Categories
Asia

My top tips for travel with kids to Tokyo, Japan

Ema wooden prayer cards at Meiji Shrine, Harajuku, Tokyo (photo by Sheila Scarborough)Through a couple of referrals by mutual friends on Twitter (here’s my Twitter stream) I got a question from Mzinga executive and social media business strategist Jim Storer about taking his family to Japan later this year.

After pulling together an email for Jim, with links to most of my Japan-related writings across this blog, the Perceptive Travel Blog and some other publications, I thought, why not put the same consolidated information in a helpful blog post?

I lived in Japan for awhile while serving with the Navy near Fukuoka, on Kyushu, and returned a couple of years back when my daughter was a preteen, staying for about a month and a half near Tokyo.

Japan is not an “easy” destination for families  —  that’s not to scare you off,  but so you’ll know that standing around feeling like a complete idiot (and usually a lost idiot who can’t determine north from south) is TOTALLY normal for a visitor to Japan. It’s worth it, though.

I always advocate pushing out of the coddled tourist bubble and striking out on your own, but it’s harder to do that with kids in tow. Mix it up – do the “weird stuff” (occasionally feeling like an idiot) and then allow occasional forays into McDonald’s or Starbucks for some feeling of familiarity. Your brain will need it more frequently than you’d think, especially with kids.

I don’t care what anyone tells you, English is not widely spoken, but it really doesn’t matter all that much. Do a lot of bowing and hand gestures; the Japanese will generally go out of their way to help.

Let me tell you, travel around Europe after that was (comparatively) a piece of cake.

My writings on Japan:

***  Here’s an article I wrote about taking a preteen to Tokyo, for the San Antonio Express-NewsNavigating Tokyo with a ‘tween.

***  One of my first posts – an itinerary for Asakusa to Odaiba in Tokyo. It can fill one whole day.

***  They’re everywhere and they’re awesome – one of the main things I miss about Japan – vending machines!

***  You need to know how to use a squat toilet.

***  If you plan to rent a car in Japan, stand by to blow up your brain by driving on the left.

***  Here’s my guest post on Away.com’s family travel blog about climbing Mt. FujiTrip of a lifetime – climbing Fuji with a preteen.

***  Great side trip from Tokyo: Yokohama (try to see the Shin-Yokohama Ramen Museum.)

***  Another good Tokyo side trip: the beaches at Zushi and Kamakura (see the giant Buddha, or Daibutsu, at Kamakura – here’s a Taylor family post about it, and an excellent description of the area by travelers Susan and Lars.)

***  Fun souvenir: Japanese children’s chopsticks and bento boxes.

***  More great souvenirs: Kappabashi Dori where you can buy plastic food.

***  Don’t miss the summer fireworks and local matsuri (festivals.) Check the Tokyo tourist Web site event calendar for matsuri dates and locations, but you may also stumble across one going on in the streets so be ready to get swept up in the fun! One of my favorite blogs about Japan, AMPONTAN, has a whole category about Japanese festivals; most posts are titled Matsuri-da!

Guidebooks – I wore out my copy of TimeOut Tokyo and I’m a long-time fan of Frommer’s guides for good overviews. Dorling Kindersley Eyewitness Guides are pretty good but are rather heavy. I’d get one good guidebook for Japan overall and then a small one for the city where you’ll spend the most time.

Maps. You’ll want maps. The guidebooks have ’em and they always boot up and don’t need WiFi.

When you arrive, look for copies of Metropolis and TimeOut Tokyo magazines, for the latest info in English (Metropolis Visitor’s Guide online, and TimeOut Tokyo online.)

For good blogs and news sites about Japan, take a look at Alltop, an “online magazine rack,” and their topic page on Japan.

Another good book is CultureShock! Japan: A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette.

Here’s the BootsnAll Travel Network portal page for Japan.

Did I miss anything about taking kids to Japan, especially Tokyo? Tell us about it in the comments….

Categories
Asia Photos

Photo of the Week: Crocs invade China

Yes, folks, it is true. You can buy those attractive Crocs shoes for your kids all over the world (I picked up this flyer in Shanghai.)

Then again, I’m not sure that this is a good thing….

Categories
Asia

Fun souvenir: Japanese children’s chopsticks and bento boxes

My fellow Perceptive Travel blog author Nia Malchik had a moment in the spotlight recently on the Going Places blog, which is part of the Cookie parenting magazine Web site.

Nia wrote about some fun wooden beads that she’d found for her son on a trip to Austria, and it got me to thinking about packable, easy-to-find kid’s souvenirs from other countries.

I thought I’d share photos of a couple of my favorites from Japan….

Kid-sized chopsticks and bento boxes.

They are a fun and inexpensive souvenir, and if your children are anime fans, it’s easy to find all sorts of anime bento boxes and chopsticks that go way beyond Power Rangers.

Any large Japanese department store will have an assortment, as will any toy store, houseware/kitchenware shop or large 100 Yen store (the equivalent of a Dollar General in the U.S.)

The bento box compartments are pretty teensy, but work well for small items like cheese cubes and grapes.

Plus, the “cool factor” when they are pulled out of a lunchbox is hard to beat.

Savvy use of chopsticks, however, may take a little more effort….

Categories
Asia

Oh China, Part Two

Gate of Heavenly Peace, China (courtesy Laura Bond Williams)(This is Part Two of a two-part series by guest poster Laura Bond Williams, about taking kids to China. Click here for Part One, with lots of tips on long-haul air travel with children. Thank you SO much for this, Laura!)

In April 2008, we explored Beijing, China, with our daughters, ages 3 and 5.

We played hackey sack at the Temple of Heaven and hustled away from adoring crowds at Tiananmen Square.

We motored by Beijing’s National Stadium (dubbed the Birds’ Nest,) paddled boats on Lake Kunming at the Summer Palace and hiked the Great Wall.

Fun with Chinese hackeysack (courtesy Laura Bond Williams)Our daughters ate fried rice and ice cream at Golden Tripod Attic in Chaoyang (and twice, chicken nuggets at McDonald’s — I admit also drinking Starbucks coffee a few times.) We ate a fabulous Peking duck meal at the famed Li Qun Roast Duck restaurant in a hutong southeast of Tiananmen Square.

While we planned our trip, friends often asked, “Why China?” (roughly translated: “If you’re spending $4,000 on airfare and visas, shouldn’t you end up by a pool with a swim-up bar?”)

I realized that I’d hear that question for years, and it reveals both anxieties and curiosities about international travel generally — and specifically, about traveling with children.

People familiar with China worried about environmental and other health hazards including public toilets, Asia’s notorious “squatty potties”. Other friends were concerned about food (because kids are reputed to be picky,) homesickness and entertainment. How would we keep the kids amused?

Anxieties: yes, I had them all. But the bottom line is that there is plenty for kids to do, see and eat in Beijing. And we found a great solution for squatty-potty fears.

First, why China?

  • Reason No. 1 — Friendship and opportunity

Williams family at the Great Wall, China (courtesy Laura Bond Williams)Our trip to China was motivated by my childhood friend who moved to Beijing last year with her family. When she and her husband began preparing for their expatriate life together, I said that we would visit them anywhere as long as we didn’t need a dozen vaccinations or bodyguards. When she announced that they were headed to Beijing, I said, “We’ll come.”

So, while preparing for this opportunity of a lifetime, we were both practical and pragmatic.

Here’s my one practical tip to allay health fears: if you choose vaccinations for your children, make sure they are up-to-date with current requirements. My husband and I chose to have Hepatitis A vaccinations. The Centers for Disease Control Web site has more information. We didn’t drink tap water on the advice of our friends; they have bottled water at home. We bought bottled water at the store while out and about. Done.

About squat toilets; yes, they are a little intimidating. They have a fearsome reputation among women travelers and expats because of the likelihood of peeing all over yourself if you’re not positioned just right. (My kids also figured that out — fast.)

So here’s the good news: when the Chinese government began preparing Beijing for the summer 2008 Olympic Games, they put a high priority on improving public toilets. There are 1 or 2 “Western-style” toilets in nearly every public restroom. (The public restrooms near Tiananmen Square are pristine.) There, Chinese attendants saw our non-Chinese faces and politely guided us to the right stalls. You can buy some cheap souvenirs upon exiting the toilets (really.)

But in restaurants and in public spaces like Ritan Park, Houhai and Chaoyang Park, nearly all potties are “squatties.”

Enter a wondrous creation, the portable toilet. My husband carried it in his backpack, and voila, my kids could squat contentedly. We even placed it over squatty toilets a few times and didn’t use plastic bags. Done.

If you solve for those minor anxieties, the opportunities to enjoy Beijing with your kids are everywhere. You’ll find yourself:

** Jostling along in rickshaws around Houhai, riding the rides and walking the great rocks at Ritan Park.

** Absolutely captivated for a full hour watching acrobats at Chaoyang Theatre.

** Posing for photos in front of the Gate of Heavenly Peace and Tiananmen Square.

Hall of Prayer, China (courtesy Laura Bond Williams)** Shopping the stalls at Hongqiao Market, where I haggled on the price of pashminas and eager sellers dangled Hello Kitty watches at my daughters.

** Peering into the Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests and seeing a 4-minute friendship bloom with a sweet-faced Chinese girl at the Temple of Heaven.

** Hiking more than a mile on the Great Wall at Mutianyu, their little legs pausing to rest at the guard stations.

And more.

These brown-eyed, blonde girls were minor tourist attractions nearly everywhere they went. Nai-nais (grandmothers) and college students wanted to sweep them into their arms. (My friend calls this awkward celebrity status the “Brangelina effect.”)

There’re not a lot of 3-feet-tall, pink-skinned children in China.

Truthfully, the adoration was not always welcomed; my 3-year-old began burying her face in her hands when a stranger approached and a camera came out. We politely declined a lot of requests to photograph and hold our children. Even when we felt a bit hassled, I was touched by how Chinese people simply adored having children around them.

Making friends in China (courtesy Laura Bond Williams)That memory is a sweet souvenir, which brings me to Reasons No. 2 and 3 why we wanted to go to China….

  • Reason No. 2 — Regret

We missed our first opportunity to go to Asia 8 years ago.

My brother-in-law and sister-in-law lived in Okinawa, Japan for more than 2 years.

We did not visit.

Enough said. That wasn’t going to happen again.

  • Reason No. 3 — Inspiration

One of the most spectacular human beings I ever knew was an American expat raised in Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong. His name was Scott Seator, and when we became friends in college, I never tired of asking him about his life growing up overseas. He shared with me a great love of and fascination with Asia. He had a head full of memories and anecdotes (of southeast Asia and many other subjects, like baseball and Stan Musial.)

Chinglish sign, or how Chinese and English don’t always translate (courtesy Laura Bond Williams)He opened up my world by simply being one of the kindest, most interesting and talkative people I ever met. Over the years I longed for the opportunity to see Asia through my own American eyes, and that yearning was a gift from him.

Though my children’s memories of China may fade, I believe that my husband and I gave them something else: a story and a seed.

My youngest may protest one day that she doesn’t remember the Great Wall.

My oldest may have watery recollections of the indoor ball pit and playground in Shunyi (her favorite places.)

Rickshaws in China (courtesy Laura Bond Williams)Here’s my goal: as long as we keep talking about it, the trip becomes part of their “when-I-was-growing-up” story.

Then there’s the seed. It’s already sprouting.

Yesterday my 5-year-old came to me with a small tin of candy from Jenny Lou’s grocery.

“Mommy,” she said, as she passed through the kitchen, “When we go back to China, can we get some more of these?”

© 2008 Laura Bond Williams

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Categories
Asia

Summer Fireworks in Japan

Tokyo fireworks mosaic (courtesy HAMACHI! at Flickr's Creative Commons)You probably already know this if you’re in Japan right now or planning to go there in the next few weeks, but July is prime time of year for some great fireworks.

This is especially true in Tokyo, where the Sumida River explodes with color and locals wear traditional cotton summer yukata to watch the show.

The Japan National Tourist Office has a good online article on the Sumidagawa Hanabi Taikai (Sumida River Fireworks Display,) some of which my daughter and I enjoyed when she joined me for a few weeks in Tokyo a couple of years ago.

There are always matsuri or festivals going on in Japan, but there are a lot in the summer and they are fun to watch if you can catch one.

Check out AMPONTAN, one of my favorite Japan blogs, and his post about a mad morning dash through the streets of one of the cities in Kyushu.

In a country that is sometimes (OK, often) pretty confusing and overwhelming (even experienced travelers tend to hang onto their guidebook here) it’s nice to find an event that anyone can understand and appreciate.

Technorati tags: travel, family travel, Japan, Tokyo, fireworks

Categories
Asia Blog

Learning Cantonese

Hong Kong street (courtesy filmmaker in Japan on Flickr CC)

I’ve said before that Hong Kong is my favorite city in the world and you should take the kids there for a visit if at all possible. 

This morning, I realized that I’d put a shortcut on my computer desktop to a site called “Learning Cantonese,” but I couldn’t remember what it was so I clicked on it. 

Well.  Glad I saved this.

Author Daisann McLane writes this fabulous blog about living in Hong Kong and the trials, tribulations and bliss therein (including the fact that actually trying to learn Cantonese has sometimes reduced her to tears of frustration.) 

I would love to meet this fellow writer some day, since she also writes a National Geographic Traveler magazine column that I like called “Real Traveler,” plus articles about Caribbean music and books about cheap hotels.

Isn’t it fun to start your morning with a great discovery?

Update today:  I should have also added a link to the BootsnAll Hong Kong [Travel] Logue, a “one-stop travel guide to Hong Kong.”

                                              Hong Kong's Star Ferry coming into Kowloon terminal (courtesy courriel_vert at Flickr CC)

Technorati tags:  travel, Hong Kong, Daisann McLane, China

Categories
Site reviews

Family travel overseas? Read expat blogs

What’s an expat? An “expatriate” is someone who lives away from his or her home country, usually for an extended period of time.

I’ve been an expat in Bahrain, Japan and the Netherlands, but the Web and expat Web sites/blogs weren’t all that widespread until my Netherlands stint. Since we lived in Limburg, near Maastricht, and most expat sites focused on Americans living in Amsterdam or Den Haag, I still didn’t get as much of a sense of community from them as I would have liked.

We were also on dial-up in our Dutch house (with a Belgian ISP) and local calls are not free in the Netherlands, so surfing was rather expensive. One of those things you learn only by living there.

Still, if you are going to travel to a country, even if you won’t live there, I can’t think of a better way to learn the nitty-gritty details than by surfing some of these links for insight:

There are directories of expat blogs here and here, and half-year expat Pam (some Seattle, some Austria) talks a little about expat blogging here.

Don’t miss the comprehensive Web site and magazine Transitions Abroad; their list of expat Web sites is here.

The UK’s Guardian newspaper Web site has a wonderful section written by and for expats in many different countries: Guardian Abroad. I’d never heard the term “expat” until I met British citizens on the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia during a Navy port visit on my first ship. In many ways, the Brits wrote the book on being an expat.

Want family-specific stuff? Check out Family Life Abroad for all sorts of articles and tips. For Japan there’s a new site, Piqniq — the Piqniq blogs from people living in Japan are here (to access the full site you must register, but it’s free.)

When you live in a country for awhile, you draw experiences from everyday life, like watching local TV. My husband wanted to keep up with the golf scene, so he’d watch tournaments broadcast in Japanese because the patter from the commentator wasn’t that important to him and he could still follow the action. He did enjoy hearing the English golf terms mixed with Japanese; “something-something-something-Birdie des ka!”

We loved watching Japanese commercials, and so do the folks on this site. If you want to understand a nation’s sense of humor, their commercials are a great way to do it (so what does that tell people about Americans if they watch our Super Bowl commercials? Hmmmm….)

As a former Navy person, I love this blog, written by a Navy spouse stationed with her Sailor husband where I used to live: Sasebo, in Kyushu, near the city of Fukuoka. Reading it brings back so many memories for me — and for my husband, who REALLY lived in Japan since I was deployed on the ship all the time!

Some of the best books about living in another country are in the Culture Shock series; they’ll give you so much more information than a standard guidebook. It’s also useful to read English-language newspapers published in the country you’ll visit, especially their Life/Travel/Recreation section.

Our family hopes to live overseas again, but even if we’re just passing through a country as a visitor, we always see what those expats have to say.

Update just after posting: Thanks to an email from co-founder Andrea Martins, I’ve just learned of a brand-spankin’-new expat site, Expat Women. They released a newsletter here, and are collecting expat blogs to fire up a new blog section as well. Andrea is from Brisbane, Australia, with stops in Jakarta and Mexico City. There are all sorts of women here living in all sorts of places, so go check it out.

Update 13 March 2007: At a SXSW Interactive evening social event, I met and exchanged business cards with writer/photographer Wes Eichenwald. He lived as an expat in Slovenia for awhile, and I enjoyed his thoughtful impressions of how an expat feels when returning to the US after living overseas.

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Categories
Asia

Go-Today package deal

I do not usually plug specific companies, but I noticed that Smarter Travel is highlighting a $25 discount on some of Go-Today’s packages.

This is the company that gave my daughter, nephew and I the unbeatable airfare/hotel package to Hong Kong and Tokyo last summer.  

There are also side tours offered as options, but we didn’t take any of them.  If you know exactly what you want from a major destination like London, Buenos Aires or Rome, and you aren’t too rigid about hotels, they have good options to get you there as inexpensively as possible.

Categories
Tips

When Your Kids Encounter a Squat Toilet

There’s no getting around it in some countries; you’ll have to figure out how to use a squat toilet and so will the kids.

Warning: relatively high gross-out factor in post below.

When we lived in Japan, our house had a squat toilet but you could buy a plastic converter thing that fitted over the toilet on the floor and allowed you to sit down above it.

Your business does not go into a water pool as it does in a European toilet. It just sits there, waiting for the toilet flushing action to wash it away. One of my more vivid Japan memories is a really cold morning when I thought I was dying of a disease; my morning offering was literally steaming.

Out in town or on the highway, we looked for the bathroom stall for the disabled, which generally had a European-type toilet. I don’t see how anyone with bad knees or other malfunctioning lower extremities can get in the ol’ squat position to start with, much less maintain it for, ahem, bigger business.

And what do you do with pantyhose? Or skirts? And do your jeans have to come all the way off? (Pretty much, I’ve found.)

And you sure can’t read a magazine on a squat toilet — or maybe my technique is lacking.

Remember when Mom said to always carry some Kleenex to use as toilet paper?

Friends, it is time to listen to Mom. If there’s no t.p. in the stall of a squat toilet, there’s trouble in River City.

In many parts of the world, there is never toilet paper. You use water, poured down your bottom. God bless Frank Bures, a fearless writer at World Hum, who provides us detailed insight into this process:

World Hum travel advice guru and Vagabonding author Rolf Potts has also seen a few squatters in his day. “In places like India, and many parts of Asia,” he told me, “a bathroom won’t have toilet paper. It will have a little cup of water. Basically, after you’ve done your business, you take your left hand and wash the exit hole of fecal matter, then wash your hand. That’s why nobody shakes hands with their left hand in most of Asia and the Middle East, because that’s your a**-wiping hand.”

A Thai squat toilet with the requisite water. Courtesy Hobo Traveler.

Ah, another one of life’s little mysteries explained.

So, for those who may be contemplating a trip with the family to the domain of squat toilets, march off to the airport secure in your knowledge of operating procedures, and well-armed with something to use as toilet paper.

Kids may as well learn that not everyone around the world does things the same way, but do prepare them before you go.

Update 06 November 2006: This post and others were featured on Surfing Mama’s Blog Carnival, which has “Only stuff that matters. For mums.” Thanks!

Categories
Philosophy

A Trip Too Far? When Travel with Kids Isn’t a Good Idea.

Thanks to overseas military duty stations in Japan and the Netherlands, both of my children have been able to see a lot of the world (which was only one of the reasons that I specifically requested overseas assignments. The main reason was that my husband and I love to travel and “get local.”)

My young son, now almost 7, doesn’t remember that much of Europe, but recognition of landmarks like the “Eyfee Towee” or the Louvre pyramid in Paris seems to come back to him every once in awhile, or he remembers a bit of the Dutch that he learned in his kindercentrum preschool. My teenage daughter remembers a lot, which was reinforced when she visited me in Tokyo and Hong Kong after I was sent to Asia on a temporary duty assignment.

This article in the UK’s Telegraph online asks some interesting questions about whether parents take kids for selfish reasons, not the “educational” ones that we all offer up as our primary reason for family travel. Should kids be taken to more adventurous locations (i.e., anyplace that needs special shots or anti-malarial medication?) Are we making them jaded by showing them too many cool places when they’re young?

I thought that a lot of the article was not convincing and had a rather peevish, lecturing tone. From my perspective, most parents take the kids not because they are trying to show off, but because they have always traveled and see no reason to come to a roaring halt simply because children have arrived in the family.

Yes, some far-away, exotic destinations should probably wait until kids are old enough to really appreciate them (and not drive everyone nuts on the long plane ride getting there.) But what is “old enough?” Five? Eight? Past ten? As always, it depends upon your individual child.

My son may not have been old enough to really “appreciate” Paris, but there was no way that I was not going to go and enjoy it with my husband and older daughter, especially living right there in Europe. We all took delight in the discovery of pistachio macaroons at Laduree, too.

There was no way that I was not going to have my daughter join me in Japan for a few weeks, either, and as long as she was coming that far, there was no way she was going to miss my favorite city in the world, Hong Kong.

Selfish? Fine, I’m selfish.

My daughter also read the article. She didn’t care for most of it, but did agree with the assertion that all of her travels have in fact made her a bit ho-hum about discovering the rest of the world. “I’ve already seen all of the important stuff, the stuff anyone cares about.” It’s no use telling a teenager that such comments are completely absurd; that there are world-class cities and whole continents she’s yet to visit.

I don’t worry about it because I was the exact same way as a young teenager.

I grew up in a Navy family and also lived overseas, in the Middle East, with lots of European and U.S. travel thanks to my parents. I, too, thought I knew it all….doesn’t every teen? I remember my parents worrying that I was too “jaded” (that was the word they used.)

Does that mean that they shouldn’t have taken me all over? I think not. With maturity I came to appreciate the gift of travel, and I’m still eager to see around the next corner and over the mountaintop.

I do know that I was making plans to visit Morocco a few years back, and my well-traveled father rather bluntly indicated that my young son was simply not ready for the jam-packed souk in Marrakesh or getting a stomach disorder and being miserable. What I considered “exotic” might well have been plain “scary” to my kids. He reminded me that I had been 10-12 when we hit some of the funkier places in the Middle East. I thought about it, and for my family at that time, he was right.

We went to Pisa & Florence instead.

The whole world is still waiting out there, it’s not going anywhere, and my family and I have every intention of seeing a lot more of it.

Update 17 October 2006: Thanks to TripHub for featuring this post on the latest Carnival of Travel, featuring the topic of family travel.