Tokyo finally
After about 10 hours flight, we arrived in Tokyo Narita airport after 5pm on Sunday. I had been to this airport numerous times, never going to Japan! This time we actually had to go through immigration and customs. The line at immigration checkin was real long, however, after waited patiently for about 15 minutes, we were redirected to a bunch of newly opened agents, so we got through pretty quickly.
We got some money at the ATM, then we found a cell phone rental at the airport and got a cell phone. (Later we found cheaper rates closer to the train station, so don't get it at the airport right away, go down a few levels to near the train station!)
I had researched about traveling around Japan by Rail before coming, so we were armed with vouchers for the Japan Rail pass we got back home, and found a JR (Japan Rail) office in the airport on the way down to the train station.
We exchanged the vouchers for the real pass and selected the starting date for our 7 day pass. If we were staying longer then it may make sense to get a 14 day or even two 7 day passes. The 7 days are consecutive so if you are going to be in one city for a while, then it may make sense to get 2 7-day passes etc. Because we are going to try the fastest bullet train (Nozomi) which is not covered by the JR pass, so I picked the optimal dates for the rest of the trip.The thing I was worried most about this trip was the train travel, whether we would be able to find the station, navigate inside to find the boarding area and not miss our trains because the connection time was between 15-20 minutes usually. At the airport, we bought the tickets to Tokyo because our JR pass start date is not today, and found our way without problems.
I did have some trouble getting through the turnstiles with my luggage, too slow! After getting to our stop at Shimbashi, we tried to find a map and locate our hotel. There was a free booklet in the station, with maps or several stations and surrounding areas. However, we didn't notice they did not point the top of the map at North until after we walked inj the wrong direction for a few minutes. After going back and exiting at the correct exit from the station, the hotel was clearly visible and very close from the station. We checked in and noted the high-tech toilet in the bathroom. The room was pretty nice, the bathroom has both shower and tub, and lots of amentities. OK, we are in Tokyo and ready for our adventure in Japan!|
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and use the rail route finder web site
http://www.jorudan.co.jp/english/index.html
to plan your trip.
You have to know about a few terms, like Reserved (reserve a seat) vs Unreserved (free seats, meaning you line up and find whatever seat you can), Green Car (First class) vs Ordinary Car (cheaper). When you get your Rail Pass, you can pay for either Green Car or not. Some local or rural routes in Japan may not have Green Car service or even reserved seats for the time you want to travel. Green Car or reserved seats have roomier seats, perhaps 2 seats on either side of the aisle vs 2 on one side and 3 on the other. If you get a Green Car JR Pass, you have to to to the ticket office (in advance or same day) to get the tickets for the reserved seats (for free, because you have bought the pass).
A seven day rail pass cost 28300 yen ordinary class or 37800 yen for Green Car (and a 21 day pass cost about twice that). Check the JR web site above for the most current information. You can use the train as many times as you want during those 7 days!
People have heard about the bullet trains (called Shinkansen in Japan), but there are other types of trains too. The JR pass is good for the bullet trains except for the fastest kind called Nozomi. For long distance it would make a difference in time saved, but otherwise the difference is only a few minutes, and to tell the truth, once you are on the train, you don't really feel the difference in speed between the different kinds of bullet trains.
Shinkansen has its own platforms in the train station, so if you change from a JR train, but are changing to a Shinkansen, then you will need to follow the signs to Shinkansen, which is marked clearly. Some train stations are large, like Tokyo, Kyoto. And the stations names where Shinkansen stops are often prefixed with Shin-, like Shin-osaka.
There are lots of names for the trains (wide view Hida, Nozomi, etc), and types of services (local, LE limited express, express, etc), so it can be a bit overwhelming, but just pay attention to the times and train number (flight number?) and you should be fine.
The trains are clean, fast, on time (so you have to BE THERE for sure before it comes into the station), but just barely. Most trains stops for no more than 2 minutes, it's incredibly efficient and a great way to travel in Japan.

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The hotel room was a good size, comfortable bed, pillows (one hard, one soft, at first I thought they just had hard pillows and didn't check out the other one until later). Free in-room internet and plenty of lights and convenient controls for the lights. The bathroom was modern, well appointed with a separate shower and a tub. The toilet is one of the high-tech Japanese toilets. Nice bathrobes were provided.
The staff were very polite and made us feel welcome.
I wouldn't recommend eating at the hotel restaurants, they all seemed real expensive, and there were lots of options nearby.
I would definitely not mind staying here again!









