although winter officially ended when march began, the weather only turned warmer from the start of this month. unfortunately, spring has sort of abruptly disappeared into early summer - day temperatures have reached 25 degrees but feels far hotter because of the sun blazing down on you. i'm currently down to dressing the way i would if i were back in singapore, with a cardigan in my bag for if i'm out when the sun has set.
the very weird thing about osaka weather - not sure if it's something that occurs in other parts of japan or not - is that seasons arrive very suddenly. in autumn, it gradually got cooler up till a point, and after that temperatures took a sharp dip overnight. same for spring; it remained cold up till end march and gradually got warmer by a few degrees, and suddenly temperatures shot up about 5 degrees over a day. it's crazy!! thankfully the weather is forecast to cool down a wee bit from tomorrow, and i'm really looking forward to that.
spring in japan is of course all about cherry blossoms, and i've gone hanami - sakura blossoms viewing - 4 times in the past week. sakura are rather useless trees though (to quote a friend), as they're pretty for literally only a week when the blossoms are out in full bloom. after that, the leaves start sprouting - at a rapid rate, mind you - and mar the sea of pink with green. it's when the leaves start growing that the petals begin to fall too, which means that you see green leaves, brown branches and the reddish remnants of the blossoms after the petals are gone.
booo.
i think i've had my share of hanami though. i went to arashiyama with my parents, sakuranomiya in osaka on my own, another part of kyoto with the boy and yoshino with a few friends. with my parents, we sat on the Sagano-Arashiyama "Romantic Train" that runs from JR Umahori station down to JR Sagano station, and cost 600yen.
the train ride is anything but romantic unfortunately, and it's certainly not because i was there with my parents! the view is only on one side of the train for half of the ride and on the other side for the other half, so you dont really get to see that much. plus people can stand in the aisle - that's the best thing to do actually, cos you get a far better view standing than seated - so you cant really see over to the other side of the train if you're sitting down. furthermore, the seats are arranged in 4s with 2 seats facing another 2, so unless you're sitting facing the direction in which the train is moving, you dont get a very good view at all!
as the train passes through a mountain range - it's roughly the same path of the Hozu River Cruise I went on a bit more than a month ago - it passes through about 6 or 7 tunnels, one of which lasts close to a minute! so part of the short 15 to 20min train ride is spent in darkness. the train also screeches AND is somewhat rickety rackety, so the noise is not very pleasant at all.
the flowers in the meadow next to the train station were gorgeous though:
the sakura were kinda pretty as well:
arashiyama has pretty sakura too:
the prettiest temple there, tenryu-ji, had gorgeous sakura too, especially this one that bloomed in two different colours:
with dual coloured light pink blossoms:
there're even row boats on the river, which is really nice:
more pictures of arashiyama can be found on facebook HERE.
i went to sakuranomiya, a fairly popular spot for hanami in osaka city, just 2 or 3 days after arashiyama, and already the leaves were fairly large. i also very stupidly forgot to bring my camera; luckily i didnt really intend to take many photos!
the petals had all fallen, and the most beautiful part, i think, was seeing the petals fall like snow when the wind blew:
my shadow amongst the petals
i walked all the way from there to the outskirts of Osaka-jo park, where i saw these two kitties:
i visited the path of philosophy and heian jingu in kyoto on saturday, and it wasnt that pretty anymore.. the shrine's garden was so super packed though.
the entrance:
after going through that huge structure:
inside the garden:
my camera doesnt take very good pictures unfortunately.. the same scene looks so much better using a dslr! sigh.
check out the crowd, and imagine the ENTIRE garden - that was pretty big - like that!
the philosopher's path is meant to be super famous for sakura, but we went a bit late and the blossoms werent so pretty anymore:
more pictures from that trip can be found HERE on facebook too.
yesterday was spent in Yoshino in nara, which is supposed to be one of the best spots japan for hanami in japan. it has 3 layers of sakura that bloom at different times, so the blossoms in general are meant to last over a period of about 1 month.
the thing about yoshino, however, is that it's SO far from osaka. it took an hour and a half from Tennoji station (which is more than 30min from my house) to Yoshino station, and add that to the fact that it's hanami season and the japanese are crazy over it, which means that EVERYONE is heading there, and you get one HUGE, tremendously stressful crowd. we had to queue to get on the bus that took us from the station to midway up the mountain range, and that took a while too.
thanks to my friend's friends who were, to tell the truth, rather disgustingly late, we reached there in the afternoon and only spent about 2 to 2.5 hours chilling and enjoying the view before having to catch the last bus down the mountain at 5.30pm - and 2 hours seems rather long, but time passes quickly when you're relaxing!
i dont really have nice pictures of the place cos i was too busy relaxing, and the journey home was so super stressful that all of us were EXHAUSTED when we were finally back in osaka. i dont think we'll ever go to yoshino again, but would stay in osaka - like sakuranomiya - instead!
here are the few pictures of yoshino that i have:
already you can see that there are lots of leaves out, and that they've turned brown!
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