For more information and pictures about what we did and where we went, check out my mom's blog!  She wrote about everything we did with great detail here:http://tarasekjapantour.blogspot.com/
Hey everyone! I'm studying abroad this summer for two months in Beppu, Japan and I decided to use a blog to express all the great things I am getting involved in. Please feel free to read and comment on anything you would like and I will try to keep up with updating this as much as possible. Thanks!
For more information and pictures about what we did and where we went, check out my mom's blog!  She wrote about everything we did with great detail here:


next to our farm stay family members.
matted room and sit around the table in the room.  We all sat down and introduced ourselves one by one.  They said my name was the easiest which was awesome because it was the one they always remembered and said out of the three of us.  They told us that they were the Wakatake family that has a plum farm in the backyard.  They also said that they didn't speak any English so this would really be a test on how much we had learned since we could not communicate with them in any way but speaking Japanese.

breakfast.  Near my school in Beppu, the prices of watermelon is almost $25 for one which was four times as much as they are in Bungotakada!  After breakfast we got all of our things together and packed up the car to head to the meeting place.  We stopped by a few shrines on the way to the elementary school which is where we were supposed to meet everyone for the closing ceremony.  One of the shrines we stopped at had a huge bell that we got to ring.  We then hopped back into the car and headed to the school.  We arrived at an outside area where we were supposed to play some taiko drums but it started to rain so we went to the elementary school.  Our host families and all of us students piled in and took our choice of a drum we wanted to play once they were all set up.  I got to play on one of the medium drums that made a large booming sound.  Taiko is a tradition kind of drum that the 
Japanese play which we all got to try.  They taught us different verses of a song and then after about 20 minutes everyone had it figured out and we performed in front of everyone.  It sounded really cool once it was all done.  After we were done, the owners of the taiko company did a performance for everyone.  They dressed up and played a bunch of different instruments for us.
women that made traditional Bungotakada food.  It all looked so delicious so I tried at least one of everything.  I realized that I had had so much food in that one weekend that it was probably as much as I had eaten the two weeks before.  We all hung out after eating for a little before getting back onto the bus to go to Beppu.  We arrived in Beppu just in time to do our homework and get ready for the next week to come.



more to do and it seems so much bigger.   We went to two different 7 story department stores that day- where I had a problem of not being able to stop shopping. The style here is very different than America which I don't mind.  Some of the things are very interesting, especially the shirts that are written in English but are completely incorrect.  I've gotten myself some of those to take back to America.
Can you find me?
that you use so you don't wear your indoor shoes into the bathroom.  Hence, get shoes that are easy to take off and put back on multiple times if you are planning on coming to Japan.



was a good break from the day.  I also learned how to make Korean food one of the days!  There was a dessert pancake, spicy soup, mochi balls (a gooey ball made from pounded rice), and a rice snack square.  I got the recipe for the dessert pancakes because they were absolutely delicious.  This is one thing I love about living in the dorm on this campus- I am so involved in every event they have and I have learned so much about out countries and their cultures.  Every Friday night is the final show which I went to with a couple of friends and it was very interesting.  I learned that the Korean alphabet is made up of only three symbols- that's it! すごい!(cool!)
It was a small area tucked away on the middle of the hill.  There were a bunch of tubs there  that were all different temperatures which was awesome- we went from one to another a few times before leaving.   Beppu, the city I am in, is considered the capital of onsens in Japan which is pretty interesting and I'm glad I got to experience it.  After soaking in the onsens, we went and got homemade udon noodles from a small restaurant on the way to the bus stop.  I got home and passed out from the amazing bath and it made my skin feel so smooth.  After the onsen we were supposed to go to a karoke party but it got rescheduled due to everyone having too much homework that day.  I was looking forward to it though because karoke in Japan is very different than in America!
weekend!  We got there in about 3 1/2 hours which I definitely slept through.  Upon arriving, we ate dinner at a really nice hotel restaurant and then had a couple of minutes to explore so we toured the oldest Chinatown in Japan- which happen to be right next door.  It was such a beautiful day and we all hopped back on the bus and headed to our next destination- Dejima.
post up at the island.  They also were not allowed to have their families live on the island so the Japanese would supply them with Geisha Girls!!  We walked around there and learned some pretty neat things about the area and the island (which actually isn't an island anymore since the Japanese expanded past it and further into the ocean).
 stop, the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum and the Peace Park. It was a quick ride to the museum and a couple of sightseeing spots on the way so it went quickly.  All 34 of us stumbled out of the bus and entered the museum.  They did not allow any pictures to be taken inside- like most museums, so all I did was take in all of the information.  I learned so much about the atomic bombing like how the bomb was detonated before it hit the ground for it to have a bigger impact and that 100% of the people in 3ish km died from the bombing.  It was a pretty intense museum but I feel like going to the Holocaust museum before coming to Japan helped a little.  They had piles and piles of paper cranes all around the museum and park.  They told us that 1,000 cranes represent getting well if you are sick and also represents peace.  Children that would come and visit the park with their schools would make 1,000 cranes and donate them to the museum for peace (these are some of the cranes that students have made on chains).  The Japanese do not 
necessarily have an army anymore because they do not have a draft so they only have a safety group that people can volunteer their time to help in crisis.  They focus heavily on peace and no war instead.

times.  Thomas Glover was not only a famous entreprenuer but also the creator of Kirin beer- a famous Japanese beer, which I've tried and liked!
that was solid, daikon- pickled radish, pickled cucumbers- that were definitely not American pickles, a slice of beef in a sauce, and some watermelon.  It was actually all very good but I was one of the few that ate or tried everything and liked it.  Some people stopped at our now favorite Japanese burger joint called Mos Burger.  They have delicious burgers that are healthy and some even have rice patties for buns.  I didn't eat anything because I was so stuffed from dinner but I joined the crowd for the conversation.  We then hit the town to find a local bar or some place that was playing the World Cup game.  We ended up stopping at an outside bar to watch the game 
and it was across from a pachinko parlor!!  We all just hung out during the night and drank while exploring this unknown city.  We actually found Nagasaki's makeshift red light district that they call the pink district.  The girls here wear business suits and prom dresses here though if they are "workers"- Japanese style is so confusing.   Some of us retired back to the hotel later and went to bed so we would be ready for day two. (The picture to the right is one of the many Japanese people we met during the night).
different groups and my group decided to head to a famous shrine.  It was located right in the middle of houses and shops in the city.  It seemed to fit perfectly even though it was an old shrine that did not belong with the modern buildings standing around it.  We walked up the many flights of stairs to find us at the top of the hill in front of the main building.  We washed our hands in the communal pool before entering the shrine.  There was a wedding taking place in one of the buildings so we could not enter but we walked around outside and found many different places to explore.  There were shrines hidden in many different places in the yard but we managed to find some of the pretty ones including a beautiful wishing pond.  After exploring some cultural 
aspects of Nagasaki, we headed over to the local mall.  We took the street cars to get from place to place which reminded me so much of Amsterdam.  If there wasn't as many cars on the road and no Japanese characters on the buildings then I would have sworn I was still in Amsterdam from looking at everything.
received.  From there you can choose to get a prize that they have at the counter (things like purses, cameras etc.) or you can ask for money.   One of the people in my program asked for money and told me about his experience.  He said that they gave him a card with the amount of money he was to receive and they told him he needed to collect his winnings across the street.  He was escorted out of the building and into a small shack directly across the street.  In there was a man sitting at a desk who took his card and gave him money in return.
This is a picture of my dorm hallway.  I live on the 4th floor and almost all of the students on my floor are from an Asian country- most being from Japan.  I've been working hard on my speaking skills which have already improved a lot since being here for only two weeks.  I feel like when I was in America I would never practice my speaking skills and since I am forced to talk in class and with my friends here then I am progressively improving.  I've actually met a lot of people even though I haven't been here for that long.  Every time we go out, most of the students gather at the beach before going out to the bars so that is where we meet so many different people.  I met a lot of people who are from a different American program that started a couple of weeks before ours did.  I've also met a lot of Japanese students that live on the floor above me and on my floor as well. 
