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okinawa

Okinawa Living October 2007 Naha Matsuri Feature
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-30 18:00:00
Naha OkinawaThe Photo Essay for October's Okinawa Living issue features scenes from the Naha Matsuri held annually in Naha City which is also held in conjunction with the Naha Tug-of-War. This Tug-of-War features the world's largest rope made of natural substances weighing in at over 40 tons. Tens of thousands of participants line up to help pull this rope a distance of only five meters, the distance which decides the winner.


Read More About Okinawa Living October 2007 Naha Matsuri Feature...


Okinawa Living October 2007 Shinjuku Feature
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-30 18:00:00
Shinjuku TokyoFeature one of this month's Okinawa Living magazine features a hot place--Shinjuku Tokyo, home to large buildings and Tokyo's hot nightlife spot, Kabuki Town.
Read More About Okinawa Living October 2007 Shinjuku Feature...


52th Okinawa All Island Eisa Festival
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-08-16 19:00:00
August 31-September 2
Goya Crossroads (31th Eisa parade) Okinawa City, koza park
Okinawa all-island eisa festival office
098-937-3986
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American Village Okinawa
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-12-19 18:00:00
American Village The sun setting over American Village in Chatan Town, Okinawa Japan. American Village is a popular shopping area and is located just outside Camp Lester.

American Village is a busy shopping area near central Okinawa. This entire area is land that has been extended into the ocean.


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Bise Okinawa
Written By: John Burgreen
2008-01-11 21:05:41
Okinawa CoralBise is a small area in northern Okinawa best known for it's Fukugi trees that line sandy paths through a village that is hundreds of years old. These trees serve as protection from strong typhoon winds.
Read More About Bise Okinawa...


China Airlines paints over name, logo on wreckage of jet at Naha Airport
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-23 04:31:35
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NAHA -- China Airlines has painted over its name and logo on the wreckage of a passenger jet that exploded in flames at Naha Airport in Okinawa moments after passengers slid down emergency chutes to escape.

The airline painted over the name "China Airlines" on the left-hand side of the aircraft and the company's logo on the plane's tail fin.

After the accident, photographs and video footage of the jet continued to appear in news reports, and the company apparently painted over the name and logo to limit further damage to its image.

Before painting over the name and logo, the airline sought permission from the Land, Infrastructure and Transport Ministry's Aircraft and Railway Accidents Investigation Commission. Officials granted the request, judging that it would not hinder the investigation into the accident, and the airline painted over the markings following inspections carried out on Tuesday.

When questioned over the move, an official from the Taiwan-based airline said, "We followed international procedures. We do not have detailed information." (Mainichi)

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Churaumi Aquarium, Okinawa Japan
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 05:43:56
One of the three largest aquariums in the world, Churaumi is home to dozens of varieties of fish, sharks, and manta rays. It's also one of the few aquariums in the world that has successfully housed whale sharks in captivity, and scientists at the park lead the way in research on coral bleaching and whale shark mating.

Classical Folk Dance
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 03:50:25
Early History

Archeological evidence gleaned from illustrated ceramics fragments suggests that dance has been a part of daily life for thousands of years. Many early dances, such as those of Native Americans, derived from ceremonial and ritualistic purposes. Ancient Egyptian and Indian dances often had religious purposes, while those of ancient Greece were more celebratory in nature


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Gyokusendo Cave
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-20 18:00:33
Gyokusendo cave is a giant limestone cave in southern Okinawa. With over 900,000 stalactites covering a large area, Gyokusendo cave is the second largest cave in Japan. Within Gyokusendo is an underground waterfall and stream.

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Hedo Point, Okinawa Japan
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 05:48:05
Located at the northernmost tip of Okinawa Honto, Hedo Point marks the confluence of the Pacific Ocean and the East China Sea. The surrounding waters are known among the dive community for containing some of the most breathtaking seascapes in the prefecture.

Hiji Falls, Okinawa Japan
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 05:41:33
Cutting across the heart of the dense forests and jungles of Yanbaru is the Hiji River, which plummets several meters to produce Okinawa's largest and most spectacular waterfall. Though cliff jumping is prohibited for SOFA status personnel, there's nothing stopping visitors from cooling off from the 1.5-kilometer hike in the refreshing pool below.

Iriomote Island, Okinawa Japan
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 03:45:58
Iriomote Island of approximately 130Km in size, located in the west of Ishigaki Island, is the second largest island in this prefecture after Okinawa's main land. The most part of the island is mountainius area, over 90% of which is coverd with tropical and subtropical virgin forest, most of which is untouched jungle. The climate of Iriomote is much closer to tropical than subtropical. Overwhelming
Read More About Iriomote Island, Okinawa Japan...


Japan Summer Kimono, Yukata
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 03:29:24
After summer rains bring unrelenting heat and humidity to prefectures throughout Japan, donning a heavy kimono for social occasions becomes a dreaded thought and task. In lieu of the layers of fabric required for traditional kimono, many in Japan opt to wear yukata during the nation’s stifling summers.

As opposed to the heavy silk or synthetic fabrics used to make kimono, yukata


Read More About Japan Summer Kimono, Yukata...


Japanese Naval Underground
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-20 17:58:09

The Battle of Okinawa was the only battle fought on Japanese soil during World War II, and the fighting was so fierce that Okinawans nicknamed it the "Typhoon of Steel," or tetsu no bofu. Battle veterans returning to the island today recognize little of the Okinawa of 1945, as most of the buildings were leveled and much of the landscape was bombed and blasted away.

The Japanese Imperial Navy built the headquarters of its Okinawa district headquarters under a hill in Oroku, near Naha. Abandoned for decades after the war, the chambers have been opened to the public since the 1970s. Visitors can see the marks left on the walls by the pickaxes of the men who carved the commander's office, storerooms, bunk rooms, powder rooms, and medical rooms from the earthy hill. Blast marks from the mass suicide committed by Vice Admiral Minoru Ota and his men are visible as well. Some tunnels and rooms remain exactly as they were during the war and are off limits to visitors.


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Katsuren Okinawa
Written By: John Burgreen
2008-01-12 06:27:10
Okinawa Beach in KatsurenImages from the quiet area of Okinawa known as Katsuren. The most traveled part of Katsuren is Katsuren Castle, yet the area surrounding Katsuren Castle is covered in sugarcane farms and beautiful beaches that line the western side of the island of Okinawa. Pictured below is an 80-year-old sugarcane farmer in Katsuren Village.


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Kokusai-Dori
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-20 17:58:09
Kokusai Dori (Kokusai Street) is the largest shopping district in Naha City, Okinawa. After World War II the development of Kokusai Dori was so fast that it was also called, "the miracle mile".

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Kourijima Island
Written By: Tomoko Akamine
2007-12-30 01:18:22
Kourijima IslandThe Okinawa island of Kourijima. This island is surrounded by emerald green waters and only became accessible by bridge in recent years. Kourijima features only a small fishing port and most of the island is covered in sugarcane and open fields.
Read More About Kourijima Island...


Makishi Public Market
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-20 17:58:09
If the Okinawan diet is the marvel of fad-chasing, image-obsessed America consumers for the moment, there’s little hope that our young nation will achieve the longevity for which Okinawans are so famous. While certain foods are key to the prefecture’s high number of octa- and nonagenarians, attitude and lifestyle choices are equally as important, and in few places can the holy trinity of the Okinawan elixir be seen quite like in Makishi Public Market. This island icon is located in the Heiwadori on Kokusai Street in central Naha.

It’s easy to write the market off as a tourist attraction. On any given day, there are swarms of camera-bearing outsiders swarming the alleys for deals and the perfect Okinawan omiyage (souvenir). But equally as numerous, especially when you venture into the bowels of the marketplace, are aging Okinawans who come to this machigwa (local market) buy a few fresh items (likely what they can’t grow or catch on their own) and catch up with acquaintances.

Some call Makishi "Okinawa's kitchen," a moniker that's right on the money. In this maze of covered alleys, an alert consumer can find almost anything needed to create a traditional Okinawan meal. The inner sanctum is home to a vibrant fish and meat market whose vendors politely hawk their goods to passersby. Parrotfish, octopus, squid, blowfish, shrimp, snapper, yellowfin tuna, and a dozen other varieties of seafood abound, artfully displayed on ice or in cases. Across the building are the pork vendors, who offer up every portion of the pig except the oink, say locals. You’ll find mimi (ear), intestines, feet, hocks, and even chiraga (face flesh). Shoppers are also sure to pass an entire pig head or two, the smiling carcasses likely bearing sunglasses.

Poultry and beef are available as well, though are not nearly as plentiful as pork. Vendors can also be found with wide selections of pickled vegetables, tofu, and fish cakes. Just outside are vegetable vendors, nearly all of whom grow what they sell. Goya, or bitter melon, is a common sight, as are daikon (radishes), fruits, kabocha (a gourd sort of like a pumpkin), and fresh flowers. Sata andagi (Okinawan donuts) are available in abundance, as are chinsuko (Okinawan cookies) and products made from beniimo (purple Okinawan sweet potato). Eye-catching irabu (smoked sea snake) and jars of habu sake reel in tourists to the many stalls.

Perhaps the best kept secret of Makishi is the second floor, which houses a cluster of restaurants, some of which will even cook fish purchased at the market below. Staples such as goya champuru and Okinawan soba are also available. Many of the aging, wrinkled faces here and on the first floor have been working in the market for decades.

More than 400 storefronts exist in Makishi, selling everything from sanshin and star sand to used military surplus clothing and cheap blankets. Though businesses are legitimate now, the area began as a black market alley after World War II. Slowly, as Okinawa recovered from the devastation of the Battle of Okinawa, the core of shops expanded one by one.

Today, the Makishi Public Market is an Okinawa icon, the largest market on the island. And while it may be a portal to the stomachs of Okinawans, it’s also a community lifeblood. Economically, it brings in hundreds of thousands of tourist dollars annually. But emotionally, it’s a way for residents who have long patronized the markets to continue the traditions of the Okinawa of yesteryear, to connect with a rural past that is rapidly yielding to mega tourist resorts and shopping malls. And it’s this sense of charm and island energy that keep people—tourists and locals alike—coming back.

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Manzamo
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-12-23 18:00:00
Manzamo OkinawaManzamo is located near Onna Village, Okinawa Japan. The Okinawan prefecture government has declared this area a nature preserve due to it being a habitat for rare species of plant life. The area is a naturally formed cliff that exposes the beautiful Okinawa coral reefs.
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Murasaki Mura
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-12-20 02:58:03
Murasaki MuraMurasaki Mura was once home to an NHK television drama that was filmed in Okinawa, Japan. After the television series ended, the set was turned into a craft park in Yomiton Village. Much of the architecture in Murasaki Mura is reminiscent of ancient Chinese arcitecture, where Okinawa has strong roots.


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Nago
Written By: John Burgreen
2008-01-03 18:00:00
Nago OkinawaNago, the largest city in northern Okinawa, is best known for its cherry blossom festival. The first cherry blossoms that bloom in Japan are found in Nago at the end of January. During this time the 2,000 cherry blossom trees that surround the ruins of Nago castle come into full bloom.
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Nago City, Okinawa Japan
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 05:42:47
In January and February of each year, eyes across Japan turn to Nago to eagerly await the country's first cherry blossoms. The city's Central Park, near Nago Castle ruins, host an annual Cherry Blossom Festival, traditionally observed as the first hanami, or cherry blossom viewing, of the year.

Naha Okinawa
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 03:43:29
When you think of quintessential Japan, you’re likely to think of the charms of Kyoto, with its many tea houses, kimono-clad geiko, elegant shrines, and narrow alleys. On Okinawa, Kyoto’s cultural counterpart is Shuri, the former seat of the royal family of the Ryukyus.

While Kyoto may have been spared from bombing by Allied generals during World War II due to its cultural importance


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Nakamura House
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-12-25 18:00:00
Nakamura HouseLocated in Kitanakagusuku Village, the Nakamura House stands as a symbol of the power of Okinawan architectural craftsmanship. This traditional Okinawan home has stood for over 300 years, enduring the Battle of Okinawa, and the harsh subtropical climate of Okinawa.




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Nakijin Castle, Okinawa Japan
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 05:46:18
Recognized as one of a dozen World Heritage Sites on Okinawa, Nakijin has a storied past that dates back to the 13th century. During the days of the Ryukyu Kingdom, Nakijin served as the primary castle of the Hokuzan, the northernmost portion of the kingdom.

Okinawa Eisa
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-12-20 03:38:57
EisaEisa performances can be seen on during obon, the holiday where the spirits return to dine with Okinawan families, but Eisa battles are events that traditionally occured when two Eisa groups would cross paths and battle one another for performance superiority. Alternatively you may also catch Eisa battles on the streets, after midnight, when the groups square off after a day of performances.


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Okinawa Events
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-20 01:09:04

Okinawa Japan

Okinawa is one of the most beautiful places in all of Japan. The best part is all the japan pictures you can create by being in Okinawa, like this set of festival images from the Naha Matsuri, Okinawa Japan. This photo essay is a small image compilation of two days of matsuri on Okinawa.
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Okinawa island, Star Sand
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 03:25:15
When tourists flock to Okinawa’s southern Yaeyama Islands during the summer, one of the most popular and coveted souvenirs they can pick up is a bottle of hoshizuna—literally, star sand. Small vials and bottles packed with star-shaped grains backed by garishly colored sand can be purchased from omiyage vendors on Ishigaki and Iriomote Islands, while the more adventurous can collect
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Okinawa Japan
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 03:49:22

Okinawa, the southernmost prefecture of Japan, consists of 57 islands which include the Miyako and Yaeyama groups, with the main island of Okinawa as the center. The only prefecture in Japan that is truly subtropical, Okinawa is a southern paradise where colorful flowers of the subtropics bloom the year-round. The sea that surrounds these islands has an emerald-green sheen, and the resplendent


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Okinawa Japan
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-11-22 02:07:42
Okinawa, which means 'rope in the open sea', is found in Japan. The term seems to refer to how the 60 island chain that makes up the prefecture of Okinawa appears. Okinawa Japan is often considered a little separate from the rest of Japan since it has a more distinct culture and tongue.


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Okinawa Living November 2007
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-11-23 19:56:34
Shuri Castle FestivalAnother issue of Okinawa Living Magazine laid to rest with the November 2007 issue. This month's feature one article uses stunning images of Shuri Castle that were shot over the past few months. The result, a look at Shuri Castle that most people will never get to experience.
Read More About Okinawa Living November 2007...


Okinawa Pottery
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 03:40:25

In 1682 three potteries, Chibana Wakuta and Takara-guchi, got together and set up a unified pottery at a place called Tsuboya. Items produced from the kilns here are called Tsuboya-yaki. Tsuboya-yaki are clasified largely into two groups, Arayachi and Jo-yachi. Arayachi denotes those potteries not glazed and large in size, while the latter includes those glazed having painted designs of Okinawa


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Okinawa's Yanbaru
Written By: John Burgreen
2008-01-23 18:00:00
Okinawa MountainsThe word Yanbaru means "mountains and trees". This word is used to describe the area of northern Okinawa where the rolling hills and covered with dense forests of trees. Between these mountains lay farmland that remains preserved far out of the eye of modern day Okinawa. Beautiful vistas can be seen all throughout Okinawa's northern Yanbaru.
Read More About Okinawa's Yanbaru...


Okinawan Bingata
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 03:42:32

Bingata is fabric with designs or patterns dyed in a typical Okinawan manner. The techniques involved in the dyeing processes are said to have been developed during the 15th century. The dyeing is performed in one of two ways: Katatsuke or Noribiki. Katatsuke means dyeing by the means of pattern pieces and Noribiki by the means of paste tubes. There are also two different colorations: vivid colors


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Okinawan Lacquerware
Written By: John Burgreen
2007-09-17 03:41:34

Okinawan lacquerware originates from the later part of the 14th century. The wood used is mostly from Deigo, flower-bearing trees commonly seen throughout Okinawa, and Egono-ki. Natural lacquer is used to refine the ware in the finishing processes, where the use of the bright red color is unmatched. The surface of the lacquerware can then be decorated in many different ways: gilded designs or pictures


Read More About Okinawan Lacquerware...





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Located between Kyushu and Taiwan, Okinawa is the largest island in Okinawa Prefecture. Although part of Japan, Okinawa has it's own unique legacy, spoken language, and influencing culture. The people of Okinawa are descendants of the Ryukyus who had ties with both Japan and China.
Photographers in Okinawa and Japan, HDR Japan features HDR photography from Japan and also hosts annual photo exhibitions in Okinawa, Japan. Members can post blogs, maintain a personal profile and upload pictures of Okinawa and Japan. For more information on having your photos in our exhibitions, please contact us.