Best Western Naha Inn
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Travel Blogs from Naha
The Good, The Bad and the Tugly
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Stepping into the small international flights terminal a helpful security person informed us that there were no flights to China that evening. She pointed to a sign printed in Japanese and English that stated Hainan Airlines had cancelled all their flights to and from Okinawa for a month. Apparently it had to do with the current dispute between China and Japan concerning ownership of a couple of islands .
The Rope Festival had all the rooms in Naha ...
Finding Nemo
... All of this was for a fee but I think we got good value. The variety of fish and coral we saw was astounding. We even got to swim with a couple of sea turtles!
We were back just about noon and had a meal at another local establishment. Graeme and Bryan headed out to another beach for more snorkeling but I was wiped from the morning’s dive and slept for a few hours.
When the guys got back we set off up the street for our dinner.
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Sayonara, Japan!
... He will return to the US in a few months, so that makes it a bit easier to say good-bye. It was precious time together this week. Now we are in the room trying to get everything bag into our allotted luggage. Tomorrow morning, it is off to Naha to drop off our little Japanese car and get to the airport. We will fly to Seoul where we will have a three-hour layover. Then, we are on to Beijing to see Shekar’s cousins. ...
Shisa, Bingata, and School Life
... a peanut butter “donut” for breakfast. Then, we drove north to pick up our new Okinawan friend, Dibbie. Dibbie took us to lunch at Ryukyu Mura (http://okinawahai.com/2007/11/ryukyu-m ura.html). To order your lunch, you enter money into a vending machine and punch a button of the item you want to order. Then, you are given a ticket which is given to ...
Royalty
... base Sunday evening. That meant we lost our guide and translator. Earlier in the day, the drive from Ginowin (where Josh lives) to Okinawa City (where we are staying) seemed easy enough. In the dark and without Josh, though, it was an entirely different experience. We stopped for directions two times. However, our hotel is not in a tourism area so no one speaks English. The first place we stopped, the young man went to ...