In Shibuya, where feisty is a fairly good word to describe the fashion, and also the way some folk show their feelings, it makes a nice change, as well as quite a contrast, to see togs of a much more traditional nature.
Archives for March 2010
A senior citizen singing in the sun
Hair Heir to the throne?
Random Japanese people #19
Sickening and semi-abandoned Japanese snake centre
With its conspicuously empty corridors,
and truly awful exhibits,
the Japan Snake Centre’s staggering abundance of ashtrays at least offer the smoker some sort of respite from the almost overwhelming miserableness of a barely-functioning-but-somehow-still-open-for-business facility and the horrible plight of its poorly housed alligators, wild boars and of course snakes.
But amazingly even this pales into insignificance when one enters the parts of the place that have actually stopped being used — as opposed to just appearing that way. And in particular, a room where, at least according to some of the letters left behind, a Mr Toba once worked.
A small, rather dark area that, despite its confined nature, is home to an absolute multitude of horrors, namely jar after increasingly sickening snake-filled jar.
In which some of the specimens are packed in.
Whereas others are left to lie alone.
With what relatively little light there was sometimes contriving to clearly display the containers increasingly disconcerting contents.
Samples that, despite the slight distraction of scientific stuff,
of some form or another, were simply impossible to ignore.
Especially as not only were they everywhere,
but some of them were quite a size too.
And yet even this nightmarish scenario wasn’t as bad as the room next door. An even smaller space stacked to the ceiling with unsealed plastic containers.
All full of the now horribly familiar.
Even the sink contained them.
A sight that whilst unpleasant, was nowhere near as repulsive as the smell — a stench so overpowering and putrid that I actually came very close to vomiting, making the return to Toba-san’s old room almost pleasant. Although not pleasant enough to consider a couple of cute-shaped cakes,
or, regardless of its apparent tastiness, some coffee.
For fans of horrible things in jars, there are other haikyo/abandoned building explorations on this site that feature a similarly contained brain, or, for the (arguably) slightly less squeamish, a mouse.