Kamakura Blog 2020

Photo of the Day: Sakura Season

Delicate pinkish white? Check. Soft, gently falling petals? Check. Grown in such quantities that Japan glows in an ethereal, otherworldly beauty? Check. Welllll... It must be cherry blossom season. Cherry blossoms, or sakura in Japanese, are the flowers that the entire country (—>that's roughly 127,000,000 people) waits for—and they only last about a week. But … Continue reading Photo of the Day: Sakura Season

Photo of the Day: Duelling Mikoshi

I've posted a few photos from this festival already, one of some fancy tattoos and one of some bare bums. I thought it was finally time to post a photo of what actually happens at the festival. Two mikoshi (portable Shinto shrines/divine palanquins), supported by local men and women, locked in "battle" in the ocean … Continue reading Photo of the Day: Duelling Mikoshi

Photo of the Day: All Tied Up

Five-yen coins hang off scarlet string and drape over a boulder at Kuzuharaoka Shrine. Kuzuharaoka Shrine, with its deep reds, heart-shaped prayer tablets, and coins on string, is striking at first sight. Quite far off the road and along a hiking path, it's also tremendously peaceful.

Photo of the Day: Cleaning Up

I love that people still use this kind of broom, which—until I came to Japan—I thought only existed in fables about witches and wizards these days. How wrong I was! Witch brooms (not their real name, of course) are still very much a part of life here, and they do a great job. They're also … Continue reading Photo of the Day: Cleaning Up

Photo of the Day: Through the Lantern Hole

A red-bibbed guardian dog framed by a stone lantern at Zeniarai Benten. There's so much more to this shrine than just money washing. First of all, it has one of the most amazing entrances—a tunnel carved out of the hillside. Once through the stone tunnel, visitors walk through yet another tunnel, this time made of … Continue reading Photo of the Day: Through the Lantern Hole

Photo of the Day: Capturing Buddha

And we're back to the mantoukai (Buddhist lantern festival) of March 11. I think it's safe to say that the vast majority of people there were holding (and using) recording devices of one sort or another. I had both iPad mini and DSLR, and I wasn't the only one with multiple electronics in hand. I'll … Continue reading Photo of the Day: Capturing Buddha

Photo of the Day: Crane Collection

Paper cranes have special power in Japan, something people the world over are familiar with from having heard the story of Sadako, the little girl who died of cancer due to exposure to radiation from the bombing of Hiroshma. She aimed to fold 1000 paper cranes so that her wish to live would come true. … Continue reading Photo of the Day: Crane Collection