At the end of my first week of my
study abroad program, the whole summer program and some students from AIU went
on a field trip to Oga Peninsula. The trip had four destinations, each unique
and fun in its own way. The trip was full of new experiences, learning, and
making friends. Let’s get started, shall we?
This giant tank is the first thing you see when entering the aquarium part of the aquarium |
So the day started off with
getting up earlier than any college student wants to get up on a weekend and
eating breakfast in the wonderful cafeteria they have here (I especially love
the cafeteria here because I have food allergies and the ladies here make me
delicious Japanese food that I can eat). After eating breakfast, we all loaded
into buses and headed out. Our first stop was GAO Aquarium. It’s right on the
beach so there are some wonderful views just walking to the building. Once
inside the building, we were in front of a giant tank of fish, sting rays, and
a couple turtles. Everyone stood there in awe taking pictures and admiring what
ocean life had to offer before working our way through many more hallways of
fish, jellyfish, octopi, polar bears, seals, penguins, and all sorts of other
aquatic life. The seals were very cute and enjoyed swimming around near us and
the color changing jellyfish looked like something out of a science fiction
novel, but I have to say the Amazon tank was probably my favorite. There was
this fish that just hung out near me and looked so dorky and hilarious. The
rest of the life in the tank was cool too, but that fish just made my day. Also
just a warning but the gift shop is absolutely amazing and you will want to buy
everything in there. Just be prepared.
This dorky looking fish 😂 |
After exploring the aquarium, we
all piled back into the buses and were on our way to Nyudozaki Cape to eat
lunch and do some more exploring. The way there required driving on some windy
roads, so my friend wasn’t feeling too good but the lovely organizer on the bus
gave her some magical Japanese motion sickness medicine and she was great for
the rest of the day. Anyway, we got to the cape and ate our lunch then started
exploring the area. There were a lot of nice views to explore and some cool
shops to check out too. A specialty to the area was black salt ice cream.
Sounds super weird, but it’s actually super good (just be careful not to get a
mouthful of salt!). With some help from a friend I managed to order some ice
cream and helped a friend of mine order as well. The lady looked so happy when I
managed to properly order ice cream for my friend. Experiences like this remind
me of why I want to study Japanese.
View from Nyudozaki Cape |
Some Namahage dudes in front of the ice cream place |
Lunch was over and then it was
time to head to the next stop of the day, the Namahage Museum. Namahage are
monsters of the winter that come to your house to scare children into being
good kids. Kinda like Santa but scary and loud. Well, to me they aren’t scary
they are fantastic but at the Namahage show we went to there was a little kid
that started crying when the Namahage came in banging on the doors and stomping
and yelling. Anyway, the Namahage are great fun and the costumes are
impressive. There was a station where you could dress up as Namahage and take
pictures so of course we had to try that. The whole Namahage Museum was great
fun. After exploring the Namahage museum, some of my friends and I went to
visit the shrines behind the museum. They were really beautiful and I got a
charm thing from one of the shrines, but our little trip made us late getting
back to the buses. The guy at the temple must have gotten a good laugh out of a
group of exchange students running to get back to our bus but of course we ran
the ran the wrong direction first. We made it back to the buses a little late
but everything was fine.
My friend and I became Namahage |
The last stop of the day was a
viewpoint at Mt. Kampuzan. There was a road up to the viewpoint so we
thankfully didn’t have to do too much walking to get amazing views. There were
some souvenir shops here as well, all of which are amazing. Honestly, I wanted
to buy everything in every one of the shops I visited. That could have
something to do with my love of cute things (like at the aquarium), and my
newfound love of Namahage (they are just so great). I got myself some Namahage
socks because Namahage socks are important obviously. After that I walked
around with friends on the viewpoint which eventually culminated in rounding up
as many summer program students as we could and taking a group photo. After
that we were summoned back to the buses and started the ride home, all the while
chatting and comparing finds.
Many students from the summer program and the school posing for a picture |
Between the cute seals and unique
ice cream and loud Namahage and beautiful viewpoints and everything else, that
field trip was probably the most fun field trip of my life. We went to a huge
aquarium then explored viewpoints and learned about the traditions of Namahage
and other history of the area. I got to see so many amazing things, learn, and
spend time with friends. Through this experience, I feel like I became closer
friends with others in my program and learned more about the wonderful place I
am studying in. If you ever find yourself studying at Akita International
University in Akita Japan, you too will get to experience this whirlwind field
trip of amazingness. And if you do, tell the Namahage I said hi.
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