Handicrafts can still be found in Kyoto shops where the craftspeople are working in the back. On the other hand, you can go crazy trying to find an ATM which accepts international bank cards. On a morning when we were running out of money and looking unsuccessfully for a short noren (the curtain which hangs over the entrance to many shop doors), I composed one of the shortest poems in Japanese history:
No yen
No ren.
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| Mostly restaurants line this old street |
| Kenninji temple. We stumbled onto this beautiful place by chance. |
| Part of the garden |
| One of the paintings |
| One of the rooms |
| Another garden |
| Yet another garden |
| A procession which took place during our visit. |
| Exhibit of bamboo gates at the excellent Kyoto Museum of Crafts |
| The shop where we bought some paintings |
| Kyoto also has places to satisfy shopping desires such as Takashimaya, whose main information desk is shown here. |
| Restaurants abound and we had a superb kaiseki meal here after choosing it because it had no English signage. Below are three of the courses. Dessert and a few extras not shown. |
| Kimonos abound, some on shoppers and strollers |
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| I wouldn't go this far but I do intend to return. |



I miss Japan. Your photographs make me nostalgic.
ReplyDeleteElaine
Have a safe trip home!
DeleteGreat poem, short and to the point. Even more spare than the haiku form. I dub this form of poetry the "no-ku."
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