• Checkin to Starbucks

    in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan
    Post movie coffee and a dessert with the fam. Feels so nice out tonight.
  • The Week #162

    • We went to the Odawara Hilton hotel with the big pool that we went to last year. It was a lot of fun though was muuch busier this time around what with covid restrictions being a thing of the past and the borders open again.I booked using my family discount, so it was a bit cheaper for the room...but then I realized it didn't include dinner or breakfast. And since it's a "resort", there's not anything across the street or even nearby. So we had to reserve when we checked in...which resulted in dinner at 7:30, which is a bit later for us than usual.

      Thanks to that though, we got the kill some time spending money at places we usually wouldn't in the hotel – namely the "amusement center", which includes 8 lanes of bowling, air hockey, and some arcade games.

      I love bowling. I took 2-semesters in college as my sport. So I was happy to be able to play a couple of games with Leo (bumpers down). He loved it. In his second game, he event managed to knock all the pins down. I'm greatly looking forward to going bowling again.

      As for the main attraction at the hotel, the pool, it was as good as always. Leo's swimming has really improved. His front crawl is on point. We went both as soon as we arrived and for an hour in the morning before checkout. I think visiting the Hilton Odawara Spa and Resort may become an annual trip for our family.

      Looking down at Nebukawa station tracks.

      Nebukawa station doesn't have any station staff

      Watching the sun rise from our room
    • Until relatively recently, sun umbrellas were used almost exclusively by women. I've thought this was ridiculous for a while, but the only sun umbrellas they sold were all frilly, something I'd be embarrassed to carry by myself.

      Recently though, they've been making more "mens" / unisex umbrellas. i.e. simple black or or gray ones (thank god men's version == camouflage patternsΒ  isn't a thing here). And as such there's been a growing number of men carrying the umbrellas – enough for a dedicated word, ζ—₯ε‚˜η”·ε­ (higasa-danshi) or "sun umbrella guy".Β  I've become a ζ—₯ε‚˜η”·ε­.

      My particular umbrella is collapsible. The top is gray and the inside is black, which is what allows it to block 100% of UV. The handle has a slight curve so it can hang on things. The stem is made a cheap alumni that feels like it will (and indeed it did) bend with a good gust of wind. It can be used in the rain as well.

      As for the experience, it's so much cooler, like walking in the shade the entire time you're outdoors, even when there is none. I felt a bit sad for salarymen walking under the oppressive august sun without one. No sunglasses...no UV umbrellas...do theyΒ  not teach about the sun in school?
      Where I trialed my UV umbrella. A toasty 34 degrees out.
  • Checkin to γƒ’γƒ«γƒˆγƒ³ε°η”°εŽŸ γƒœγ‚¦γƒͺング場

    in Odawara, Kanagawa, Japan
    Playing a game of bowling. Reminds me of college where I took two semesters.
  • Checkin to Hilton Odawara Resort & Spa (γƒ’γƒ«γƒˆγƒ³ε°η”°εŽŸγƒͺγ‚ΎγƒΌγƒˆ&スパ)

    in Odawara, Kanagawa, Japan
    Enjoying the view from the lounge after swimming while we wait for our room.
  • Two things I’d like to make in Tanzawa:

    • Books - so I can track the books I read and collect blog posts / notes about them as I read
    • While Trix is a good WYSIWYG editor, Β Markdown is also very nice. Being able to write a post in either or would be handy.Β 
  • First chance to use my UV umbrella β€” amazing. So much cooler under it. Definitely recommend. Still feel like a bit of a tool using it, but the sun is gender-blind, it tries to kill us all equally.
  • The Week #161

    • For the first time since I moved into my neighborhood, the neighborhood association had a festival. It usually a yearly thing and they canceled it during the pandemic. They held it on the grounds of our neighborhood elementary school and it was a lot of fun.

      We went with some neighborhood friends/pre-school friends who live in the neighborhood. Boys dressed in jimbei (me included) and girls in yukata. There were some stalls with yaki-soba, corn dogs, shaved ice, beer, and more. In the center was a large stand with a taiko and people would take turns drumming it. While there Leo ran into other friends from pre-school and he ran around heaps (good thing for the running as his dinner was a croquette and a giant shaved ice).
      Summer Festa 2023
    • My father-in-law turned 81, which boggles my mind. He doesn't look like he's in his 80's in the slightest. I think the secret is to be active everyday, especially as we age. The moment you stop moving you start losing it. We went over to his house and brought ice cream (Leo's request) and unagi and sushi for dinner.
    • I've been making good progress on Ultra-Processed People on my kindle. So far it's been enlightening. The two ideas that are standing out to me immediately are: the struggle for life takes place within us and food seems not to be the just the sum of its elements, how it's processed affects health.

      Inside our bodies is a unique and complex microbiome of bacteria that help us digest and extract nutrients. There's also a balance at place – bacteria in your gut are different from those in your large intestine and on. They've evolved with us over the millennia to digesting certain kinds of foods, which helps keeps them in balance and us healthy.

      Over the past 50 years there's been a large percentage of the population that overweight. It seems like it's mostly caused by eating industrialized food-like substances (ultra-processed foods). You'll find the same basic ingredients in UPF that when made traditionally, would have entirely different ingredients lists. Indeed in clinical studies they've found that people will eat more UFP (500 calories/day) and enjoy it less. Industrialized food is a lie.

      Highly recommend giving this book a read.
    • My headphones right channel stopped broke producing sound. The cables don't look damaged at all, which is odd. I've had these headphones (Sony studio monitors) for about 11 years so I'm a bit sad that it seems they've reached their EOL. I don't particularly want to buy a new pair of headphones right now, but at the same time, losing the wire would remove a weekly stress as inevitability my headphone cable tangles with my keyboard cable...πŸ€”Β 
  • Checkin to Komeda's Coffee (γ‚³γƒ‘γƒ€ηˆη²εΊ—)

    in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan
    Enjoying a coffee and some reading while boy-o is at robot school.
  • πŸ”— My 90's TV!

    Go back to the 1990's via this nostalgic TV simulator and relive the original ads, music videos, movie trailers, shows and more!
    Really love this β€œtv” that lets you flip through channels of 90’s TV. Nostalgia rules.
    1. Tagged with
    2. video
    3. nostalgia
  • The Week #160

    • My results came in from the dermatologist and as I expected, it's a basal cell. We're going to try this chemo creme for 4 weeks and see how it reacts. 3-days a week after I shower before bed I put the creme on the spot / surrounding area, and as it's quite strong, I wash it off in the morning. I've only used it one night, but it looks like it's already clearing it up.
    • An electrician came out to quote for installing an plug outside to charge our new car. While the Sakura "supports" 6kw charging, it won't ever charge faster than 3kw. Rather than "future proofing" the house with a bigger (and more expensive) setup than I can use,Β  I decided to go with a regular 200V port outside.
    • In more household electricity news my solar panels hit their 3rd mwh (3,000 kwh) of generation πŸŽ‰.
    • Beau Miles released a new video on YouTube, "Renovating a canoe while running a marathon". I really like his approach to life (as portrayed in his work) as it always inspire me to do more things than sit on my computer.
    • Since Amazon closed down an English bookseller they bought (I forget the name...but they sold through Amazon), getting English books in a timely manner at reasonable prices has proven to be a bit more difficult. The cheap yen isn't helping matters in those regards either. Then I remembered ebooks are a thing that I've used / enjoyed in the past. I started looking at kindles (the paperwhite looks quite nice)...and while I'm tempted to buy some new shiny electronics a friend reminded me I already own a kindle. Instead I charged my 10-year old kindle and started using it. Immediately I picked up some books that I left off reading a few years ago. And since it syncs automatically, I can pickup on my phone / computer / kindle. It's great.

      Then I bough a new book and remembered why I stopped using it. I've got 2 Amazon accounts: US and Japan. My kindle is associated with my US account as I bought it when I lived in the US and my regular shopping occurs from Japan. Naturally you can't merge libraries across accounts because DRM nor can you do household sharing (it doesn't exist in Amazon Japan).

      My solution is to stop buying ebooks from Amazon. I returned the book unread and instead started purchasing them from Rakuten (Kobo). As is, just buying them from kobo leaves me in no better position, as their books are DRMed and I'd need a kobo reader to read them (or a non-kindle). With a bit of finagling I was able to remove the DRM so I can read kobo epub ebooks on my kindle. The purchase experience isn't as seamless as it would be if I was in a pure Kindle camp (and I would be if I didn't need to share across accounts). Totally against the license for using the books. But also totally fair use as I'm just trying to read them on an existing reader. Hooray for re-using things we already own and generating less e-waste.
Previous 63 of 353 Next