Yuu beach is about 15 minutes away from the base and... it's where Cindy lives! It's less than a 3 minute trip from her front door to the sand. Lucky!
This floated up to the shore and Matt pretended to eat it after I said that it bore a very similar resemblance to what I had been served at a restaurant the night before. It was just as appetizing as it looks. (Think ocean-flavored gelatin)
Monday, November 29, 2010
Chicken Shack
The favorite Japanese restuarant is Sanzoku, or more commonly known as "The Chicken Shack" by all us Americans (I've learned no Japanese place is ever referred to as it's actual Japanese name- we make up names like "The Fish Tank," "The Yellow Brick Road" and the like...). It does serve chicken, but it is far from a shack. Our friends April and Chris took us up for our first visit, along with Cindy, Sharon and David. The atmosphere was picturesque and the food was amazing! I had the BEST grilled chicken I have ever had and I don't even like meat!
Surfing Part Two
I thought I would throw in a few pictures from one of Matt's later surfing trips. The waves were a bit better. He said the last time he went the waves were even bigger.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
The House
These are a few pictures of the lot and the surrounding views. Yesterday, we went to the house and within one week they had put up all the walls and the roof! I will post those pictures later, after we get them on a CD.
This our street (our house will be just to the left of this picture), with a big ol' drop-off to one side. The picture just doesn't do it justice. The ditch is deeper than our car is tall.
Da Wheels
A BIG thank you to Cindy for downloading our pictures onto a CD. I am so excited to finally share some of the pictures we've been accumulating since we got here. We still aren't in our house so it will be awhile before we can do it on our own computers.
First on the list of things to share about: our cars! We got them both from a guy here on base. It was pretty much a two-for-the-price of one deal. I was expecting cars to be expensive over here (like everything else) but we got two cars for about 3,500 US dollars. Sweet! The car pictured here is the Suzuki WagonR, which you see everywhere in Japan. Back home, I used to think- How does Suzuki stay in business? No one drives them! Well, business is booming over here. EVERYONE drives a Suzuki Wagon in Japan. The second car is a Suzuki too, but more of an SUV (think two door CRV with 4 WD) which we got for skiing in the winter. Poor thing, it sits most of the time since we usually only need one car, but we will need it more I'm sure when we move off base into our house. They are both older cars, but we love them all the same. All the American's on base tend to drive the older cars, since they aren't here for very long. It actually works out perfectly, becuase we don't have to worry to much about keeping them in nice condition. The narrow roads and driveways can be a bit tricky.
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