Walking off the curry back to our apartment, we spy a motorcycle. Hmm. That wouldn't be a bad way to see Japan...
Our apartment is on top of a four-storey building, which is one of the taller buildings in the neighbourhood. We discovered that there's a lot of flex in the structure. Every time a large truck passes by on the road in front of us, the building shakes quite a bit and since we're on the top floor, we feel it the most.
The first time it happened, I thought it was an earthquake! But that's exactly the reason why the structure flexes so much - to absorb an earthquake's shaking. A more rigid structure would just snap and topple.
Eventually, we got used to the shake and sway of passing trucks. But late one night (I'm a bit of a night owl), the building shook and rumbled. It was 5AM, there were no trucks, let alone any traffic, outside on the streets. I waited for the shaking to subside, but instead, it got worse! Plates clinked in the cupboards. The chair beneath me felt like it wanted to move across the floor. This went on for over 2 minutes. That's a LONG TIME! This was a real earthquake!!!
Finally, the building stops shaking and my chair doesn't want to creep out the front door anymore.
You know after something exciting happens, you just want to turn to the person next to you and exclaim, "Holy ****!" But Neda was fast asleep, so I PMed her instead. I said exactly that in the PM...
Then I looked it up on the Internet just to confirm it:
https://www.earthquaketrack.com/quakes/2017-03-11-19-57-46-utc-5-4-40
5.4 Magnitude! In Fukushima.
Fukushima... Fukushima... why does that name sound so familiar...?
Oh well. Back to eating...
These guys were hyping up the Annual Tokyo Gyoza Festival. The girl in the back looks like she is wearing a gyoza on her head!
Since we like gyozas (Japanese dumplings), we decide to go. Its held at the old Olympic Stadium at Komazawa Park.
Ate so many gyozas! Some of them weren't very good and it was very expensive. Not worth it.
About 20 restaurants set up booths in the park outside the stadium. You bought coupons at the entrance of the park and then lined up at each booth to sample that establishment's gyozas. There were different types of dumplings: some fried, some boiled, some with seafood, others with meat, so many different sauces.
It reminded me of this food festival held in downtown Toronto every summer. Restaurants would set up stalls in the square in front of the civic centre and charge a lot of money for you to sample a little bit of their food. Overpriced and very small portions. The gyoza festival was exactly the same.
Our neighbourhood izakaya in Sumida had cheaper and better gyozas!
Still, it was nice to get out and experience what local Tokyoans do...