Should have done gyoza and karaage instead. Shockingly bad. Makes Melbourne ramen look good. Yes, that bad.
This was the epicentre of the blast. I didn't care about the crappy ramen anymore thinking about everyone who got wiped out.
2 comments:
Hi Mike, great to see you're still at Japan trips :-)
@Jung: must take advantage of exchange rate!
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