Nov 27, 2006

SUMO!!





Its been some time since I've written anything. Life has been flying by as usual. Two weekends ago I drove with a few friends up to Fukuoka (about 31/2 hours by car), on the northern tip of Kyushu. Its the biggest city on the island of Kyushu, and pretty modern and chic. We had bought tickets to see the final day of the Kyushu Basho, the annual professional sumo tournament that comes to Fukuoka. This past weekend there was a big cabin party organized by one of my friends, and I played in two shows with RENS on Sunday.

When we arrived in Fukuoka late Saturday morning, I met up with a guy who I had found by searching on the Internet for Capoeira in Fukuoka. I had assumed there would be a decent capoeira scene there due to the size of city and supposed Brazillian community, but turns out this guy has the only group and its really small (about 6 ppl!). I had planned to buy a berimbau (bow instrument that accompanies capoiera) from him, but the one he had wasn't quite what I was looking for. I did find out however that this guy's friend will be coming back to Kagoshima in April and starting up classes.. so I am really excited for that!

The weather on the weekend was rainy most of the time, so our exploring was limited. On Saturday night we hit the town and had dinner at an Indian restaurant. After we met up with my friends Jane and Evania from Winnipeg who have been out here teaching for the past year. It was great catching up with them. Later we ended up at some dance club filled with foreigners, which was pretty weird, since that is not so common around my place (considering I'm the only foreigner in my town).

On Sunday we went to COSTCO!! I cannot describe in words how great it is walking into a familiar store with all the foods from home... they had everything we have back in Winnipeg! (with the addition of wine and sushi!) I nearly fainted at the sight of bagels. After the four of us squeezed as much as humanly possible into my car. We headed over to the sumo match. Man those guys are huge! Despite their super-human size, they are really fast and of course strong. Its a really interesting sport, and I had no idea as to the rules before I went. Luckily they were prepared for foreigners and gave us an english guide to sumo as we entered the building. Sumo is filled with ancient rituals, which makes each match about 10 minutes even though the actual bout is usually 10-20 seconds.

I really want to go back to Fukuoka sometime and explore the city... the city gets a lot of international music acts and has a pretty big arts scene. It also has an indoor snowboarding/ski hill and an amusement park...most of all I want to go back to fantasy land (aka Costco).

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Hi Josh, I'm a friend of Evania and lost her e-mail after she left Fukuoka. Please pass on my e-mail to her, or let me know hers. All the best, Peter