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How to Enjoy Natsu Matsuri (Summer Festivals)

Although summer is a time I dreaded when I lived in Japan, due to the stifling humidity, noisy cicadas, and frequent rain, one thing I definitely looked forward to was the natsu matsuri (夏祭り), or summer festivals! In the states we have county fairs to gorge ourselves on deep fried Twinkies and everything-on-a-stick, but Japan celebrates with natsu matsuri. They start around the end of July, coinciding with the start of summer vacation for students, and continue through August. Like any good festival, there's plenty of great food, games, entertainment, and fireworks  the Japanese do not limit themselves to only one day out of the whole summer to enjoy them!

For those of you who are thinking about attending a natsu matsuri now or in the future, I've made a list of tips on how to make the best of the experience!

1. Wear traditional Japanese clothing such as yukata


One of my favorite yukatas.

18 of the Funniest Japanese Inventions

The Japanese have invented lots of great things: emoji, PlayStation, bullet trains, digital cameras, karaoke, instant ramen. With over 2000 years of history, it’s had a lot of time to think up gadgets to make everyone’s lives better. Who can argue that smartphones haven’t made all our lives more accessible? And how would we ever survive the world of texting without emoji?

Alas, some ideas failed to make the cut to the popularization such products enjoy today. Just as some are brilliant, there are also plenty that are not as obviously great.

These kinds of products are called chindogu (珍道具), literally meaning rare or unusual gadget. These sorts of gadgets are usually silly and kind of useless, but every so often there’ll find a stroke of genius. You can decide for yourself: would you feel embarrassed using these in public?

It seems the 80s in particular enjoyed a radical movement in the way of strange and useless inventions, as you can tell from the many these dated photos.

Hand-y chopper
chopper.jpg
Watch the fingers!

Best Japanese snacks and treats to stay cool this summer

In Japan right now, summer vacation is in full swing! Unlike in the United States, Japanese summer vacation begins around July 18th and lasts till the end of August  meaning the time to enjoy summer is short! However, the brutally humid summer weather actually starts sometime in June, or as early as May. The other extreme bummer is that Japanese public schools typically do not have AC or at least don't use it  leading to some students being rushed to the hospital after fainting in the sweltering heat. Sad, but true  at least three students went down during the pre-summer vacation assembly at one of my junior highs. On the other hand, if you're a "salaryman", you get to battle monstrous crowds during morning rush hour on the trains, meaning being pressed up against other hot and sweaty bodies, the stench of other people's BO filling your nostrils, and sweating to death in a full piece suit in case someone from another company which does business with yours might see you out of uniform on your way to work.

Either way you slice it, summer is basically a totally gross three months in Japan.

So, how do the Japanese beat the heat? Some people make a trip up to northern Hokkaido (I always made sure to high tail it out of the country after my first year!), hitting up the local community pool which is bound to be crowded, or going down to the beach. But one of their favorite ways to stay cool is just like in America  eating food!

Garigari-kun
Soda flavored Garigari-kun

One of Japan's favorite ice creams and most beloved snack mascot is Garigari-kun, frozen popsicles. It's named for the crunchy (gari gari) sound you make when crushing bits of ice with your teeth. Inside the popsicle are flavored ice bits that are enjoyable to crunch down on! Garigari-kun is available at convenience stores and supermarkets and sold very cheaply (less than a dollar). Soda is the standard flavor, but the company has gotten creative with other flavors in the past  corn pottage or Neapolitan Spaghetti, anyone?!