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Tokyo
On the edge of the Orient, TOKYO - the last
great conurbation before the yawning chasm of the Pacific Ocean - is one of the
world's most perplexing cities. On the one hand, gaudily hung about with
eyeball-searing neon and messy overhead cables, plagued by seemingly incessant
noise, often clogged with bumper-to-bumper traffic and packed with twelve
million people squashed into minute apartments, it can seem like the
stereotypical urban nightmare. Yet behind the barely ordered chaos lie remnants
of a very different way of life. Step back from the frenetic main roads and
chances are you'll find yourself in a world of tranquil backstreets, where
wooden houses are fronted by neatly clipped bonsai trees; wander beyond the
high-tech department stores, and you'll find ancient temples and shrines. In
this city of 24-hour shops and vending machines, a festival is held virtually
every day of the year, people regularly visit their local shrine or temple and
scrupulously observe the passing seasons. And, at the centre of it all, is the
mysterious green void of the Imperial Palace - home to the emperor and a
tangible link to the past.
In many ways Tokyo is also something of a modern-day utopia. Trains run on
time; the crime rate is hardly worth worrying about; shops and vending machines
provide everything you could need (and many things you never thought you needed)
24 hours a day; the people wear the coolest fashions, eat in fabulous
restaurants and party in the hippest clubs. It's almost impossible to be bored
here and first-time visitors should be prepared for a massive assault on the
senses - just walking the streets of this hyperactive city can be an energizing
experience. You'll also be surprised how affordable many things are.
Cheap-and-cheerful izakaya (bars that serve food) and noodle shacks far
outnumber the big-ticket French restaurants and high-class ryotei , where
geisha serve minimalist Japanese cuisine, while day-tickets for a sumo
tournament or a Kabuki play can be bought for the price of a few drinks. Many of
the city's highlights are even free: a stroll through the evocative
Shitamachi (low city) area around Asakusa and the major Buddhist temple
Senso-ji ; a visit to the tranquil wooded grounds of Meiji-jingu ,
the city's most venerable Shinto shrine, and the nearby teenage shopping mecca
of Harajuku ; the frenetic fish market at Tsukiji ; the crackling,
neon-saturated atmosphere of the mini-city Shinjuku - you don't need to
part with lots of cash to explore this city.
Even if you don't arrive in Tokyo, chances are you will end up here or pass
through on your way to other parts of Japan, since the capital is the major
transport hub . Every day, scores of Shinkansen (bullet trains) speed up
to the far north of Honsho or south to Kyushu, while flights, buses and ferries
connect Tokyo to the far-flung corners and islands of the Japanese archipelago.
The only time Tokyo is best avoided is during the steamy height of summer in
August and early September, when the city's humidity sees its citizens scurrying
from one air-conditioned haven to another. October and November, by contrast,
are great months to take in the spectacular fireburst of autumn leaves in
Tokyo's parks and gardens. Temperatures dip to freezing in the winter months,
though the crisp blue skies are rarely disturbed by rain or snow showers. April
is the month when Tokyoites love to party beneath the flurries of falling cherry
blossoms - one of the best months to visit the capital. Carrying an umbrella is
a good idea during tsuyu , the rainy season in June and September, when
typhoons occasionally strike the coast.
Legend says that a giant catfish sleeps beneath Tokyo Bay, and its wriggling
can be felt in the hundreds of small tremors that rumble the capital each year.
Around every seventy years, the catfish awakes, resulting in the kind of major
earthquake seen in 1995 in Kobe. There is a long-running, half-hearted
debate about moving the Diet and main government offices out of Tokyo, away from
danger. Yet, despite the fact that the city is well overdue for the Big One,
talk of relocating the capital always comes to nothing. Now, more than ever
before, Tokyo is the centre of Japan, and nobody wants to leave and miss any of
the action.
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