
The image above, by the way, is the view from my hotel room. Beside me on the desk is a laminated card that reads, "As the strong winds accompanying the approaching low pressure may cause a variety of slightly rasping structural sounds along with a subtle back-and-forth movement, allow us to notify you that this is a natural response of the flexible, but durable, construction required to enable a sky-scraper such as the hotel to withstand the effects of earthquake and typhoon...." and then goes on to politely ask that guests refrain from calling the front desk in the event of said rasping. The word "exit" is also painted on my 20th-story window.
Happily, there are a lot of other things to look at in

Warm toilet seats aside, Kawasaki's hospitality was actually in full effect long before the plane left LAX for Tokyo, hence the title of this entry. As long-time sponsors of Infineon Raceway's AMA round—known formally as the Kawasaki Superbike Showdown—both Saturday and Sunday nights of the event featured the soon-to-be-famous Kawasaki Mini-Moto ... your only chance to see drag race world champ Rickey Gadson face-off against road race legend Jimmy Felice on kid-sized dirt bikes. With Speed TV personality Greg White doing exceptionally snarky commentary throughout the evening (I'm here to tell you that he used the phrase "razzle-dazzle" twice), you'll understand why I don't have a clue what t

Big kudos to Kawasaki's Jeff Herzog, who designed the course—which featured table-tops, an uphill section, switchbacks, and more—on a dinner napkin and then made it real in the best way. Built on a family farm just six miles from Infineon (guess how happy the three dirt-bike-riding kids who live there are about it), the track is now a permanent fixture and the Mini-Moto itself an annual tradition.
The day after the AMA road racers left the Infineon Raceway track, media and local Kawasaki dealers and riders swarmed onto it within the framework of a Sportbike Track

That's about it for me this morning—we're due in the lobby in a half-hour to start a day of touring "Kawasaki Good Times World" and the Akashi Works factory, and presumably there's coffee down there somewhere. This blog should become somewhat more coherent in the days ahead, during which we'll move from Kobe to Hakata to Kumamoto and more, visiting a slew of Kawasaki facilities as well as a round of the All-Japan Road Race Championship. I'm looking forward to starting the day ... peering down from my hotel window, I can see as many bicycles, motorcycles, and scooters as I can cars, and there's something kind of wonderful about a world with that many two-wheelers in it.
8 comments:
Sounds awesome so far, LCA. Think you can get that bedside table in your carry-on? If not that, be sure to bring me a souvenir of some kind.
One word of advice: EAT THE SHARK-FIN SOUP! You'll love it.
Uhmm... can you define the work "snarky"?
Watch out for the bidet in the toilet...I've seen toilets there that make Captain Kirk's chair on the bridge of the Enterprise look like a tree stump in comparison. By the way, there may be a female bidet in addition to the male bidet...hopefully you can also select and set the water temperature...and the radio in the same setting...
I like the deep bathtubs...but watch out for the little Shiatzu ladies...especially when they get to your toes...I thought she was trying to pull them off my feet--she was only trying to crack the nuckels in each toe...very disconcerting as I have size 14 feet...
Yr not going to respond to anonymous? Us anonymouses are hurt...... all the other day's comments got answered.
Sorry, Anonymi--
#1 Anonymous: You're spot-on about those toilets--so many amenities that the rest of the hotel room is pretty much superfluous; better temperature-control than my car, house, or office; and the faux-flushing, noise-canceling option seems particularly civilized.
That's better.
Nice rear, LCA!
greg white himself is snarky.
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