December 31st, 2009 | 5 Comments »

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Posted in Blog
December 30th, 2009 | No Comments »

Picture 10Learn Japanese Pod and Tokyo Weekender Magazine will be joining up to hold a New Year’s Party on Jan 15th in Roppongi. The Weekender Magazine is celebrating their 40th Anniversary and we will be celebrating the fact that it isn’t 2009 anymore. We are expecting a lot of people to come so this will be a great opportunity to meet new people, practice your Japanese and have a lot of fun in the process. Here are the details.

Location: 57 in Roppongi

Date: 15th January 2010

Time: 8pm start

Entrance: 4000 yen advance tickets (5000 yen on the door)

There will be an open bar, food and live music. Guy Perryman will be spinning the decks for us so this promises to be a great party.

You also have the chance to win a lot of freebies in our prize draw. Included in the prizes are free hotel tickets and organic food packages. We Japanese Language school will also be providing some cool prizes for students of Japanese.

You’d be absolutely bonkers not to come and we’d love to see you there. If you are interested please sign up here.


View Learn Japanese Pod locations in a larger map

Posted in Blog
December 24th, 2009 | 2 Comments »

OK, time for the Mt. Fuji post. I didn’t climb it, but I went the closest I’m prepared to go, to Lake Kawaguchi, which offers extremely good views of Fuji for the price of a bus fare from Shinjuku or Tokyo stations. I recommend a view of the snow covered Fuji, although at this time of year the sun is a bit low which can make you squint looking at it from the Fuji 5 Lakes area as they are to the north east of Fuji. However there are other views from the south that can give your eyes a break. Having said that, I would recommend walking around the Lakes on a warm winter’s day, with Fuji as your backdrop. If you want to copy the plan of action, this is what you need.

1) Get to Shinjuku and go here (street view and website)

2) If you are planning a day trip, go early. I went for 7 and, from the handy timetable found here, you can choose which bus you are going to take there and back.

3) By a ticket. You can book online if you like, but out of season and Japanese national holidays I doubt you’ll find the bus full. Buy the ticket from the ticket office, (1700yen one way, you can’t buy a return you’ll be told, you buy it once there) and get on the bus.

4) Once at Kawaguchiko, follow the signs and go for a walk. The path around the lake lasts about 15km, and stops about half way so you have to follow the road the rest. The reason it stops is the view of Fuji goes behind a smaller mountain, but you are half way round the lake already so you might as well keep going. If you feel lazy there are buses that go around the lakes area. You could go to one of the other lakes if you have time, although the views are no more special, although with maybe less hotels, unless you are willing to travel to Yamanaka lake to the south.

5) Get a bite to eat somewhere after the long walk. There is nothing much around the station but a short walk away are some chain places.

6) Go home. Last buses are at 8ish although that is after an hour wait from the previous one. Also, it gets dark and cold come 5pm so probably best to leave by then anyway. The bus back wasn’t busy, although everyone did pile on once it stopped at at Mt Fuji funland

If you want other ideas on viewing Mt. Fuji, I was mulling over this page for a while. With limited time and the potential of getting lost, I chose the easy option, although climbing a mountain near Lake Yamanaka and watching the sunset did pass my mind, if I thought it wouldn’t die trying to get back in the dark.

More information on travel, including trains (more expensive as far as I can tell) can be found here.

Posted in Leviathon
December 23rd, 2009 | 2 Comments »

Here is a collection of the Learn Japanese Pod videos all in one place for you.

Click on the thumbnails below to take you to the video.

Enjoy!
Tokyo JamTokyo Barcamp 2009 with KaramoonPostcard from JapanCounting in JapaneseJapanese Kanji: PeopleWes completes the Hyakumeizan  (百名山)Fun Friday with Beb, Waka and AlexParagliding in NaganoYoyogi Party 代々木パーティーSushi and Beer partyTour of Japan: Nikko 日光Valentine's day in Japan バレンタインデーとホワイトデーBeb and Alex in Osaka 大阪城公園On the Shinkansen 新幹線Wes and Alex on the Dotonbori BridgeHow to open an Onigiri package (Japanese rice ball)Pachinko SymphonyMaiko makeoverSamurai SwordCocolo FM Interview Part 1Accordian, guitar and musical saw performanceCancelling at the last minuteToo big for your boots !AnytimeDay and dayJapanese gestures with Ken 03Japanese gestures with Ken 02Gestures with Ken 1Know your sushiTenjin Fetsival Osaka 2006Maruchika standing barJapanese gesturesFavorite Japanese wordsJapanese coloursLearn Japanese days of the weekKanji video Numbers

Posted in Blog
December 23rd, 2009 | 3 Comments »

No, but seriously we might. As you may well know, Japan has a lot of earthquakes. When I first came here in March there were a couple of months where earthquakes kept popping up a couple of times a week. Nothing serious, more a ‘Welcome to Japan! Here’s an little earthquake or two for starters.’ Of course, that wets the appetite for doom and disaster so I here are my top 5 ways most impressive ways we are all going to die one day.

1) The Great Tokai Earthquake of the 21st Century

While not so bad for Tokyo (and probably Chiba, where I am, will escape severe damage), the Tokai earthquake predicted to hit Shizuoka prefecture anytime soon is a big worry for Japan.

The figure to the left is one of the major fault lines passing close to the mainland of Japan; the Nankai trough. It’s a subduction zone with the Philippine plate pushing itself under the Eurasian plate. The section marked A below is the one pertaining to the Tokai earthquake. It hasn’t ruptured for over 150 years (the last being in 1854), and is well overdue a predicted minimum M8 earthquake, centered somewhere in the Shizuoka prefecture.

If this one goes, which some scientists gave a 35-45% chance this decade, then it will cause massive destruction far worse than the Kobe earthquake of 1995. While Kobe was a different type of earthquake, and less powerful at only M7.4, it is useful as a comparison, noting that a 1 point increase in magnitude is a ~32x increase in power.

http://www.e-quakes.pref.shizuoka.jp/english/guide_01.html
http://www.jma.go.jp/en/quake_tokai/
http://geology.about.com/od/eq_prediction/a/aa_tokaiquake.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nankai_megathrust_earthquakes

2) The Great Kanto Earthquake of the 21st Century

Not afraid of just one devastating once in a lifetime earthquake, well Japan has two lined up. Emanating from a related but separate faultline, the Great Kanto earthquake, affecting Tokyo rather more directly, is also overdue. In 1923 it killed over 100,000 people. Nowadays, while the deaths will probably be a lot less, the economic damage to Japan, and potentially the entire world, could be dire. There is an anime series on the subject of death in Tokyo by earthquake too. Check it out!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1923_Great_Kant%C5%8D_earthquake
http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=10704

3) Mt Fuji Eruption

Earthquakes? Meer shaking of the ground. What you really want for death and destruction is an active volcano. While not a very active volcano, the last eruptions being over 300 years ago, the constant threat is always there that eventually Fuji-san will get angry again and belch lava and ash all over Tokyo, prevailing winds coating everything to the east of the volcano. In fact, it has been reported that Fuji is overdue, and that its last eruption, in 1707, was two months after the great Tokai earthquake of that year. Although, it has to be said that the rip in 1854 didn’t set off Fuji, it’s a sobering thought that both might happen at the same time. What does that mean for Tokyo? According to the ash map, between 1-4cm of the grey stuff if the 1707 eruption is anything to go by.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historic_eruptions_of_Mount_Fuji
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/07/060717-mount-fuji.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H%C5%8Dei_eruption_of_Mount_Fuji
http://www.japanprobe.com/2006/07/18/will-mr-fuji-erupt-soon/

4) Tidal Wave

Not content with its own natural disasters, the east coast of Japan could be affected by someone else’s problem. A magnitude 9 earthquake is coming to the west coast of America. The cascadia earthquake may generate a tsunami that will hit Japan and in certain places could cause, going from the past reconstructions, a 2-5m wave. Although this is a minor point compared with the devastation that will affect the US west coast’s major cities.

http://www.livescience.com/environment/050103_cascadia_tsunami.html
http://geology.about.com/od/quake_preparedness/a/aa_cascadiaEQ.htm
http://environment.nationalgeographic.co.uk/environment/natural-disasters/earthquake-technology.html

5) Bicycle death

Probably the most fearsome of the lot; crazy obaasan on bicycles. These lean, mean death machines combine two-wheeled destruction from behind with a near super-sonic battle cry. They are to be feared with a terror far greater than the combined power of the Kanto and Toukai earthquakes and Fuji blowing all in the same month (which could happen in theory).

Posted in Leviathon
December 23rd, 2009 | 1 Comment »

I fell behind in my postings with the busy holidays and a little travel back home. WordPress ate my first attempt at this a week or two ago. This is the grammar for describing something that someone made you do.

子供の頃に 母に ぼくは ありがとうの手紙を かかされた。
Kodomo no koro ni haha ni bokuha arigatou no tegami wo kakasareta.
When I was a kid, my mom made me write thank-you letters.

ビール先生に 10マィルを 走らされた。
Biiru Sensei ni 10 mairu wo hashirasareta.
Bill Sensei made me run ten milse.

The structure:
に indicates the person making the other person do the action.
は indicates who was or is being made to do the action
を marks any objects involved (thank-you letters)

う – verbs are conjegated as follows:
書く - 書かされる
走る - 走られる
買う - 買わされる

る – verbs: drop る add させられる
食べる - 食べさせられる

irregular vers:
する - させられる
来る - こさせられる

Posted in Isacksen
December 18th, 2009 | 4 Comments »

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Today, Karamoon and myself sat around in Yoyogi park watching Japan enjoy it’s Friday afternoon. Karamoon explained the latest developments as well as the basics of the Japanese Language Proficiency Test. Listen to the podcast to find out more about the test.

Posted in Fun Friday
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