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
July 3rd, 2009 | 2 Comments »

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View Fireworks Festivals Japan 2009 in a larger map

25th July (Saturday)

(Osaka)

天神祭奉納花火 Tenjin Festival Fireworks display

Time: 19:00-21:00

Location: MAP/地図 5 min walk from JR Sakuranomiya station (桜ノ宮駅), Loop line (環状線)

4000 fireworks / 1.3 million spectators /  TEL: 06-6353-002/ http://www.tenjinsan.com/tjm.html

Check out this Tenjin Festival Video

(Osaka)

岸和田港まつり花火大会 Kishiwada Minato Festival Fireworks
Time: 20:00 – 21:00
Location: MAP/地図 30 mins walk from Kishiwada station (岸和田駅), Nankai  hon  line (南海本線)
1500 fireworks / 20000 spectators / TEL: 072-423-9618/

(Hyogo)

芦屋サマーカーニバル Ashiya Summer Carnival
Time: 20:00 start
Location: MAP/地図 Ashiya City Park 芦屋市総合公園/Nearest station -Ashiya station / 芦屋駅 /
5000 fireworks / 90000 spectators / TEL: 0797-35-0871/

(Hyogo)

姫路みなと祭海上花火大会 Himeji Port Fireworks Festival

Time: 19:30-20:45

Location: MAP/地図 25 min walk from Shikama Station on the Sanyo Dentetsu line 山陽電鉄本線飾磨駅

3300 fireworks / http://www.city.himeji.lg.jp/s60/2212506/_10217/_10017.html


1st August (Saturday)

(Osaka)

教祖祭PL花火芸術 Kyoso Festival PL Fireworks Display
Time: 19:45 – 20:45
Location: MAP/地図 10 mins walk from Tondabayashi station (富田林駅), Kintetsu Nagano line (近鉄長野線)
20000 fireworks /  300000 spectators /TEL: 0721-23-6625/ http://www.perfect-liberty.or.jp/


7th August (Friday)

(Shiga)

びわ湖花火大会 Lake Biwa Fireworks display
Time: 19:30– 20:30
Location: MAP/地図 5 mins walk from Hamaotsu station (浜大津駅)
10000 fireworks /  350000 spectators / TEL: 077-511-1530 / http://www.biwako-visitors.jp/


8th August (Saturday)

(Osaka)

なにわ淀川花火大会 Naniwa Yodogawa Fireworks Display
Time: 19:50– 20:40
Location: MAP/地図 10 mins walk from Jyuso station (十三駅), Hankyu line (阪急線)
or Tsukamoto station (塚本駅), JR kobe line (JR神戸線)
3000 fireworks /  380000 spectators /TEL: 06-6307-5522/http://www.yodohanabi.com/


15th August (Saturday)

(Kyoto)

あやべ水無月まつり Ayabe Festival
Time: 20:00– 20:45
Location: MAP/地図 10 mins walk east from Ayabe Station 綾部駅
4000 fireworks /  35000 spectators /TEL: 0773-42-0701

Posted in Japan guide
June 30th, 2009 | 10 Comments »

TWEET THIS!

hanabi

This is the Kanto Fireworks Calendar covering the greater Tokyo area and surrounding prefectures. Be sure to check out the Kansai Fireworks Calendar here. We will be adding extra information to this calendar as the festival season progresses here in Japan. Also check out our Japan Guide Page for general event and cultural for Japan.

Every year hundreds of thousands of people gather wearing 浴衣 – Yukata – summer kimonos and try to keep themselves cool with their 扇子 – Sensu – fans during the warm humid summer.  Many of these fireworks displays have long histories stretching back hundreds of years so this is a great way to experience Japanese culture at it’s most exciting.

Please leave your comments, questions and fireworks tales on the comments below. Enjoy!


View Fireworks Festivals Japan 2009 in a larger map

4th July (Saturday)

(Yamanashi)

富士山 河口湖 山開きまつり花火大会 Mount Fuji -Kawaguchi Lake – Yamaaki Fireworks Display

Time: 20:00 – 20:30

Location: 10 mins walk from Kawaguchiko station, Fuji Kyuko line

2000 fireworks / 30,000 spectators / MAP / /TEL: 0555-72-2460


11th July (Saturday)

(Kanagawa)

2009 久里浜ペリー祭 2009 Kurihama Perii Festival

Time: 19:20 – 20:10

Location: Kurihama bay -15 mins walk from JR Kurihama station or 15 mins walk from Keikyu Kurihama station

3500 fireworks / 90,000 spectators / TEL: 046-822-2500 / http://www.kurihama.com/info MAP


18th July (Saturday)

(Tokyo)

調布市花火大会 Chofu City Fireworks Display

Time: 19:20 – 20:30

Location: 15mins walk from Chofu station

12,000 fireworks / 250,000 spectators TEL: 042-481-7311 MAP

(Saitama)

小江戸川越花火大会 Ko Edo Kawagoe Fireworks Display

Time: 19:30 – 21:00

Location: 20 mins walk from Kasahata station

4000 fireworks / 140,000 spectators TEL: 049-222-5556 MAP

(Saitama)

たまむら花火大会 Tamamura Fireworks Display

Time: 19:50 – 20:50

Location: 20 mins by bus from JR Takasaki Line, Shinmachi station

10,000 fireworks / 50,000 spectators / 0270-65-7144  MAP

(Shizuoka)

海の祭典 納涼花火大会 Umi No Saiten Nouryou Fireworks Display

Time: 20:00 – 20:30

Location: 10 min bus from Izushimoda station on Izukyukou line

2000 fireworks / 15,000 spectators / MAP / http://www.izu-shirahama.jp/event_guide.html#hanabi


19th July (Sunday)

(Saitama)

ドイツ村花火大会 Doitsu Mura Fireworks Display

Time: 20:30 – 20:50

Location: 15 min taxi ride from Ooko station (大湖駅)

5000 fireworks / 8000 spectators / MAP / http://www.doitsumura.com/index2.html

(Kanagawa)

灯籠流し&花火大会 Floating Paper Laterns On The River and Fireworks Display

Time: Events start at 19:00 with fireworks at the end

Location: 片瀬江ノ島駅 2 min walk from Katase Enoshima station

500 fireworks / 13,000 spectators / MAP


23rd July (Thursday)

(Tokyo)

足立の花火 Adachi Fireworks Display

Time: 19:30 – 20:30

Location: 15 min walk from Kitasenju station(北千住駅)

12,000 fireworks / more than 500,000 people expected to watch from the river /http:/adachikanko.jp/fireworks/ MAP


25th July (Saturday)

(Tochigi)

真岡市夏祭り大花火大会 Moka City Festival and Fireworks Display

Time: 19:20 – 21:00

Location: 15 min walk from Moka station (真岡駅)

20,000 fireworks / 280,000 spectators / http://www.city.moka.tochigi.jp/kankou/maturi/ MAP

(Tokyo)

隅田川花火大会 Sumidagawa Fireworks Display

Time: 19:00 – 20:30 (area 1) / 19:30 – 20:30 (area 2)

Location: On the Sumida river, 15 min walk from Asakusa station (浅草駅) or five min walk from Kuramae station (蔵前駅)

21,500 fireworks / 900,000 spectators / http://sumidagawa-hanabi.com/index_eg.html MAP

(Shizuoka)

安倍川花火大会 Abekawa Fireworks Display

Time: 19:00 – 21:00

Location: 10 min taxi or bus ride from Shizuoka station (静岡駅)

15,000 fireworks / 600,000 spectators / MAP

(Tokyo)

立川祭り国営昭和記念公園花火大会 Tachikawa Festival and Showakinen Park Fireworks Display

Time: 19:20 – 20:30

Location: 15 min walk from Tachikawa station (立川駅)

5000 fireworks / 600,000 spectators / MAP


25th and 26th July (Sunday)

(Shizuoka)

沼津夏祭り狩野川花火大会 Numazu Sumer Festival and Kanogawa Fireworks Display

Time: 19:30 – 20:45

Location: 10 min walk from Numazu station (沼津駅)

9000 fireworks / 360,000 spectators / MAP


29th July (Wednesday)

(Chiba)

船橋港親水公園花火大会 Funabashi Koshinsui Park Fireworks Festival

Time: 19:30 – 20:30

Location: 10 min walk from JR Minami Funabashi Station (南船橋駅) or 10 min walk from Keisei Daijingu-shita station (京成大神宮下駅)

6000 fireworks / 70,000 spectators / MAP


30th July (Thursday)

(Saitama)

さいたま市花火大会 Saitama City Fireworks Display

Time: 19:00 – 21:00

Location: 15 min walk from Omiya Koen station (大宮公園駅) or Owada station (大和田駅)

5000 fireworks / 130,000 spectators / MAP

AUGUST


8th August (Saturday)

(Tokyo)

東京湾大華火祭りTokyo Bay Fireworks Festival

Time: 19:00 – 20:20

Location: 15mins walk from Kachidoki station on Oedo Line(大江戸線勝どき駅) 20mins walk from Tsukishima Station on the Yurakucho line(有楽町線月島駅)

12000 fireworks / 170,000 spectators / MAP

(Kanagawa)

あつぎ鮎大花火大会 Atsugi Ayu Fireworks Festival

Time: 19:00 – 20:40

Location: 15mins walk from Honatsugi station north exit on the Odakyu line (本厚木駅北口小田急線)

5000 fireworks / 580,000 spectators / MAP


11th August (Tuesday)

(Tokyo)

せいせき多摩川花火大会 Seiseki Tamagawa Fireworks Festival

Time: 19:30 – 20:30

Location: 10mins walk from Seiseki-Sakuragaoka station on Keio Line(京王線聖蹟桜ヶ丘駅)15mins walk from Nakagawara Station on Keio line(京王線中河原駅)

5000 fireworks / 230,000 spectators / MAP


29th August (Saturday)

(Kanagawa)

相模原納涼花火大会 Sagamihara Fireworks Festival

Time: 19:00 onwards

Location: 30 min bus ride from Fuchinobe station on the JR Yokohama line (JR横浜線淵野辺駅) Car is probably best transport.

8000 fireworks / 290,000 spectators / MAP

Posted in Japan guide
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