Sunday, July 01, 2007

The A-bomb blast dome




On an overcast Sunday afternoon we headed first to the famous site of the Atomic bomb detonation. The epicentre monument is actually nothing more than a sign but less than a hundrend metres away is the blast dome which survived due to its proximity to the centre of the blast.

Peace Park statues





The top two images are of a memorial for a girl who died of cancer caused by radiation aged 10. Before she died she attemped to make a thousand origami paper cranes which she believed would grant her wish to live. She only managed near to 700 but her efforts now inspire children to send in origami cranes from the world over.

Museum


The museum near the A-bomb dome contained many sad, touching and inspiring artifacts. This watch was found stopped at the exact time of the blast. Beside the actual watch was this tragic Haiku.

Downpour outside the museum


After visiting the museum near the peace park, the heavens opened.

Cool shopping centre sculpture


A pidgeon crosses the moat to invade Carp Castle


Carp Castle



Hiroshima's Carp Castle was wiped out in the atomic blast but has been rebuilt as a museum. A samurai clothing section lets you play at being samurai in (very heavy) replica armour.

On the ferry to Miyajima Island!



Deer on Miyajima






One of the most appealing things about Miyajima island is the friendly and completley free roaming deer that populate the island and seem to get everywhere, from the beaches to the streets to the top of the highest mountain!

Giant rice spoon!


Miyajima island is famous for its rice serving spoons.

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Itsukushima's 'torri' gate at high tide



Two views from within the Itsukushima Shrine



The Itsukushima Shrine is one of the few remaining structures not devastated when the bomb hit Hiroshima. At high tide the ocean comes in under the shrine.

A close encounter with the Itsukushima Shrine



It was great to get so close to this giant arch. The people in the picture directly above are attempting to throw pebbles onto the lower rung of the arch. Doing this succesfully means your wish will come true (luckily I mangaged it after a few goes).

A return visit to the A-bomb dome


This return visit was somewhat sunnier than the original. What had seemed a slightly depressing monument upon it's first viewing became much more hope inspiring when viewed literally in a different(much sunnier) light.

Two pictures from Shukkeien Garden