Loading
Search
▼ Okinawa: Secrets For a Long and Happy Life
- Category:Tourism
Japan’s sunny southern islands see a remarkable number of 100th birthdays – the scientists have their theories as to why, but we’ve travelled to research our own list of top Okinawan lifestyle tips.
Mrs Kajigu used to get up at 5am. Now that she is 104, she allows herself a lie-in, except for the two days a week when she rises early for the shuttle bus that circuits the small island of Taketomi, bringing together the older members of the community. Japan has the world’s highest share of centenarians, but in the southern islands of Okinawa, people live long even by Japanese standards. Sitting in her spacious tiled-roof house, with carved wooden ‘angama’ masks on the walls, Mrs Kajigu proffers a tray of sweet-potato cakes, and downplays the significance of her age. ‘In Okinawa, 97 is when we traditionally have a big party,’ she says. ‘For my 100th birthday, I just celebrated with my family.’
The main island of Okinawa lies 1000 miles southwest of Tokyo; the Yaeyama group, to which Taketomi belongs, is another 240 miles towards Taiwan. Taketomi is just one corner of this subtropical archipelago, which has health researchers poring over their data. It’s clear talking to Mrs Kajigu that the key to long life is not a one-size-fits-all approach: ‘I eat anything,’ she says. ‘When I get together with friends, I do karaoke, even though my voice isn’t what it used to be.’ An island-hopping tour around Okinawa is a chance to pick up small clues about what goes into this famously healthy lifestyle.
Getting enough vitamin D is rarely a problem in Okinawa. Just one degree north of the tropics, the Yaeyama group is especially blessed with sun. On the island of Ishigaki, Taketomi’s larger neighbour, fields of sugarcane chequer the flat land between the jungle-cloaked mountains and the coral-fringed shore. The light has the kind of brilliance that sends painters rushing to their easels. What’s good for the banana plants and mango trees is also a charm – taken in moderate doses – for the 49,000 people of Ishigaki.
On the main islands of Japan, custom as much as weather limits the beach-going season to July and August, but in Okinawa this stretches from April to October, or longer. While their compatriots to the north are busy with cherry blossoms or early autumn leaf-peeping, beachgoers here have ample time for typical summer pursuits such as suika-wari – a Japanese version of the piñata, where blindfolded players holding baseball bats take turns trying to locate and split open a watermelon laid on a mat.
Driving from Ishigaki town, a circuit of the island takes about four hours. This being Japan, there are vending machines for cold drinks even on sleepy back roads, but thirst is not yet an issue at an early-morning stop by the little white lighthouse at Uganzaki. Just off the point is a rock shaped like the kind of slipper you change into on entering a Japanese home. A crackling in the bushes on the hill to the side announces a party of hunters and their dogs, moving through the thicket in search of wild boar. Further east along the coast, two fishermen with cone hats and nets cross the road that leads to Sukuji Beach. This broad sweep of sand curves around a bay of uncanny stillness. With one solitary hotel nearby, it’s usually a peaceful spot. Today the only movement is a woman doing yoga on the sand, the only noise the frenetic chatter of cicadas. On many other beaches around the Yaeyama Islands, finger-sized stubs of whitened coral lie scattered across the sand, left there by the tide, making a glassy sound when knocked together under walkers’ shoes. Locals sometimes use the pieces in garden wind-chimes, or as chopstick rests and paperweights.
Nearby Kabira Bay offers an easy chance to see living coral. Glass-bottom boats reveal an undersea geography of canyons and defiles more intricate than any on land, if on a smaller scale. Beneath the turquoise surface of the bay, clownfish and Moorish idols flit between brain corals and toaster-sized clams, two species for which a hundred years is no great record.
In any region famed for its number of centenarians, diet gets the most excited attention. And in Okinawa, as with other places, not everything in the local cuisine seems an obvious recipe for good health. Among the best-known dishes here is rafute: cubes of fatty pork belly simmered in a stock that contains several spoonfuls of black sugar.
This kind of food, though, would have been a rare indulgence in times past, when most islanders lived by the saying ‘eat every bit of the pig except its squeal’. Even now, in more prosperous times, mimigaa (chopped pig’s ears) is a staple dish. Another motto, still repeated today, is ‘hara hachi-bu’ – ‘eat until you are 80 per cent full’. Traditions matter at Funakura-no-sato, a restaurant in a cluster of old buildings by the sea outside Ishigaki town, run by Den Motomura.
‘Okinawan food had influences from other parts of Asia,’ he says – the Yaeyama Islands are closer to the Philippines and even Vietnam than they are to Tokyo. Chanpuru, a kind of stir-fry, takes its name from a similar dish in Indonesia called campur. Chinese cooking inspired tofuyo: cubes of tofu soaked in awamori (rice-grain spirit) and fermented, a dish akin to a creamy blue cheese, and a former favourite of Okinawan royalty. ‘We eat tofu very often,’ says Mr Motomura. ‘And also a lot of seaweed compared to the rest of Japan. There’s a bigger variety here.’ He singles out one kind in particular: ‘I think mozuku helps us to live longer.’ This type of seaweed is farmed in huge beds just offshore from the islands, and is harvested by divers holding what are essentially giant vacuum cleaners.
While mozuku has a gloopy texture (vinegar gives it more kick), sea grapes – another local delicacy – have a satisfying pop to them. At Hitoshi restaurant back in Ishigaki town, chef Shimoji Hitoshi serves them alongside sliced raw tuna. ‘My father fished for tuna and my mother sold it,’ he says, standing in front of a photo of his parents. ‘When I go home, though, I like to have ramen.’
Yusei Taba sits cross-legged behind his low worktop, and picks a chisel from more than 50 tools lined up on a lazy Susan. He has been a mask-maker for 56 of his 83 years, crafting wooden angama worn by dancers in festivals. Most are displayed in pairs, one with a frown and one with a smile. ‘The one with a single tooth represents an old man,’ says Mr Taba. ‘The one without teeth is an old woman – people thought that the more children a woman delivered, the more teeth she would lose.’ He points at the male mask with a chuckle: ‘I look like him now. But my upper body is very good at least.’ In his workshop in Ishigaki town, Mr Taba is helping to preserve a craft that was nearly abandoned after WWII. ‘I see fake masks from Taiwan and I’m disappointed,’ he says. ‘I feel a responsibility to keep our traditional ones.’ It used to take him three days to make two masks, but now he has it down to one. ‘I’m getting quicker all the time.’
The mask-maker is a good advert for the idea of continuing to hone one’s talents beyond standard retirement age – and many researchers also believe that a habit of sitting on the floor, with all the getting up and down involved, is a lifetime benefit to bones and muscles. In Okinawa, craftsmen and women gain more respect with every year under their belt, but there’s still room to add a personal touch to an ancient method. Until the 1870s, these islands were part of the Ryukyu Kingdom, a state that played a nimble diplomatic game between Japan and China. Its people paid their taxes in cloth, and Ishigaki’s variety, called Yaeyama jofu, was prized. Woven from fibres of ramie – a plant related to nettles – this textile made kimonos light enough to be worn in the Okinawan summer.
Sachiko Arakaki is one of the few practitioners of the craft today. For more than 30 years, she has researched historic colour patterns to feed through the looms in her workshop on the outskirts of town, but her inspiration is not limited to the past. ‘The island is so rich in plant life,’ she says. ‘I wanted to make dyes from what I could find in my garden and in nature.’ Meanwhile, three miles up the west coast from Kabira Bay and its corals, an even bigger island icon is getting a radical makeover. The shisa, or ‘lion-dog’, is a guardian spirit statue seen on rooftops and beside gateways across the islands of Okinawa. At his roadside pottery studio, Hisashi Katsuren has turned the shisa’s usual bombastic scowl into a zany grin, with a technicolour paint-job to match. ‘The traditional statues are for protection from disease and other misfortune,’ he says. ‘But I think of mine as being like people. That’s why they have a big smile. It’s like I communicate with them as I make them.’
The ferry from Ishigaki to Taketomi crosses four miles of sea, and seemingly several decades. In the centre of this island, wooden-walled houses of an earlier era sit low behind coral-stone walls bursting with flowers. Villagers sweep the sandy streets every morning, but on the eve of Tanadui – the annual seed-planting celebration and the big event of the year – preparations are even more diligent. Mrs Kajigu has witnessed a century of Tanadui festivities, since the days when she walked to school barefoot. ‘I still remember some of the dances,’ she says. ‘Now my granddaughter will be up on the stage.’ On the lane outside, one of her neighbours practises her steps in the evening light. Further on, two dozen men stand in a semicircle, with paper cut-out horses’ heads fixed to their midriffs. Drummers behind them start to play, and the mock-horsemen launch into a high-kneed dance, as a 10-year-old boy keeps pace with a sharp-pitched chime. Other rehearsals can be heard from a distance, the sound carrying well over the flat island.
The festivities begin with four residents who have turned 77 (another symbolic age here) invited up on an outside stage to be specially honoured. What follows may only fully make sense to islanders: a series of costumed performances whose names are written on a flip-chart to one side. ‘Red Horse’ is followed by ‘Quick Talking’. One dance might involve a woman in a saffron-yellow kimono and tasselled headdress moving with measured grace; another celebrates the arrival of iron tools on the island. When the board announces the fortune-bringing Yuhiki dance, the backing curtain tweaks open, and a man with a walking stick, strap-on beard and bushy eyebrows is guided onstage by two boys in red robes and mint-green turbans. Two more men appear, pulling a miniature cart loaded with sheaves of millet. The ritual movements are enacted, ending with the youngsters doing their bit to great acclaim, the crowd throwing money onstage. In spirit, the dance brings together three generations.
Kai-kun is in his element, and that element is water. His job is to take sightseers across a short, shallow channel to Yubu Island, a botanic garden. The water buffalo uses his 600-kilo bulk to pull a passenger cart. ‘He doesn’t need directions – he knows the way,’ says the driver, Tsutomu Takamine. While his bovine autopilot wades on at unhurried pace, Mr Takamine picks up his sanshin – the Okinawan three-string banjo – and begins to play and sing along to the folk song Asadoya Yunta, the perky rhythm of the chorus at odds with the slow, rocking motion of Kai-kun’s haunches. The cart reaches the far shore and Mr Takamine calls out ‘stoppu’ to the buffalo. ‘He knows Japanese and English, and I’m teaching him Mandarin.’
The garden, filled with subtropical plants, lies just off Iriomote, Japan’s jungle frontier. This island is larger than Ishigaki, but has less than a twentieth of its population. Even those few inhabitants are concentrated in a handful of villages along a single coastal road. Stray not far from this tenuous ribbon of civilisation, and you’re in the realm of humid forest, mangrove-thick riverbanks and the endangered Iriomote wildcat, unique to this island. Most of the interior is inaccessible, and for people like Naoya Ojima, this is a good thing. He has worked as a guide for 12 years, sharing his natural knowledge in those parts of Iriomote that humans can just about reach.
Today, he leads a party of kayakers up one of the creeks through the mangroves, pausing his paddle from time to time to keep the group together. ‘Mangroves create five to six times more oxygen than a normal tree,’ he says. ‘Fish can hide among the roots, and it holds the mud in place. People used to cut them to make charcoal. Now Japanese firms are paying to plant more of them in Southeast Asia.’ Pinaisara Falls can be seen up ahead, white spray plunging 55 metres off a cliff face and disappearing into the forest. The final half hour is uphill on foot, past trees buttressed with giant roots. By the pool at the foot of the cascade, walkers eat packed lunches on giant boulders. The fine mist from the waterfall is suddenly replaced by a near-tropical downpour, and everyone returns from the trek thankful for the waterproofs they brought for the kayak, which steam gently when the sun returns.
Five miles west of the falls, the coast road ends at the tiny port of Shirahama. Beyond here there is still one settlement, but it must be reached on water. The heavens have opened again, and it seems unlikely that the glass-bottom boat about to cross Funauki Bay will provide much in the way of sights. But soon into the short trip, the water beneath the rain-pitted surface becomes clear. Coral gardens unfold beyond the viewing window, yellow and bright blue. A sea turtle glides past and the rain subsides. The boat’s pilot, Mr Ikeda, guides his craft into the small harbour at Funauki, a village of 50 people and seemingly 500 butterflies. At the quayside restaurant, also Mr Ikeda’s home, his uncle stops by with a bucket of sardines, and slices one into sashimi. Mrs Ikeda senior appears with a warm smile and a tray of soba noodles, papaya salad and rice flavoured with fragrant pipachi pepper. She is keen to demonstrate a traditional dance from the village. It’s tempting to linger, but the boat must head back. As Shirahama port draws near, a headland comes into view. Standing atop the golden rock and spreading its branches wide is a pine tree – the Japanese symbol of longevity.
This article appeared in the August 2016 edition of Lonely Planet Traveller Magazine. Rory Goulding travelled to Japan with support from the Okinawa Convention & Visitors Bureau (en.okinawastory.jp). Lonely Planet contributors do not accept freebies in exchange for positive coverage.
By Rory Goulding
Mrs Kajigu used to get up at 5am. Now that she is 104, she allows herself a lie-in, except for the two days a week when she rises early for the shuttle bus that circuits the small island of Taketomi, bringing together the older members of the community. Japan has the world’s highest share of centenarians, but in the southern islands of Okinawa, people live long even by Japanese standards. Sitting in her spacious tiled-roof house, with carved wooden ‘angama’ masks on the walls, Mrs Kajigu proffers a tray of sweet-potato cakes, and downplays the significance of her age. ‘In Okinawa, 97 is when we traditionally have a big party,’ she says. ‘For my 100th birthday, I just celebrated with my family.’
The main island of Okinawa lies 1000 miles southwest of Tokyo; the Yaeyama group, to which Taketomi belongs, is another 240 miles towards Taiwan. Taketomi is just one corner of this subtropical archipelago, which has health researchers poring over their data. It’s clear talking to Mrs Kajigu that the key to long life is not a one-size-fits-all approach: ‘I eat anything,’ she says. ‘When I get together with friends, I do karaoke, even though my voice isn’t what it used to be.’ An island-hopping tour around Okinawa is a chance to pick up small clues about what goes into this famously healthy lifestyle.
Bring sunshine into your life
Getting enough vitamin D is rarely a problem in Okinawa. Just one degree north of the tropics, the Yaeyama group is especially blessed with sun. On the island of Ishigaki, Taketomi’s larger neighbour, fields of sugarcane chequer the flat land between the jungle-cloaked mountains and the coral-fringed shore. The light has the kind of brilliance that sends painters rushing to their easels. What’s good for the banana plants and mango trees is also a charm – taken in moderate doses – for the 49,000 people of Ishigaki.
On the main islands of Japan, custom as much as weather limits the beach-going season to July and August, but in Okinawa this stretches from April to October, or longer. While their compatriots to the north are busy with cherry blossoms or early autumn leaf-peeping, beachgoers here have ample time for typical summer pursuits such as suika-wari – a Japanese version of the piñata, where blindfolded players holding baseball bats take turns trying to locate and split open a watermelon laid on a mat.
Driving from Ishigaki town, a circuit of the island takes about four hours. This being Japan, there are vending machines for cold drinks even on sleepy back roads, but thirst is not yet an issue at an early-morning stop by the little white lighthouse at Uganzaki. Just off the point is a rock shaped like the kind of slipper you change into on entering a Japanese home. A crackling in the bushes on the hill to the side announces a party of hunters and their dogs, moving through the thicket in search of wild boar. Further east along the coast, two fishermen with cone hats and nets cross the road that leads to Sukuji Beach. This broad sweep of sand curves around a bay of uncanny stillness. With one solitary hotel nearby, it’s usually a peaceful spot. Today the only movement is a woman doing yoga on the sand, the only noise the frenetic chatter of cicadas. On many other beaches around the Yaeyama Islands, finger-sized stubs of whitened coral lie scattered across the sand, left there by the tide, making a glassy sound when knocked together under walkers’ shoes. Locals sometimes use the pieces in garden wind-chimes, or as chopstick rests and paperweights.
Nearby Kabira Bay offers an easy chance to see living coral. Glass-bottom boats reveal an undersea geography of canyons and defiles more intricate than any on land, if on a smaller scale. Beneath the turquoise surface of the bay, clownfish and Moorish idols flit between brain corals and toaster-sized clams, two species for which a hundred years is no great record.
Eat to eight-tenths full (and don’t skip the seaweed)
In any region famed for its number of centenarians, diet gets the most excited attention. And in Okinawa, as with other places, not everything in the local cuisine seems an obvious recipe for good health. Among the best-known dishes here is rafute: cubes of fatty pork belly simmered in a stock that contains several spoonfuls of black sugar.
This kind of food, though, would have been a rare indulgence in times past, when most islanders lived by the saying ‘eat every bit of the pig except its squeal’. Even now, in more prosperous times, mimigaa (chopped pig’s ears) is a staple dish. Another motto, still repeated today, is ‘hara hachi-bu’ – ‘eat until you are 80 per cent full’. Traditions matter at Funakura-no-sato, a restaurant in a cluster of old buildings by the sea outside Ishigaki town, run by Den Motomura.
‘Okinawan food had influences from other parts of Asia,’ he says – the Yaeyama Islands are closer to the Philippines and even Vietnam than they are to Tokyo. Chanpuru, a kind of stir-fry, takes its name from a similar dish in Indonesia called campur. Chinese cooking inspired tofuyo: cubes of tofu soaked in awamori (rice-grain spirit) and fermented, a dish akin to a creamy blue cheese, and a former favourite of Okinawan royalty. ‘We eat tofu very often,’ says Mr Motomura. ‘And also a lot of seaweed compared to the rest of Japan. There’s a bigger variety here.’ He singles out one kind in particular: ‘I think mozuku helps us to live longer.’ This type of seaweed is farmed in huge beds just offshore from the islands, and is harvested by divers holding what are essentially giant vacuum cleaners.
While mozuku has a gloopy texture (vinegar gives it more kick), sea grapes – another local delicacy – have a satisfying pop to them. At Hitoshi restaurant back in Ishigaki town, chef Shimoji Hitoshi serves them alongside sliced raw tuna. ‘My father fished for tuna and my mother sold it,’ he says, standing in front of a photo of his parents. ‘When I go home, though, I like to have ramen.’
Keep a little bit busy
Yusei Taba sits cross-legged behind his low worktop, and picks a chisel from more than 50 tools lined up on a lazy Susan. He has been a mask-maker for 56 of his 83 years, crafting wooden angama worn by dancers in festivals. Most are displayed in pairs, one with a frown and one with a smile. ‘The one with a single tooth represents an old man,’ says Mr Taba. ‘The one without teeth is an old woman – people thought that the more children a woman delivered, the more teeth she would lose.’ He points at the male mask with a chuckle: ‘I look like him now. But my upper body is very good at least.’ In his workshop in Ishigaki town, Mr Taba is helping to preserve a craft that was nearly abandoned after WWII. ‘I see fake masks from Taiwan and I’m disappointed,’ he says. ‘I feel a responsibility to keep our traditional ones.’ It used to take him three days to make two masks, but now he has it down to one. ‘I’m getting quicker all the time.’
The mask-maker is a good advert for the idea of continuing to hone one’s talents beyond standard retirement age – and many researchers also believe that a habit of sitting on the floor, with all the getting up and down involved, is a lifetime benefit to bones and muscles. In Okinawa, craftsmen and women gain more respect with every year under their belt, but there’s still room to add a personal touch to an ancient method. Until the 1870s, these islands were part of the Ryukyu Kingdom, a state that played a nimble diplomatic game between Japan and China. Its people paid their taxes in cloth, and Ishigaki’s variety, called Yaeyama jofu, was prized. Woven from fibres of ramie – a plant related to nettles – this textile made kimonos light enough to be worn in the Okinawan summer.
Sachiko Arakaki is one of the few practitioners of the craft today. For more than 30 years, she has researched historic colour patterns to feed through the looms in her workshop on the outskirts of town, but her inspiration is not limited to the past. ‘The island is so rich in plant life,’ she says. ‘I wanted to make dyes from what I could find in my garden and in nature.’ Meanwhile, three miles up the west coast from Kabira Bay and its corals, an even bigger island icon is getting a radical makeover. The shisa, or ‘lion-dog’, is a guardian spirit statue seen on rooftops and beside gateways across the islands of Okinawa. At his roadside pottery studio, Hisashi Katsuren has turned the shisa’s usual bombastic scowl into a zany grin, with a technicolour paint-job to match. ‘The traditional statues are for protection from disease and other misfortune,’ he says. ‘But I think of mine as being like people. That’s why they have a big smile. It’s like I communicate with them as I make them.’
Practise your moves
The ferry from Ishigaki to Taketomi crosses four miles of sea, and seemingly several decades. In the centre of this island, wooden-walled houses of an earlier era sit low behind coral-stone walls bursting with flowers. Villagers sweep the sandy streets every morning, but on the eve of Tanadui – the annual seed-planting celebration and the big event of the year – preparations are even more diligent. Mrs Kajigu has witnessed a century of Tanadui festivities, since the days when she walked to school barefoot. ‘I still remember some of the dances,’ she says. ‘Now my granddaughter will be up on the stage.’ On the lane outside, one of her neighbours practises her steps in the evening light. Further on, two dozen men stand in a semicircle, with paper cut-out horses’ heads fixed to their midriffs. Drummers behind them start to play, and the mock-horsemen launch into a high-kneed dance, as a 10-year-old boy keeps pace with a sharp-pitched chime. Other rehearsals can be heard from a distance, the sound carrying well over the flat island.
The festivities begin with four residents who have turned 77 (another symbolic age here) invited up on an outside stage to be specially honoured. What follows may only fully make sense to islanders: a series of costumed performances whose names are written on a flip-chart to one side. ‘Red Horse’ is followed by ‘Quick Talking’. One dance might involve a woman in a saffron-yellow kimono and tasselled headdress moving with measured grace; another celebrates the arrival of iron tools on the island. When the board announces the fortune-bringing Yuhiki dance, the backing curtain tweaks open, and a man with a walking stick, strap-on beard and bushy eyebrows is guided onstage by two boys in red robes and mint-green turbans. Two more men appear, pulling a miniature cart loaded with sheaves of millet. The ritual movements are enacted, ending with the youngsters doing their bit to great acclaim, the crowd throwing money onstage. In spirit, the dance brings together three generations.
Explore your wild side
Kai-kun is in his element, and that element is water. His job is to take sightseers across a short, shallow channel to Yubu Island, a botanic garden. The water buffalo uses his 600-kilo bulk to pull a passenger cart. ‘He doesn’t need directions – he knows the way,’ says the driver, Tsutomu Takamine. While his bovine autopilot wades on at unhurried pace, Mr Takamine picks up his sanshin – the Okinawan three-string banjo – and begins to play and sing along to the folk song Asadoya Yunta, the perky rhythm of the chorus at odds with the slow, rocking motion of Kai-kun’s haunches. The cart reaches the far shore and Mr Takamine calls out ‘stoppu’ to the buffalo. ‘He knows Japanese and English, and I’m teaching him Mandarin.’
The garden, filled with subtropical plants, lies just off Iriomote, Japan’s jungle frontier. This island is larger than Ishigaki, but has less than a twentieth of its population. Even those few inhabitants are concentrated in a handful of villages along a single coastal road. Stray not far from this tenuous ribbon of civilisation, and you’re in the realm of humid forest, mangrove-thick riverbanks and the endangered Iriomote wildcat, unique to this island. Most of the interior is inaccessible, and for people like Naoya Ojima, this is a good thing. He has worked as a guide for 12 years, sharing his natural knowledge in those parts of Iriomote that humans can just about reach.
Today, he leads a party of kayakers up one of the creeks through the mangroves, pausing his paddle from time to time to keep the group together. ‘Mangroves create five to six times more oxygen than a normal tree,’ he says. ‘Fish can hide among the roots, and it holds the mud in place. People used to cut them to make charcoal. Now Japanese firms are paying to plant more of them in Southeast Asia.’ Pinaisara Falls can be seen up ahead, white spray plunging 55 metres off a cliff face and disappearing into the forest. The final half hour is uphill on foot, past trees buttressed with giant roots. By the pool at the foot of the cascade, walkers eat packed lunches on giant boulders. The fine mist from the waterfall is suddenly replaced by a near-tropical downpour, and everyone returns from the trek thankful for the waterproofs they brought for the kayak, which steam gently when the sun returns.
Five miles west of the falls, the coast road ends at the tiny port of Shirahama. Beyond here there is still one settlement, but it must be reached on water. The heavens have opened again, and it seems unlikely that the glass-bottom boat about to cross Funauki Bay will provide much in the way of sights. But soon into the short trip, the water beneath the rain-pitted surface becomes clear. Coral gardens unfold beyond the viewing window, yellow and bright blue. A sea turtle glides past and the rain subsides. The boat’s pilot, Mr Ikeda, guides his craft into the small harbour at Funauki, a village of 50 people and seemingly 500 butterflies. At the quayside restaurant, also Mr Ikeda’s home, his uncle stops by with a bucket of sardines, and slices one into sashimi. Mrs Ikeda senior appears with a warm smile and a tray of soba noodles, papaya salad and rice flavoured with fragrant pipachi pepper. She is keen to demonstrate a traditional dance from the village. It’s tempting to linger, but the boat must head back. As Shirahama port draws near, a headland comes into view. Standing atop the golden rock and spreading its branches wide is a pine tree – the Japanese symbol of longevity.
This article appeared in the August 2016 edition of Lonely Planet Traveller Magazine. Rory Goulding travelled to Japan with support from the Okinawa Convention & Visitors Bureau (en.okinawastory.jp). Lonely Planet contributors do not accept freebies in exchange for positive coverage.
By Rory Goulding
- January 6, 2017
- Comment (4344)
- Trackback(0)
Comment(s) Write comment
wmbjc0hj2hr pink viagra <a href="https://www.cheaperseeker.com/u/seatwrist80">viamedic .com</a> canadian pharmacy with viagra [url=https://is.gd/Qhtjha]candida viagra[/url] canadian pills online
cialis over the counter in canada <a href="https://pattern-wiki.win/wiki/How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy">viagra tablets</a> canadian pharmacy no prescription [url=https://www.instapaper.com/p/metershade75]buy cialis canada[/url] medication without prescription
viagra online prescription <a href="https://0rz.tw/create?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.canadotcphar.com%2F">order viagra without prescription</a> order cheap viagra [url=http://www.4kquan.com/space-uid-1181467.html]cialis canada[/url] viagra free sample
cialis over the counter in canada <a href="https://pattern-wiki.win/wiki/How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy">viagra tablets</a> canadian pharmacy no prescription [url=https://www.instapaper.com/p/metershade75]buy cialis canada[/url] medication without prescription
viagra online prescription <a href="https://0rz.tw/create?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.canadotcphar.com%2F">order viagra without prescription</a> order cheap viagra [url=http://www.4kquan.com/space-uid-1181467.html]cialis canada[/url] viagra free sample
-
oeybprfxiqz Web Site
- January 22, 2023
lriut2mwo0g international drug mart <a href="https://site-9197822-6477-7385.mystrikingly.com/blog/five-facts-about-pharmacy-you-need-to-know">buy viagra now</a> viagra pharmacy [url=https://urlscan.io/result/50b60ad8-cf40-4a91-b27e-62374533922d/]buy cialis from canada[/url] canadian drug companies
canadian pharmacy without prescription <a href="https://www.yhkw88.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=651157">free sample of viagra</a> generic viagra canadian [url=http://wjyyouxi.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=155504]prescription viagra[/url] viagra 100
cialis canada <a href="https://is.gd/Qhtjha">canadian-pharmacy-online</a> canadian generic viagra [url=https://linkgeanie.com/profile/verseshade06]drugs of canada[/url] www.canadadrugsonline.com
canadian pharmacy without prescription <a href="https://www.yhkw88.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=651157">free sample of viagra</a> generic viagra canadian [url=http://wjyyouxi.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=155504]prescription viagra[/url] viagra 100
cialis canada <a href="https://is.gd/Qhtjha">canadian-pharmacy-online</a> canadian generic viagra [url=https://linkgeanie.com/profile/verseshade06]drugs of canada[/url] www.canadadrugsonline.com
-
sbpqxifh9t8 Web Site
- January 22, 2023
br88u0xb777 viagra doses <a href="https://bbs.pku.edu.cn/v2/jump-to.php?url=http://www.canadotcphar.com/">cialis cheap canada</a> when will viagra go generic [url=https://www.6isf.com/space-uid-882049.html]canadian generic viagra[/url] cheap viagra for sale
viagra without a prescription <a href="https://dsred.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=598597">viagra canada online pharmacy</a> what is the price of cialis in canada [url=http://flymouses.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=667789]real viagra[/url] tadalafil canada
cheap viagra online <a href="https://bbs.pku.edu.cn/v2/jump-to.php?url=http://www.canadotcphar.com/">overnight viagra</a> cheap canadian drugs [url=https://www.pcb.its.dot.gov/PageRedirect.aspx?redirectedurl=http://www.canadotcphar.com/]generic cialis in usa[/url] cialis on canadian pharmacy
viagra without a prescription <a href="https://dsred.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=598597">viagra canada online pharmacy</a> what is the price of cialis in canada [url=http://flymouses.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=667789]real viagra[/url] tadalafil canada
cheap viagra online <a href="https://bbs.pku.edu.cn/v2/jump-to.php?url=http://www.canadotcphar.com/">overnight viagra</a> cheap canadian drugs [url=https://www.pcb.its.dot.gov/PageRedirect.aspx?redirectedurl=http://www.canadotcphar.com/]generic cialis in usa[/url] cialis on canadian pharmacy
-
gxe0zqqt2u4 Web Site
- January 22, 2023
lpher7wblfq viagra online prescription <a href="http://sc.sie.gov.hk/TuniS/www.canadotcphar.com/">viagra overnight shipping</a> drug online [url=https://www.click4r.com/posts/g/6388408/exactly-how-to-buy-prescription-drugs-from-a-canadian-pharmacy]viagra tablets[/url] canadian prescription drugstore
buy medication without an rx <a href="https://anotepad.com/notes/dfg6ssc5">viagra from canadian pharmacy</a> drugs-med.com [url=https://bbs.pku.edu.cn/v2/jump-to.php?url=http://www.canadotcphar.com/]india pharmacy viagra[/url] canada pharmacies online viagra
buy cialis from us pharmacy <a href="http://giga2021.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=608740">canada-cialis</a> alternative viagra [url=https://www.zotero.org/versejar80/cv]canadian pharcharmy's[/url] canadian discount pharmacies
buy medication without an rx <a href="https://anotepad.com/notes/dfg6ssc5">viagra from canadian pharmacy</a> drugs-med.com [url=https://bbs.pku.edu.cn/v2/jump-to.php?url=http://www.canadotcphar.com/]india pharmacy viagra[/url] canada pharmacies online viagra
buy cialis from us pharmacy <a href="http://giga2021.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=608740">canada-cialis</a> alternative viagra [url=https://www.zotero.org/versejar80/cv]canadian pharcharmy's[/url] canadian discount pharmacies
-
nkvoe9zf6ax Web Site
- January 22, 2023
ddd3pnowjxu prescription codes <a href="https://www.kickstarter.com/profile/593130923/about">viagra plus</a> northwest canadian pharcharmy online [url=https://learn.centa.org/forums/users/bearpail13/]viagra erections[/url] viagra information
buy cialis online canada <a href="https://valetinowiki.racing/wiki/How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy">buy viagra new york</a> erectile dysfunction drugs online [url=https://dohabb.com/index.php?page=user&action=pub_profile&id=1391937]canadian medications[/url] medications from canada
canada online pharmacy viagra <a href="https://site-9198084-8243-2989.mystrikingly.com/blog/five-facts-about-pharmacy-you-need-to-know">canadian pharmacy no prescription</a> canadian medication [url=https://trade-britanica.trade/wiki/Five_Facts_About_Pharmacy_You_Need_to_Know]cialis from canadian[/url] alternatives to viagra
buy cialis online canada <a href="https://valetinowiki.racing/wiki/How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy">buy viagra new york</a> erectile dysfunction drugs online [url=https://dohabb.com/index.php?page=user&action=pub_profile&id=1391937]canadian medications[/url] medications from canada
canada online pharmacy viagra <a href="https://site-9198084-8243-2989.mystrikingly.com/blog/five-facts-about-pharmacy-you-need-to-know">canadian pharmacy no prescription</a> canadian medication [url=https://trade-britanica.trade/wiki/Five_Facts_About_Pharmacy_You_Need_to_Know]cialis from canadian[/url] alternatives to viagra
-
gyvumftohke Web Site
- January 22, 2023
drn7n5djycy cialis canadian <a href="http://giga2021.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=608848">buy viagra without a prescription</a> generic cialis canadian [url=https://notes.io/qhe2a]buy discount viagra[/url] buy viagra online without script
buy cheap viagra online <a href="https://writeablog.net/vanbaby53/five-facts-about-pharmacy-you-need-to-know">cheap cialis online canada pharmacy</a> 44-466 green pill [url=http://idea.informer.com/users/menudead68/?what=personal]buy cialis from us pharmacy[/url] how viagra works
canadian pharmacy and cialis <a href="http://mc-dqm4.xii.jp/index.php?barberbeach75">buy cialis in canada online</a> how to get viagra [url=http://ddzjcn.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=655289]generic cialis in usa[/url] does viagra work
buy cheap viagra online <a href="https://writeablog.net/vanbaby53/five-facts-about-pharmacy-you-need-to-know">cheap cialis online canada pharmacy</a> 44-466 green pill [url=http://idea.informer.com/users/menudead68/?what=personal]buy cialis from us pharmacy[/url] how viagra works
canadian pharmacy and cialis <a href="http://mc-dqm4.xii.jp/index.php?barberbeach75">buy cialis in canada online</a> how to get viagra [url=http://ddzjcn.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=655289]generic cialis in usa[/url] does viagra work
-
urlayvnxsgj Web Site
- January 22, 2023
bk13q10s63j viagra buy online <a href="https://ipunplatform.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=402939">canadian pharmacies without prescription</a> order medications online [url=https://dohabb.com/index.php?page=user&action=pub_profile&id=1392139]alcohol and viagra[/url] sildenafil canada
viagra drug <a href="https://atavi.com/share/vox0v7zfie8p">buy viagra from canada pharmacy</a> cheap viagra in canada [url=https://picomart.trade/wiki/Five_Facts_About_Pharmacy_You_Need_to_Know]cheap viagra canada[/url] canadian pharcharmy
side effects viagra <a href="https://www.truthmall.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=321122">legitimate online pharmacies india</a> generic cialis [url=https://flipboard.com/@courseanimal25]viagra without a doctor prescription canada[/url] www.canadianpharmacymeds.com
viagra drug <a href="https://atavi.com/share/vox0v7zfie8p">buy viagra from canada pharmacy</a> cheap viagra in canada [url=https://picomart.trade/wiki/Five_Facts_About_Pharmacy_You_Need_to_Know]cheap viagra canada[/url] canadian pharcharmy
side effects viagra <a href="https://www.truthmall.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=321122">legitimate online pharmacies india</a> generic cialis [url=https://flipboard.com/@courseanimal25]viagra without a doctor prescription canada[/url] www.canadianpharmacymeds.com
-
hqq8v4bl34k Web Site
- January 22, 2023
lx3balmhxeq lowest prescription prices <a href="https://drivehud.com/forums/users/bearwrist03/">viagra soft tabs</a> natural viagra substitute [url=https://cameradb.review/wiki/Five_Facts_About_Pharmacy_You_Need_to_Know]viagra without a prescription[/url] drugs of canada
medication online <a href="http://hawkee.com/profile/2265942/">online pharmacies canada</a> cialis canada pharmacy [url=https://kikipedia.win/wiki/Exactly_How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy]cialis canada pharmacy online[/url] viagra alcohol
walmart drug prices <a href="http://www.mifengedu.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=3235610">5 mg cialis canada</a> viagra-canada [url=http://qooh.me/northseal43]viagra online cheap[/url] does generic viagra work
medication online <a href="http://hawkee.com/profile/2265942/">online pharmacies canada</a> cialis canada pharmacy [url=https://kikipedia.win/wiki/Exactly_How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy]cialis canada pharmacy online[/url] viagra alcohol
walmart drug prices <a href="http://www.mifengedu.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=3235610">5 mg cialis canada</a> viagra-canada [url=http://qooh.me/northseal43]viagra online cheap[/url] does generic viagra work
-
vcb0oljzkzz Web Site
- January 22, 2023
hjr1j1ayca3 how to order viagra from canada <a href="http://vipersrc.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=393593">buy canadian drugs without prescription</a> canada drug companies [url=https://www.renderosity.com/users/id:1312698]l484 pill[/url] canadian-pharcharmy-
cialis for daily use canada <a href="https://unsplash.com/@fishdead14">us pharmacy cialis</a> cheap generic viagra online [url=https://www.instapaper.com/p/rugbybomb46]drugs online without a prescription[/url] wwwcanadianpharmacy.com
viagra samples free <a href="http://www.hebian.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=749255">over the counter viagra alternative</a> canadian drugs without a prescription [url=http://sc.sie.gov.hk/TuniS/www.canadotcphar.com/]drugs without a prescription[/url] canadian viagra online pharmacy
cialis for daily use canada <a href="https://unsplash.com/@fishdead14">us pharmacy cialis</a> cheap generic viagra online [url=https://www.instapaper.com/p/rugbybomb46]drugs online without a prescription[/url] wwwcanadianpharmacy.com
viagra samples free <a href="http://www.hebian.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=749255">over the counter viagra alternative</a> canadian drugs without a prescription [url=http://sc.sie.gov.hk/TuniS/www.canadotcphar.com/]drugs without a prescription[/url] canadian viagra online pharmacy
-
lnj9c7ffh76 Web Site
- January 22, 2023
qvnzom7ki08 cost of cialis at walmart <a href="http://lineage38r.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=585366">canada medication</a> canadian pharmacy for cialis [url=https://sixn.net/home.php?mod=space&uid=428124]hydrocodone[/url] buying from viagra canada
viagra best price <a href="https://studyroom.co.za/user/barberdead08">viagra.canada</a> buying cialis canada [url=https://cutt.us/3Ixew]viagra testimonials[/url] canadian pill store
viagra for sale online <a href="http://52ch.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=1232561">pharma from canada</a> viagra sildenafil [url=https://cutt.ly/2BQXd3T]buy viagra usa[/url] viagra reviews
viagra best price <a href="https://studyroom.co.za/user/barberdead08">viagra.canada</a> buying cialis canada [url=https://cutt.us/3Ixew]viagra testimonials[/url] canadian pill store
viagra for sale online <a href="http://52ch.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=1232561">pharma from canada</a> viagra sildenafil [url=https://cutt.ly/2BQXd3T]buy viagra usa[/url] viagra reviews
-
jppzktbvj5q Web Site
- January 22, 2023
mxcnlh4wdls viagra stories <a href="https://trade-britanica.trade/wiki/Five_Facts_About_Pharmacy_You_Need_to_Know">how to buy viagra</a> canadadrugpharmacy.com [url=https://repo.getmonero.org/banjofall28]canada drug store[/url] cheap generic viagra online
generic cialis online pharmacy <a href="http://itw99.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=340834">online viagra canada</a> canada drugs cialis [url=https://scientific-programs.science/wiki/How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy]viagra price[/url] cialis for daily use canada
discount cialis <a href="https://chaomianzhu.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=587404">mail order viagra</a> cialis coupon for pharmacy [url=http://ajgsm.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=352452]viagra buy[/url] does viagra work for women
generic cialis online pharmacy <a href="http://itw99.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=340834">online viagra canada</a> canada drugs cialis [url=https://scientific-programs.science/wiki/How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy]viagra price[/url] cialis for daily use canada
discount cialis <a href="https://chaomianzhu.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=587404">mail order viagra</a> cialis coupon for pharmacy [url=http://ajgsm.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=352452]viagra buy[/url] does viagra work for women
-
sjycn9foifl Web Site
- January 22, 2023
ul82fwhpecy pfizer viagra <a href="http://www.mifengedu.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=3235460">order viagra without prescription</a> generic cialis canadian [url=https://godotengine.org/qa/user/northanimal20]lowest price viagra[/url] order medication online
canadian pharmacy without a prescription <a href="https://historydb.date/wiki/Five_Facts_About_Pharmacy_You_Need_to_Know">buy pfizer viagra</a> cialis - canada [url=http://www.touzichaoshius.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=1255871]drugs from canada[/url] viagra erection
viagra canada online <a href="https://canvas.instructure.com/eportfolios/1532237/Home/Just_How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy">cheap viagra generic</a> canadian drugs without a prescription [url=https://www.click4r.com/posts/g/6389070/exactly-how-to-buy-prescription-drugs-from-a-canadian-pharmacy]drugs from canada[/url] viagra for cheap
canadian pharmacy without a prescription <a href="https://historydb.date/wiki/Five_Facts_About_Pharmacy_You_Need_to_Know">buy pfizer viagra</a> cialis - canada [url=http://www.touzichaoshius.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=1255871]drugs from canada[/url] viagra erection
viagra canada online <a href="https://canvas.instructure.com/eportfolios/1532237/Home/Just_How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy">cheap viagra generic</a> canadian drugs without a prescription [url=https://www.click4r.com/posts/g/6389070/exactly-how-to-buy-prescription-drugs-from-a-canadian-pharmacy]drugs from canada[/url] viagra for cheap
-
waqrexxpbu3 Web Site
- January 22, 2023
imcbo8umir1 how does viagra work <a href="https://public.sitejot.com/harpfall03.html">best generic cialis</a> how to get viagra [url=https://studyroom.co.za/user/barberdead08]baclofen[/url] get a prescription online
medication without prescription <a href="https://wikidot.win/wiki/Five_Facts_About_Pharmacy_You_Need_to_Know">buy propecia</a> viagra dosing [url=http://www.swanmei.com/space-uid-778117.html]buy drugs[/url] over the counter viagra
viagra testimonials <a href="https://gufenghanfu.com/space-uid-528979.html">get viagra</a> cialis canada pharmacy online [url=http://wjyyouxi.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=155550]viamedic .com[/url] cialis in usa pharmacy
medication without prescription <a href="https://wikidot.win/wiki/Five_Facts_About_Pharmacy_You_Need_to_Know">buy propecia</a> viagra dosing [url=http://www.swanmei.com/space-uid-778117.html]buy drugs[/url] over the counter viagra
viagra testimonials <a href="https://gufenghanfu.com/space-uid-528979.html">get viagra</a> cialis canada pharmacy online [url=http://wjyyouxi.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=155550]viamedic .com[/url] cialis in usa pharmacy
-
nwchwtabwne Web Site
- January 22, 2023
au93vana7x5 online pharmacies canada <a href="https://lexsrv3.nlm.nih.gov/fdse/search/search.pl?match=0&realm=all&terms=http://www.canadotcphar.com/">canadian prescriptions</a> cheap viagra [url=http://ddzjcn.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=655360]canada rx pharmacy[/url] highest rated canadian pharmacies
canadian pharmacy com <a href="http://www.drugoffice.gov.hk/gb/unigb/www.canadotcphar.com/">viagra professional</a> viagra.com canada [url=https://app.glosbe.com/profile/6986058895449918712]online generic viagra[/url] buy viagra now
buy cialis in canada <a href="https://drivehud.com/forums/users/vancornet22/">canadian pharcharmy</a> canadian pharcharmy online viagra [url=http://vipersrc.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=393452]canadian pharcharmy online without prescription[/url] viagra without prescription
canadian pharmacy com <a href="http://www.drugoffice.gov.hk/gb/unigb/www.canadotcphar.com/">viagra professional</a> viagra.com canada [url=https://app.glosbe.com/profile/6986058895449918712]online generic viagra[/url] buy viagra now
buy cialis in canada <a href="https://drivehud.com/forums/users/vancornet22/">canadian pharcharmy</a> canadian pharcharmy online viagra [url=http://vipersrc.com/home.php?mod=space&uid=393452]canadian pharcharmy online without prescription[/url] viagra without prescription
-
xmcbbcmqhqx Web Site
- January 22, 2023
price for cialis in canada <a href="https://mooc.elte.hu/eportfolios/1383007/Home/How_to_Buy_Prescription_Drugs_From_a_Canadian_Pharmacy">canadian pharcharmy online reviews</a> drug prices [url=http://www.saxmachine.it/sax1/userinfo.php?uid=105867]cost of cialis[/url] viagra from india
online viagra canada <a href="https://postheaven.net/savecolon72/how-to-buy-prescription-drugs-from-a-canadian-pharmacy">generic viagra cheap</a> viagra directions [url=https://www.click4r.com/posts/g/6388261/five-facts-about-pharmacy-you-need-to-know]buy viagra usa[/url] where to buy viagra online
gjj8bdxtv97 Web Site- January 22, 2023