THINGS TO DO - MCCS Iwakuni
Transcription
THINGS TO DO - MCCS Iwakuni
Finding yourself bored & restless? GET OUT! Here are 101 activities to get your mind, body and soul rejuvenated and charged! Check off each activity as you eat, travel and play your way around Japan. 101 Head to Hiroshima to view the Genbaku Dome W H IL E S TATIO N E D at M C AS IW A KUN I Explore an actual Japanese submarine at the PERSPECTIVE #1 Reason: Have a positive attitude. There are many advantages of being stationed overseas. It is up to you to make the most of it. Let MCCS help you make Iwakuni feel like home. Whether your interests are in learning and understanding the local culture, food and entertainment, advancing your education or fitness and health— Marine Corps Community Services is here for you. THINGS TO DO FOOD Live dangerously and try fugu (blowfish) sushi at the Shimonoseki market. ENTERTAINMENT Grill your meat to perfection at a yakiniku yaki. Which style is better? Enjoy fresh sushi at a sushi-go-round or try Iwakuni-style sushi. Grab lunch at a convenience store. The options will amaze you! Sample oysters, a local specialty, at one of the many oyster festivals held each winter. There are numerous ways to enjoy them from fried to grilled. Miyajima’s oyster festival is one of the largest. Sample tasty pastries at one of the local bakeries. Slurp a big bowl of noodles! Taste fresh mikan (mandarin oranges) from Oshima Island. Eat Kobe beef in Kobe. Try all things Lotus (root)! Iwakuni lotus root is unique and can be found in a variety of dishes from curry, chips, tempura, ice cream and more. Better yet, learn to cook it yourself at a cooking class offered by Cultural Adaptation. Enjoy ice cream on a hot summer day by the Kintai Bridge. Japan has more than 80 different types of Kit Kats! Sample as many as you can find. (Tip: some flavors may be regional or seasonal.) Have a momiji manju (Maple leaf cake) on Miyajima. Experience “America’s favorite pastime” while in Japan at a Hiroshima Carp baseball game. Be sure to stick around until the 7th inning for the traditional balloon release! Hit the epic slopes of Japan! There are several local ski resorts as well as the world renowned resorts of Nagano and Hokkaido. Surf at Hamada Beach. Save yourself the drive during their tournament season. Go whitewater rafting down the Yoshino River. Get fit while in Iwakuni by taking advantage of the excellent IronWorks Gym facilities. Take sailing lessons and get certified on sailing - offered by Outdoor Recreation. Enjoy stunning views of the Seto Inland Sea by biking the Shimanami Kaido. This 70km bike route links the main island of Honshu to Shikoku via six islands and bridges. Sharpen your Japanese by attending Cultural Adaptation’s free Survival Japanese 4-Day Class. Experience old world Japan in the city of Kyoto. Shrines, temples, traditional cuisine, Golden Pavilion, Gion District and more! JMSDF Museum in Kure. church and koi swimming along the street canals of Tsuwano. NATURE Stay at New Sanno hotel in Tokyo and experience American comfort in Japan’s largest city! Karaoke with friends! Hand feed a koi (carp) fish at Asa Zoo. Have your picture taken at a mini photo booth. Visit the Yamaguchi Flea Market and see what treasures you can find! Hold a rhinoceros beetle at the Insectarium in Hiroshima. Have your picture taken with Kitty-Chan (Hello Kitty) at Harmony Land. Ride a roller coaster at Space World. Get in the holiday spirit at the Bihoku Christmas Illumination. Go to an auto race. (JGTC, rally, drift, etc.) Travel to another country in Asia. The options are endless, let IACE Travel help you out. Head to Osaka for the weekend. Don’t miss the Osaka Aquarium and Universal Studios! Take an ITT tour or drive yourself to Akiyoshido Cave and Safari Land. Visit one of many aquariums within this area. There’s the Shimonoseki Aquarium, AQUAS, and the Miyajima Aquarium. See several hundred thousand people on MCAS Explore the coastal town of Hagi. Enjoy fresh seafood and purchase some of their famous Hagi-yaki pottery. Catch a Space-A flight to Okinawa and experience another Japanese island. Visit one of many Japanese fireworks festivals. Attend the Sapporo City Jazz Festival in July August, the largest jazz festival in Japan. Visit the Fukuoka Canal City. Conquer Japan’s highest peak, Mt. Fuji. Stroll among the beautifully colored autumn leaves on the Sandankyo hike. Beat the heat with a day at Yuu Beach. Throw a hanami (cherry blossom viewing) party with your friends in the spring. Conquer the Three Peaks hike! Beat the heat by hiking Seven Falls and cooling off in the water! Check out the quaint Yanai Flower Park. Bike through the tulip fields at Huis Ten Bosch in Kyushu during their annual Tulip Festival. Take photos of the lotus flowers when they’re in full bloom. (Tip: morning time is best) Explore another island of Japan. There are the larger islands of Shikoku, Kyushu, and Hokkaido, or head to the one of the several small unique islands scattered through the Seto Inland Sea. Go dolphin watching in Kyushu. Float down the Nishiki River. Drive to Oshima Island. Enjoy the hidden beaches, great camping, museum, fresh mikan (mandarin oranges) and more! Japan has great outdoor opportunities! Go on your own or sign up for an Outdoor Recreation trip. Hike Miyajima’s Mt. Misen each season. Autumn is especially beautiful with the changing leaves, but winter and spring offer great views over the Seto Inland Sea. Go snorkeling near Susa on a camping weekend getaway. Go camping with friends at Yasaka Dam. Experience large snow sculptures at Sapporo Snow Festival. ITT has a yearly trip. Soak away your tension at an onsen (Japanese and let Outdoor Recreation take you! Experience Japan’s National Sport of Sumo in Tokyo. Or you can enjoy the palace gardens for free! See an impressive Inari shrine, a Catholic Climb the Tokyo Tower. Visit the Tokyo Sky Tree. Iwakuni for the annual Friendship Day event. SPORTS Schedule a tour of the Emperor’s Palace while to a summer festival. Shack. Try both Hiroshima and Osaka-style okonomi- (A-Bomb Building) and tour its Peace Memorial Museum and Park. Purchase a traditional yukata/jimbei and wear it Enjoy an unforgettable meal at the Chicken restaurant. HISTORICAL & CULTURAL ¥ hot spring bath). SHOPPING Enjoy dining and shopping options at Hondori Street in Hiroshima. Rub the incense smoke over you at the Asakusa Shrine in Tokyo and then shop in the numerous stalls lining the streets to the shrine. Explore the vast assortment of items at a ¥100 store. Get a “Doctor Fish” pedicure and let tiny fish nibble away your rough edges! Visit Tottori City for the sand dunes, the largest in Japan, camel rides and sand surfing. Feed rabbits on Bunny Island, Okunoshima. Experience the grand sight of Wisteria Tunnel in spring. Take the 99 Island cruise tour in Sasebo. Visit Himeji Castle, which survives in its original form. Achieve enlightenment by fitting through a hole in the pillar at the Daibutsu-den, or Big Buddha, in Nara. Enjoy the Kintai bridge and park during one of its festivals. Some of the annual events are lantern festival and fireworks festival. Ride the trains every chance you get! Japan has a very efficient train system. Nervous about the ride? Learn the ropes with IRR’s Venture Out tours. Watch a taiko drum performance. Head to the Iwakuni Castle on January 1st and take part in the Japanese tradition of watching the sunrise from a mountain on the first day of the new year. Participate in a traditional tea ceremony. Watch a traditional Kabuki performance at the Itsukushima Shrine on Miyajima. Take a boat ride and learn about the ancient art of cormorant fishing at the Kintai Bridge area. Experience a Japanese fertility festival. Bonus points if you don’t giggle! Learn to use chopsticks. Make an origami crane and give it to a Japanese friend. Get your hands dirty (not really) with the Japanese flower art of ikebana. Purchase a shuin book and collect unique hand drawn calligraphy and stamps from various temples and shrines. Stay at a traditional Japanese inn called ryokan. Some famous ones are in Miyajima, Kyoto or Hakone Lake region. Enjoy the festivities of Yanai’s Goldfish Lantern Festival on August 13. You can even purchase a goldfish lantern as a souvenir! Spend a day exploring Miyajima Island with its famous floating torii, shrine, roaming deer, momiji manju cakes and much more! Plant rice in the spring and harvest it in the fall. (Tip: Cultural Adaptation/Youth Cultural Adaptation programs offer this trip each year.) Take a picture in front of Godzilla attacking Tokyo’s Shinjuku district. (It’s a statue!) Learn basic Japanese through Cultural Adaptation and strike up a conversation with a local. Feel the samurai spirit at Tsuwano’s Yabusame horseback archery festival held annually on the second Sunday of April. Travel somewhere--anywhere!-- on the bullet train. Zipping around the countryside on the “shinkansen” is an experience unto itself! WHICH Are You? Get out and have fun LOCAL FLAVOR MCCS HAS A MYRIAD OF DEPARTMENTS TO HELP YOU ASSIMILATE TO JAPANESE CULTURE. TRANSITION COMFORTABLY WITH THESE FAMILIAR ACTIVITIES. ER NTUR E V D A CRAVING SOMETHING DIFFERENT? AMERICAN COMFORT S BLOWFISH MIYAJIMA MOMIJI OUS NERV ? IE FOOD SHIMONOSEKI HIROSHIMA CULTURAL NATURE SHOPPING FITNESS & SPORTS OKONOMIYAKI HIKING 7/ELEVEN ON A BUDGET? THE POPULAR ¥100 STORE IS GREAT FOR PURCHASING JAPANESE TCHOTCHKES FOR YOUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS BACK HOME. WEEKEND TRIP IWAKUNI IWAKUNI ZUSHI YES KINTAI ICE CREAM IWAKUNI-ZUSHI: INSTEAD OF HAND-MOLDING THE SUSHI,THE CHEF PLACES THE LAYERED INGREDIENTS INTO A LARGE WOODEN MOLD AND STEPS ON THE MOLD’S LID TO FORM THE SHAPE WITH THEIR OWN BODY WEIGHT. THE SUSHI IS TRADITIONALLY TOPPED WITH PICKLED JAPANESE MACKEREL, SHIITAKE MUSHROOM, THINLY SLICED EGG AND IWAKUNI’S FAMOUS LOTUS ROOT. KOBE OSAKA BEEF AQUARIUM DAISO NO GET FIT IRONWORKS GYM BASEBALL SKIING & SNOWBOARDING ENJOY AMERICA’S PASTIME IN THE LAND OF THE RISING SUN. BE SURE TO STICK AROUND TILL THE 7TH INNING FOR A FUN SPECTATOR TRADITION. 7 FALLS & 3 PEAKS CYCLING DO YOU ENJOY PHOTOGRAPHY? OVERNIGHTER LOCAL NAGANO MEGAHIRA & GEIHOKU Share your pictures from your Japanese adventures and have them published in an upcoming Preview Magazine! Contact info@mccsiwakuni.com Information, Tours & Travel Crossroads Mall, Bldg. 410 | 253-4377 Explore Japan with one of ITT’s many weekly trips led by a friendly and proficient tour guide. Additional services include booking accommodations, luggage delivery, camping & restaurant reservations just to name a few. Information, Referral & Relocation Services Bldg. 411, Rm. 101 | 253-6161 IR&R maintains a database of local information including sightseeing directions, travel maps, regional travel brochures, restaurants, shopping guides, and cultural events. NO ONSEN ONSEN LITERALLY MEANS HOT-SPRING, AND COMES IN MANY TYPES AND SHAPES. TRADITIONALLY, ONSENS WERE LOCATED OUTDOORS, ALTHOUGH A LARGE NUMBER OF INNS HAVE NOW BUILT INDOOR BATHING FACILITIES. ONSEN WATER IS BELIEVED TO HAVE HEALING POWERS DERIVED FROM ITS MINERAL CONTENT. A PARTICULAR ONSEN MAY FEATURE SEVERAL BATHING AREAS, EACH WITH WATER THAT HAS A DIFFERENT MINERAL COMPOSITION. Cultural Adaptation IACE Travel Outdoor Recreation Bldg. 411, Library | 253-6165 This program assists with the transition into Japan by offering Survival Japanese, Japanese Culture and Cooking classes and trips. Youth Cultural Program provides cultural activities for both American and Japanese children and their families in the local community. Crossroads Mall, Bldg. 410 | 050-5806-7460 IACE Travel is here for all of your worldwide travel needs. The staff will help you with arranging travel and booking tickets. IronWorks Gym | 253-3822 Sign up for fun and affordable trips with Outdoor Rec. Don’t have the supplies for an outdoor adventure? Check them out for FREE at Gear Issue. MCCSIWAKUNI.COM