Showing posts with label one-way. Show all posts
Showing posts with label one-way. Show all posts

Saturday, 20 August 2011

One Week to Go & Japan Leaving Party

It's taken an age (but yet no time at all, if that makes sense) to get here, but there is now just one week left until I go to Japan for the year!

I'm still pretty unprepared; the amount of packing I've done so far extends to merely buying a suitcase, which is now sitting at the end of my bed, eagerly waiting for me to pack it, having gained a healthy layer of dust in the meantime.

My excuse for not having packed yet is that my bag will contain primarily clothes, all of which I'm likely to wear next week.  This excuse obviously has to run out some time, so I'll have to spend the last day or two before I travel wearing some very old, unstylish clothes which I won't be taking to Japan, or just be naked.  I'll probably do the former, to be honest.  Not that any of the clothes I'm taking to Japan are particularly stylish anyway, if we're frank.

At least all of my really important stuff is sorted, like my visa.  That said, I do still need to get my insurance for the year.  Leeds University offers pretty comprehensive travel insurance for just £50, so I'll most likely get that; it's what most year abroaders seem to do, anyway.

Last night I had my Japan leaving party, where I invited some friends and family over for food, drinks, and just a general goodbye!  As far as I know(!), everyone enjoyed themselves, and I did too!  It was sad thinking that I wouldn't be seeing most of them for a year, and saying goodbye to everyone really did make the year abroad feel a lot closer.  The only people still to say goodbye to are my grandparents, whom I should be seeing next week.  

So last night's party started off with some food courtesy of Mum; chili con carne, chicken bits, different salads etc, and then brownies that Ayu made, with some strawberries and whipped cream for pudding.  Mmmm.  After that we went out for a few drinks at Rocca, Otley's finest (and only) bar.  No, Rose & Crown, you'll never be a bar, no matter how many bad lighting rigs you get.

It was a lovely night, all in all!  I'm really going to miss everyone over the next year, but I'm glad that my last night with them was so enjoyable.

Below are a few pictures from the evening.  The top one was a tribute to Miss Natasha Clancey, who couldn't be bothered to be there.  She also has a very mockable photo pose, hence the setup of the photo.

I'll blog in a few days, after I've packed a bit!  Getting close now!

James









Monday, 8 August 2011

A Brief Moment of Panic

As I mentioned in a previous post, I bought a one-way ticket from Manchester to Tokyo for the 27th of August, as I didn't know exactly when I'd be returning to Blighty.  I decided that I'd see how my plans work out once I'm there, and then choose a date on which to leave.  After reading on the British Foreign & Commonwealth Office website that any entrants to Japan must have a valid passport and an onward/return ticket, I decided to give the Japanese Embassy in London a ring, as quite a few people from the University of Leeds have got single tickets, rather than return ones.

After being transferred to a person, rather than a machine, to talk to, I was initially startled by a greeting of  もしもし (yes, I was startled to be spoken to in Japanese when phoning the Japanese Embassy).  After a second or two (or three) of awkward silence and a mumbling of "英語で話してもいいですか" on my part, we were good to go!

I explained my one-way ticket situation to the lady, who then said that she wasn't sure, but that I probably wouldn't be able to enter Japan on a one-way ticket.  She then went on to tell me that she was from the cultural department of the embassy, hence the uncertainty, and that she would transfer me to someone from the diplomatic side, who would be able to inform me for sure.

As the phone went quiet, I was nervous, but remained hopeful that she would be mistaken.  Someone from the diplomatic side then picked up the phone (greeting me with a 'hello' this time), before telling me in no uncertain terms that "they won't let you into the country".  

I was very worried at this point!  I would have to get another ticket, or change my ticket, and I don't really have enough in the bank at the moment to do that.  After getting him to repeat the fact that I wouldn't be let in about twelve times out of disbelief, I then gasped "even with a student visa?!", to which he responded, "oh, yeah that'd be fine on a single."  It turns out his colleague hadn't explained that I was going as a student, so he just thought I was going as a tourist for a couple of weeks or something. 

As tourists staying for up to three months don't need a visa or guarantor to visit Japan, they instead need a return ticket.  Fair enough really.  Turning up in a country with no real reason to be there except for 'sight-seeing', and no ticket to leave the country, does smell a little bit like illegal immigration.  I think the UK has something similar in place, too.

Anyway, that's today's drama over with, and hopefully I won't have any other problems before I go to Japan!  Or whilst I'm in Japan, for that matter.

James