About The Author

Welcome to OKINAWA LOCAL TOUR GUIDE'S BLOG.

This blog is created by a local tour guide born and raised in the northern region of Okinawa island. This lush mountainous area is locally known as Yanbaru, and the name means to the locals as a place to enjoy and appreciate nature.
I write, in a rather freewheeling manner, things I see and hear mainly in the nature-rich region of Okinawa . Okinawa is the southernmost prefecture in Japan. Come and experience this unique resort island in the heart of subtropical climate and blue ocean.
For those who wish to contact Shu Uechi, the author, please send an e-mail to: sr-uechi@auone.jp

このブログは沖縄生まれ・沖縄育ちの地域限定通訳案内士・上地が作成しているブログです。

2010/10/27

Hinpun Gajumaru, An Old Banyan Tree in Nago City, Okinawa

Nago City Citizen Gajumaru Festival (Banyan Tree Festival) was held on October 23rd and 24th on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of Nago City's gaining city status.


(Nago City is located in the central part of Okinawa's main island at the root of Motobu peninsula. Population over 60,000. Google Map: from Naha Airport to the tree



Many citizens gathered at the city's Gajumaru Green Area Park to hear what panelists would say about the tree at "Banyan Tree Symposium" which was coordinated by the delegate of Gajumaru Network. The symposists included a citizen's representative, a delegate of City Tourism Association's administrative office, the chairperson of Nago City Museum Friendship Association, and the deputy director of Nago City Board of Education.






The citizens pay particular attention to this banyan tree for two reasons. The first reason is that the tree has stood at the entrance of the city's main street for nearly 300 years and been registered as the natural monument by the national government. The other reason, a graver one, is because the tree has lately been in danger of falling over. A powerful typhoon hit the city a few years ago and almost blew the old tree down. Luckily, the tree has survived but the city had to shore up the large branches to prevent the tree from being further uprooted. In this early summer, the city's education board, an organizing body in charge of maintaining cultural properties, had to cut off many spread branches in order to lessen wind resistance before the typhoon season arrived.


At the symposium, the deputy director of the education board explained the measures the city has been taking to prevent the felling of Hinpun Gajumal. "It is important that every citizen, as well as the city office, give consideration to the banyan tree," he appealed.


The delegate of the city's tourism association proposed a number of suggestions, including plans to designate the area around the tree as "a power spot*," to organize a gourmet festival at the park nearby, and to train tour guides so as to systematically support the revitalization of the city's main street area.


* The phrase "power spot" is a Japanese people's coinage to describe a sacred place or a location with magnificent views where visitors are spiritually/emotionally energized.


The City Museum Friendship Association chair expressed a necessity to think about ways for helping the citizens become more appreciative of their own community. "One way to do this is to exhibit old photographs throughout the downtown area," he suggested.


On October 24th, the festival committee hosted other events including a music concert.


At the end of January through early February, Nago City cerebrates one of Japan's earliest cherry-flower viewing festival which attracts over 200,000 visitors each year. The banyan is introduced to first-time visitors as a tree that has protected the city for three centuries. 


Nago City people has started giving back a little of what they can to the old tree.

2010/10/25

Harvest Season

The photo I posted below was taken at a rice paddy nearby.

I wrote about Naha City's Great Tug-of-War in this blog earlier. Tug-of-wars take place in various communities in Okinawa and those events (with Naha's as the largest) have their roots in the island people's agrarian life style. Straw ropes used in those games are made of rice straws. (Okinawa is the southernmost prefecture in Japan. Haha is the capital city.) 

This particular area shown in the photo is a remainder of once much larger landscape in the region called "Haneji," a place where the Kingdom of Ryukyu designated as one of the premier grain zones to produce dietary staple, rice. The kingdom was ruled by the Sho Dynasty that governed the chain of islands stretching across the East China Sea, located between the south of Japan and the north of Taiwan. Though tiny and hard to spot on the world map, it had existed as an independent kingdom for many centuries until 1879. I took the photo as a token of appreciation for the farmers who have preserved this field in the middest of rapid urban development. This small portion of traditional rural landscape in Okinawa reminds me of the good old days when the community people lived in harmony with the natural environment.

A scene of golden carpets of rice paddies that spread underneath the clear autumn sky represents what we all share deep in our hearts as Asians.





If you live in Okinawa, or if you happen to be having your vacation on the mainland Okinawa, you can take photos or enjoy oil-painting at the same point I took the photo. This photo is taken as of Oct. 23, 2010. Farmers may harvest the rice in a few week. 


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Sakura Translation Office
Translator/Certified Local Tour Guide  Shu Uechi

E-mail: sr-uechi@auone.jp
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2010/10/11

Great Tug-of-War, Result: Draw

The world's largest tag-of-war event took place on Oct. 10th and the game ended in a draw.

As I wrote about the yearly event yesterday, two huge pieces of ropes--each weighs more than 20t--are connected before the game starts.

There is a YouTube video sent to me through Twitter which happens to show a close look of how it is like to take part in the tug-of-war event.

A local newspaper reports it took too much time to have those ropes just to get connected and the starting time was delayed half an hour, leaving little time for the event before the time limit for using the Japan't national route 58. So, this year's game lasted only 6 minutes.

Here is a URL of Daikon-no Hana (Restaurant Radish Flower) who posted the very good video.
(Dailon-no Hana operates a local restaurant chain, attracting local and non-local customers alike who are health-conscious eaters. Their buffet style lunch and dinner have attracted many patrons.)

http://am6.jp/9H6bay

2010/10/10

Great Tug-of-War, Naha City, Okinawa, Japan

Naha City, the prefectural capital of Okinawa, Japan, annually holds the world's largest tug-of-war event, which attracts about 300,000 people in and around the island's capital. Out of this large number of spectators, only lucky 20,000 people get to pull those ropes.

Every year, on Oct. 10th, the event organizer prepares two giant ropes with rice straws. Each rope is about 100m in length (about 330ft), 1m56cm in width (about 61.5in), and each rope weighs more than 20t (about 44090lb).

Once the two ropes are connected with a large log ---the total length now reaches more than 200m---the great power game starts. Imagine a team of 10,000 men and women pulls the rope against another team of the same number.

Tug-of-wars have been played in many parts of the island prefecture, though they are in much smaller scale. Many villages and towns in Okinawa have long held festivities of fall harvest, in which tug-of-wars include, as a token of appreciation for good harvest this year and as prayers for the good harvest next year.

After the game is over, the ropes are cut into smaller pieces and given to visitors for free. It's believed that anyone who takes a piece of the rice straw ropes will be happy and live a healthy life for the whole next year.


YouTube video of Tug-of-War here