Categories
JapaneseCulture

Relocation And Inauguration Flowers

When you find many flowers at the entrance of an office building, hotel, restaurant or store like in the following pictures…

flores4

…the most likely reason is that a new business is being inaugurated or and existing one has relocated. Each flower pot is the present of a client or a business partner. If you can read some Japanese you can identify the name of the companies and the persons that sign the flowers. For example these flowers are a present of the president of Kadokawa:

Japanese inauguration flowers

Another curious thing is that you could guess how wealthy or powerful the company sending the flowers is just by spotting the biggest and most sumptuous flowers, which can cost as much as 1,000 EUR / 1,100 USD.

Japanese inauguration flowers
I found these flowers in this website, it is one of the standard models and costs around 250 EUR / 280 USD.

Japanese inauguration flowers

Japanese inauguration flowers

Japanese inauguration flowers

Japanese inauguration flowers

flores3
This one was sent by a board member of Fuji Xerox

Japanese inauguration flowers

Japanese inauguration flowers

Categories
JapaneseCulture

Sowing Rice And Collecting Stories

Last Summer I visited for the first time an area with rice paddy fields in Chiba. I loved the experience. It was not only the place, but the friends I made there that made me return more times to breath the fresh air of the Japanese countryside.

After a while, I was offered to be a member of an association of rice paddy owners. My first reaction was to reject the offer, it seemed like it was just another thing to worry about in my life. But after some days of thinking about it I remembered one of the wisest advice my friend Zordor has given me:

“In life you should invest in stories”

This thing about the rice paddy fields sounded like a great opportunity to “invest in stories”, so I eventually accepted the offer. During some months it was a hassle to read and sign contracts, to do transfers to the bank of the association, to read the rules of how to maintain the rice fields, to speak with other members on the phone… It was like dealing with one of those secret clubs that characters in Haruki Murakami novels bump into.

After investing so much time, finally the harvest of stories began last week. We put together a group of more than twenty friends and we learned how to sow rice. We lost the fear of sinking in the mud, we learned how to walk without falling into the water and we learned how to put our hand in the mud while you feel a frog walking up your arm. We learned how to plant rice sprouts by using only two fingers just as the farmers in Kurosawa movies do. On top of that we were even interviewed by a local radio in Chiba!

Sowing rice following the traditional way made me understand the importance of Japanese agriculture and its influence in the countryside culture. All the members of our group had to coordinate and work collectively so that the plants will grow aligned. It is very important for the community to work in unison and for everybody to collaborate in order to have a good harvest. Not only in you rice paddy field but also in the neighboring ones.

Thank you very much to all of you that came to help. In September we will collect more stories and we will harvest the rice in our field! ๐Ÿ™‚

Screen Shot 2015-05-08 at 15.55.35

sowing rice in japan

sowing rice in japan

sowing rice in japan

sowing rice in japan

sowing rice in japan

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

sowing rice in chiba

Categories
JapaneseCulture

Sakura ๆกœ

The Sakura is something that I didn’t understand at the beginning. I remember my first years, when I was looking at the flowered cherry trees with indifference, taking a photo from time to time. I recall how I looked with surprise the passion of hundreds of Japanese people gathering around the trees and spending the day chilling. After several years my indifference has been transforming into love of the Sakura. I guess it’s like wine or bitter chocolate, it’s a matter of learning how to appreciate it.

It’s not only one flower, it’s all that is represents. The change from cold to warm weather, from the gray skies of winter to the blue skies of spring which melt with the white of the Sakura. The smiling crowd flooding the streets and the parks of the city, making you forget the non-stopping flow of salaryman dressed with dark suits that clog the subway stations during rush hour.

Although I had been waiting for the arrival of the Sakura, it caught me off guard. I was not expecting it to be so beautiful. It surprises me every time, I don’t get used to it. The problem is that not only it surprises me when it arrives, but also when it leaves. One day you leave home in the morning and you see flowers everywhere, one week later you start seeing petals on the sidewalks, and when you less expect it, the Sakura is gone! Sayonara! See you next spring!

These are some of the photos that I’ve been publishing in my instagram during the last two weeks:

sakura in tokyo

sakura in tokyo

sakura in tokyo

sakura in tokyo

sakura in tokyo

sakura in tokyo

sakura in tokyo

I obtained the last illustration by playing with the app Paper 53 in my iPad. Inspired after painting I wrote a haiku. What is your haiku of the Sakura?

“้’็ฉบใซ
ใ•ใใ‚‰ใฎใ‚ทใƒผใƒ„
ๆ˜ฅใŒๆฅใŸ”

In the blue sky,
a sheet of sakura sakura,
spring arrived

sakura8

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