Day 5: Wednesday, 21 October 2009
Jan. 5th, 2010 10:08 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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Photo by nobrinskii |
Among the autumnal treats available were hot-off-the-hibachi roasted ginkgo nuts and chestnuts, the latter only spotted after I had a bag of the former. Only some of the roasted ginkgo nuts had cracked open; the others were really hard to get into. Maybe a nutcracker is in order next time. Somewhere along the way I got a skewer of chewy yomogi dango, and by early afternoon, chocolate-filled dorayaki, hot of the griddle, really hit the spot.
Ever since we had Okinawan black sugar one day earlier this year in tea ceremony class, I've been a fan of it, so I picked up some from a vendor here in loose and block forms. I decided I'd like to set up a tanzaku display in my house, and to that end I bought four embroidered tanzaku—momiji (red maple leaves), ume, fuji (wisteria), and ayame (iris). I bought a red coral necklace on a fabric cord that I just recently shortened to a length I prefer; I wondered at the abundance of red coral for sale there as jewelry and as loose pieces. I also wonder whether the harvesting of this coral destroyed a living reef habitat. I picked up a keychain with bells and bottle-gourd-shaped wooden beads; a dictionary suggests the motif might be called 千成り瓢箪. For equally aesthetic and practical purposes I bought this pocket watch. The kanji around the outside are numerals, some of them the less-common formal variants. The hiragana on the inside are a mystery to me, though.

The most special piece, though, is the ceramic natsume with the vertical stripes that I bought new from the potter. I'm kicking myself for not catching the potter's name, though—he didn't have a business card—since provenance is pretty important when it comes to tea ceremony utensils, or at least nice ones that you'd like to use for special gatherings.
As an aside, there were a few vendors at the market who were surprisingly pushy, getting in my face and insisting that I buy their wares when I was only looking. One even grabbed my arm, a move that took me aback in a place like Kyoto. I don't know what to make of those experiences, which were new to me on my third time visiting Japan and at which the other group members were surprised when I recounted them. Maybe I was looking especially timid that day? Maybe the depressed economy has made a few vendors desperate for sales? I don't know.
