English camp. It’s just what it sounds like….only not. If you’re from the North West and at all schooled in the history of the San Juan Islands you’ll think the English Camp is where the British built a fort and a beautiful garden surrounded by maple trees on the North end of the island during the Pig War in 1859.

You’d be wrong.

In Japan, English camp is where all the 6th graders in the district come together for 3 days and two nights in one gym, split into teams and enjoy activities administrated by Wakakusa teachers.

Thankfully our team is so small this year that they had to split up the groups into 4 camps, further reducing the program to a 2-day program from 9am-3pm. Much more manageable.

As a team we split up planning and teaching responsibilities weeks in advance, preparing materials, planning programs to the minute, and cutting out hundreds of eyeholes from paper plates. It’s our “make a mask for Halloween” craft project. The few basic elements of the program include making a team name and poster, learning basic shopping dialogue and pretending to be a shopper/shopkeeper. The second day boasts Halloween masks and candy bags for crafts, learning ABC’s while playing fun games, and participating in a Halloween party.

Halloween…oh my. Well, it’s much different here than in America. Japanese people just think it’s all about trick or treating and dressing up, usually bringing the “cute” factor up a few notches. You thought a witch was scary? Now it’s vying for first place against kittens, puppies, and little girls with pigtails.

Yes, we teach them about trick-or-treating, make masks and decorate paper bags. All the teachers dress up and have a little entrance parade. Most of the female Japanese teachers were witches, though one sported an Obama mask. Have I mentioned that “Yes, we can!” is a popular phrase over here?! The male teachers were a little more diverse though namely revolved around fictional action heroes such as the power rangers, samurai-jedi, and Doraemon. Us Americans showed up as a Japanese high school student, a cowboy, Cat in the Hat, a bumble bee, a Native American, a manga character, a pirate, and a rockstar. The last one was me….but all it took was one look at my afro wig and I was immediately labeled “Lady Gaga!” Probably because she’s the only American rock start they know, because I KNOW I don’t look crazy enough to imitate her. I don’t even know her songs, just the chorus to “Poker Face.” I played the part though and had a pretty snazzy entrance complete with a fake mic made of a Sharpied paper towel tube and a dress sock stuffed with a small ball of yarn.

Almost all of our evening classes were mercifully cancelled during the weeks of English camp to lighten our load a bit. I appreciated that, considering I battled with losing my voice each morning and drank a ton of tea to compensate. At the end of camp Enchou sensei  and his wife took us on a trip to onsen and a Fall tour. We enjoyed onsen and initiated Travis’s mom who was visiting from the U.S. to the ritual of continuous bathing. Looking out the 10th floor steamy bath window, I watched the clouds turn a delicate pink as the sun set behind the foothills. The hills themselves were showing their Autumn colors of reds and oranges, dotted between the evergreens. In the evening we went to the downstairs outdoor bath where the hot spring water was a welcome contrast to the cool and fresh night air. Poking my head out from the overhang I saw the cloudless night sky twinkling with stars.

I love Fall.

I loved it even more when our trip continued to the 5 colored lakes, my 3rd trip there since arriving in this prefecture. This time the trees were clothed in an array of colors instead of a uniform green. Enchou sensei rowed me and Janelle out on to one of the lakes for a picturesque ride in the perfect weather. I was sure to wear my favorite new red scarf that wrapped my neck and chin in fuzzy warm feelings.

We trekked further up the lakes to the larges of them all and boarded a touring boat. The friendly guide chatted about the history of the lakes and how the eruption of Mt. Bandai in 1881 created over 300 of them…and destroyed a village in the process. I’m determined to summit the mountain next year.

After lunch in an American-inspired restaurant called “Monterey,” we rode the van up the mountain to look at the leaves and check out the trailhead. It was a bit windy on the way down and I felt a little queasy but we got back safe and soundly late in the afternoon. It was just enough time for Rachel and I to stretch our legs in the park, watching the sunset as we threw around the frisbee. From the park we had an uninterrupted view of Mt. Katasone; the sun was setting, thrusting rays of pink and red across the sky while the sharp cresent moon lingered low over the mountain top. What a perfect night to climb a mountain and watch the sunrise.

So we did.

Yes, we got up at 3am and rode our bikes not to the close Katasone, but the further and higher Mt. Utsushigatake, an impressive 994.5 meters compared to the former. We climbed it in the summer, if you remember, and got caught in a torrential downpour at the top. This time the sky was perfectly clear and as we rode our bikes past empty rice fields and dark country houses we continuously looked into the heavens to comment on the intensity and sheer number of glowing celestial bodies blinking back at us. Orion’s belt? I thought it consisted of 3 stars but it turns out there are like, 50 stars up there. Who’d have known?!

We were pretty surprised to pass 4 cars on the road at that hour of the morning. I bet they were equally surprised to see bikers out for a pleasure trip.

Then we got pulled over by the police.

Yeah, they were out patrolling…seriously, patrolling WHAT?!?! The rice paddies??? They’ve already been harvested---there’s nothing to steal, nothing to graffitti, and nothing to DO. I have no idea why they were out there, but that made them more interested in asking about our business.

The officer turned on his flashing lights, pulled over the car and walked across the street to where we stood waiting with our bikes.

“Wasldjfasdhfiuwhoqiwuebvbvasdivbasiuebka?”

“Um, one more time please?” I asked in Japanese.

“Wasldkfjeiwopqwoeifaoidnvdinvaosefpqowieka?”

I looked dumbly at Rachel, who didn’t offer any assistance.

“Eeto…” I stumbled around to try and ask for clarification.

“Oh, you don’t understand Japanese, do you?...” He inquired.

“Well, just a little bit.”

“Wfahsidofewifhasodfhowhefwoppqpaasdnneuka?” He asked a slightly different question and I decided that since I couldn’t understand what he said I would just offer information and see if it’s what he wanted to know.

“We’re on our way to climb the mountain. We want to watch the sunrise.” I ventured in poor Japanese.

He understood right away, agreeded that it was great weather for it, and energetically encouraged us to continue and be careful.

You betcha.

As the officers pulled away We walked our bikes a few feet in silence, then burst out laughing at being pulled over on bikes by the Japanese police at 4am.

“Well,” I said, “That’s one thing to check off on our adventure list! Next thing is to be startled by a strange noise in the woods and discover it’s a very small animal! Hahaha!”

Well, that did in fact happen not long afterwards as we walked up the mountain and nearly jumped out of our Under Armor at the sound of an owl lifting off of a metal construction sign.

P.S., backhoes look like monsters in the nighttime.

Ascending the mountain I realized that a little cirrus cloud was creeping up from the West. I actually welcomed it, thinking it would make for a more interesting sunrise. What I didn’t anticipate was the huge cumulous clouds barreling in from the East. I couldn’t have seen them anyways for two reasons: the mountain was in my way, and it was dark.

So, we finally made it up the rocky trail, traversing the ropes like Indiana Jones to the summit only to find it completely enveloped in a cloudy mist. We had 45 minutes to kill and hoped it would blow off, considering the small breeze that was chilling the sweat on our backs. We hid behind the rocks on the summit and I sipped my thermos of tea waiting for the light to appear.

It did…eventually, but only filtered through that stupid cloud. There was no sunrise, no epic display of beauty and power, no 360 view of the surrounding mountains and villages, and no sight of my beloved ocean.

It was most disappointing.

However, we made the best of it by taking a different path down the mountain and exploring a few new places on the way back.

After arriving back home we quickly took showers and headed out for a new kind of adventure: a festival!

It was the annual offer-grain-to-the-gods-and-drink-lots-of-sake festival. Men carry a shrine on their shoulders and chant incessantly as they approach businesses who offer sake in return for a blessing. The shrine is an offering of thanks for the harvest. All the guys are either wasted before they start, or become wasted during the walking. Two men per shrine have a specific duty of blowing a shrill whistle. Each blow signals something to the group, directions and other things that I’m not sure about. There are also men who linger on the sides of the group, pushing them away from hazards and prevent them from crashing into bystanders like me. Yes, it happened and I have a video of it J There are a few people who switch in and out and they take a few breaks now and then. I mean drinking breaks. They make use of the alcohol though as some groups slip and slide down the steep river bank to wade upstream…with the shrine! You’d have to be drunk to want to do that, and you’d need the booze to keep you warm in the cold water.

Kids participate in this too, carrying their own mini shrine and substituting Coke and sports drinks for alcohol. Starting them young….

Yeah, basically they walk around chanting, drinking, and spinning their shrines for 5 hours….I watched a bit and took a fat nap. There were a few street vendors out so I supported the local economy by buying some yummy food.

Yep, that’s pretty much the exciting business of late. School is back to normal this week, with the exception of a random holiday on Thursday.

I wish I had an inspiring or funny bit to leave you with but I’ve got nothin’. Good night. 

Marissa
11/3/2011 11:03:41 am

Only you (and your partner in crime) would be crazy enough to get up early enough to watch the sunrise on a mountain...you had to climb....and get pulled over by the local law enforcement in the process!

Missed you at the Gala this year...it isn't the same without you.
Glad you are still having a good time!
~M

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