(Insert time-traveling harp music here.)
My friend Eli and I had heard about this owl cafe in our neighborhood.
"What's an owl cafe?" you ask. Well, an owl cafe is a variation on a cat cafe, which is popular in Japan.
"Ok, but what's a cat cafe?"
Pretty much it's a place where people go pay to play with cats and drink soft drinks. A lot of people can't have pets in their apartments here, but cats are just so cuuuuute, so some entrepreneurial people have decided on a way to make money while letting people get their cat fix. Or their owl fix, in this case.
Anyways, Eli and I had been pretty excited about this for a while. Because how often do you get to hang out with owls? So one sunny Sunday afternoon we walked on over. Upon discovering that we had just missed the lunch time opening and would have to wait until "cafe time", we decided to go ride the tiny little ferris wheel on top of the department store down the street. Up until a year ago, I didn't even know there was roof access, but there's a fair share of amusement available (depending on your standards for "amusement").
Here it is:
It takes a "full three minutes" to go all the way around... |
Not a bad view from the top |
Proof that we enjoyed ourselves |
After getting a level of enjoyment proportionate to the size of the ferris wheel, we made our way back to the owl cafe. Only to discover that we had not come "on time", at a place where no appointments are necessary. (Japanese people...)
With more time to kill, we decided to turn ourselves into full-fledged local tourists and head over to a nearby children's playground, made entirely out of old tires. Much more than a junk-yard, designers have been creative here:
First there was godzilla... |
Then we saw some boys who *obviously* know how to enjoy themselves at a playground... |
And eventually we made our way over to the robot. |
Finally, back to the owl cafe. Where we learned we had arrived too late. Again...
This time they sent us downstairs to an oden restaurant where we ordered drinks and sat down for a 30-minute wait. But when 4pm finally rolled around, it was definitely worth the trouble. For 1,000 yen we got a tea or coffee and a full hour of owls galore.
Owls are nocturnal, so this guy humored us and let us wake him up from a nap |
This one looks much more wide-awake in the photo than I remember him being... |
Just chillin'... |
In case you got tired of looking at real owls, there were owl decorations all over the room. (The one on the right is real.) |
They're surprisingly light. They really liked my sweater, too. I held two of them and both just wanted to pick at it with their beaks, but I did my best to make friends:
This photo was taken moments before he jumped onto my head, pooped, and then it all ran down the back of my hair and onto my sweater... |
2 comments:
Who needs to pay 7,000 yen to visit Tokyo Disneyland when you have such exciting attractions as that Ferris Wheel and a tyre (note the spelling, thank you very much) theme park to enjoy?!
By the way, I'm grabbing the shot of you with the owl to show my idol friends how my normal friends don't put on fake smiles in every photo they take. (Although the owl did pretty well with the "stare randomly off into space in an attempt to show a cool image" expression that my idol friends seem to love to use in their photos.)
Good! That is exactly the picture I had in mind last week. The owl *does* look like them a little bit, now that I think of it.
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