kevin_standlee: (Kevin and Lisa)
After checking out of the Holiday Inn, we took our bags over to Narita and put them in storage for the day. Then we caught a Narita Rapid train (Green car available, unreserved) out to Chiba, eating our bento boxes and finally getting to see the Narita Airport railway line in daylight. At Chiba, we boarded the Chiba Monorail, buying a minimum JPY190 ticket each.

We boarded the first Line 2 train that arrived, rode it to the end of the line, then back to the other end, then back to Chiba, where we changed to the Line 1 train and rode out to the end of its (much longer) line and back. Lisa shot vast amounts of video, mostly high-res stuff, and burned through the rest of her batteries and mostly ran out of memory sticks. Along with what's on my PC and all seven memory sticks, she's shot more than 40GB of video during this trip. Editing it into usable form looks to be a winter project.

To economize, we changed lines again and rode one stop out Line 2 before exiting the system and walking the 500m back to Chiba Station. Although we were inside the system for about two hours, exiting where we did meant we were charged only the minimum system fare.

The Osaka Monorail is a SAFEGE type, one of only a few of the French-designed underslung monorails ever built. Because of how it's suspended, you somewhat get the feeling that you are flying over the city at about 20 m AGL or so. It's pretty cool, and no amusement-park ride, as shown by how packed our train was as we headed back toward Chiba Station around 1630 or thereabouts. It's a serious piece of transportation in a country that has to move a whole lot of people efficiently.

I composed this message originally (handwritten) on the 1720 Airport Rapid to Narita Airport from Chiba. Our green car emptied out in Chiba's suburbs, and we ended up with a private car (or part of a car -- the green cars on this train are double-deck between the trucks, and we have the upper deck to ourselves) for our final ride on JR during our trip to Japan.

It would be difficult to work out how much we saved over individual fares for the travel we've done these past three weeks, but we think it must have been substantial. Of cours, part of that was that because we had already bought the passes, we had every incentive to use them as much as possible, whether it was a Shinkansen from Tokyo to Hachinohe, the Kamome from Hakata to Nagasaki, or just hopping on the Tokyo loop line for one stop because the station udon was better there than at Shinagawa.

Lisa, who handled our reservations, pointed out to me as I read the above back to her that in some cases, the only reason we got a seat was because we had Green cards, because there were only green seats available. Although not all trains had green cars, if you're going cross country the way we did, I'd have to say that the green card was well worth the difference in price.

It's going to be very difficult to go back to a country with a third-world transportation system.
kevin_standlee: (Formula 1)
[Photos referenced here are in my Flikr albums and have had no work done to them."]

This was our first full day in Tokyo, but in fact we haven't really made any plans to speak of, so we sort of decided to go see what we could do in the way of interesting transit and trains in the area. We rode the loop line up to Yurakucho to find the Tourism office shown on our map, but before we could go there, Lisa got distracted by an electronics store and ended up buying more camera memory. I slowed things down by noticing after she had bought it that purchases of more than JPY10000 could be made duty free, so we spent time fussing around with the paperwork to get that fixed before going to the Tourism office, which was mostly a bust other than to find a few English-language maps.

After that, we went to Shimbashi Station, examined the steam locomotive on display in the square to the east of the station, and walked over to Old Shimbashi Station, a reproduction on the spot of the original station by that name. Those of you who were at Worldcon who had JR passes with you may have noticed that there was a JR station down beyond the Landmark Tower. Japan's first rail line ran between that station and Shimbashi, some 29 km. The Shimbashi area has been turned into a bunch of office buildings on the site of the former rail yard, but they've preserved some of the old station excavated during construction, and re-located the line's Milepost 0 to its historical location, which is where we took the photos.

Turning from the old to the new, we rode the Yurikamome Line over to Odaiba and somewhat randomly got out to look at things. We ended up riding the big (115 m) Ferris wheel, but the most interesting thing may have been Toyota's Formula 1 exhibit. The driving simulator was for a touring car racer, so we skipped that, and unfortunately the exhibit where you can attempt to squeeze yourself into the seat of an F1 car for a photo opportunity was closed, but they had a lot of the parts of a current F1 race car on display with exhibits about how they work, including the vastly expensive steering wheel and the absurdly powerful-for-its-size engine.

After a late lunch at one of the many places in the Odaiba area, we rode the Yurikamome line back across to Takeshiba, where we walked to Hamamatsuchō, where we boarded the Tokyo Monorail out toward Haneda Airport. Not wanting to pay full fare twice for what was just an out-and-back excursion, and not wanting to risk falling into the clutches of Airport Security, we got out just before the Airport, went around to the other platform, took some pictures on Lisa's camera, and then rode back in, getting off at Tennōzu Isle station, which was around a kilometer or so from Shinegawa. This meant we only had to pay the minimum fare, as we entered and exited only one station apart.

Back at Shinegawa, we bought stuff for dinner in the room tonight and breakfast tomorrow morning, because we were too tired and footsore from all the walking to go out for dinner again.

It takes us a long time to get anything done here because, everything being new, we're gawking around like the tourists from the backwoods that we are. And we're already pretty tired, so I shouldn't expect to get much done. But I keep hearing voices telling me how much I'm missing. You could take a year trying to explore just Tokyo and not run out of things to do. We've got three days, so we're concentrating on the more oddball rail and transit-related things to do. Above-ground transit and monorails have an advantage in that you can see out while you're traveling.

Saturday's plans aren't particularly firm, but probably include going to the Tokyo Tower and visiting the famous Ginza shopping district for Lisa's benefit. I reckon I need to keep a running total to make sure we don't run over our $1600 duty-free allowance.
kevin_standlee: (Kevin and Lisa)
I have many gigabytes of photographs. I have no time at all to go through them and do anything with them. I'm throwing some of them into Flickr, but even then I just don't have time to even assign proper keywords! Putting it off means that most of these photos will never be cataloged, and not having time to write entries means I'll forget a bunch of this, I fear.

But at least today gets a write-up )

Tomorrow, thank goodness, we do not have to pack up again, and instead can go to the transport museum relatively at leisure.

Update, 9 Sep 19:00: Comments tell us that "bicycle monorails" are common at Japanese and UK rail parks, even though I'd never seen one at a US park.

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