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Date, Time, Currency Rate
Japan:
Sat, 04/18/2026, 4:44 PM
Central USA:
Sat, 04/18/2026, 2:44 AM
Currency: 1 USD = 158.63 JPY
as of 04/18/26 07:00 UTC

Japan Days

My Days in Japan

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Welcome to Japan-Days.info

On this web site, I will share with you some stories and pictures from the time when I lived in Japan as a member of the United States Air Force, and from various visits that my wife, Ritsuko, and I have made there since my departure from the military in 1978. As you browse the site, please note that clicking (or tapping if using a phone or tablet) on any of the images will enable you to see an enlargement of the picture, clicking on it again will take it back to original size. Also, many words are highlighted to show the availability of a tooltip, which will provide you with more information about the word, and are invoked by hovering the mouse pointer over it (or tapping if using a phone or tablet).

I will add content to the site periodically, so please visit often.

News Feeds

News feed source: NHK News (Japanese)
NHKニュース
日本放送協会 NHKニュース

【地震情報】長野県北部で震度5強 地震相次ぐ 津波の心配なし
Sat, 18 Apr 2026 14:38:38 +0900

18日午後1時20分ごろ、長野県北部で震度5強の揺れを観測する地震がありました。長野県北部ではその後も震度5弱の揺れを伴う地震が発生していて、注意が必要です。
【地震情報】長野県北部で震度3 津波の心配なし(16:21)
Sat, 18 Apr 2026 16:24:23 +0900

18日午後4時21分ごろ、長野県北部で震度3の揺れを観測する地震がありました。この地震による津波の心配はありません。
【地震 影響や被害は】長野県北部で震度5強
Sat, 18 Apr 2026 16:36:36 +0900

長野県大町市で震度5強や震度5弱の揺れを観測した地震について、被害や交通の影響などをまとめてお伝えします。
【長野 震度5強】 気象庁「1週間程度 同じ規模の地震に注意」
Sat, 18 Apr 2026 16:38:32 +0900

長野県で震度5強の揺れを観測した地震について気象庁は、午後3時20分から記者会見を開き、今後の注意点や地震活動の状況などについて説明しました。
【長野 地震】 専門家「同じような規模の地震 続く可能性も」
Sat, 18 Apr 2026 15:54:20 +0900

長野県北部で、震度5強や震度5弱の揺れを観測する地震が続けて発生していることについて、東京大学地震研究所の酒井慎一教授は「午後3時前に発生した地震は、最大震度5強を観測した午後1時すぎの地震と同じような場所で起きたのではないかと考える。震源の深さが浅いため、局所的に強い揺れとなっている場所が存在する可能性があり、何かが倒れたり崩れたりしていることも考えられる」と話しています。
京都 男児遺体遺棄事件 自宅と小学校の間のトイレを現場検証
Sat, 18 Apr 2026 15:03:44 +0900

京都府南丹市の山林に小学生の息子の遺体を遺棄したとして37歳の父親が逮捕された事件で、警察は18日、自宅と小学校の間にあるトイレで現場検証を行いました。警察は遺体の遺棄や死亡の経緯に関係している可能性があるとみて、事件のいきさつを詳しく調べています。
イラン側「米海上封鎖なら自由通航認めず」数日以内に協議か
Sat, 18 Apr 2026 14:09:14 +0900

ホルムズ海峡をめぐり、イランのアラグチ外相は条件をつけた上で「完全に開放される」とSNSで発表しましたが、その後、イラン議会のガリバフ議長が、アメリカによる海上封鎖が解除されないかぎり、船舶の自由な通航を認めないと強調しました。こうした中、アメリカとイランの次の対面協議について、ここ数日以内に行われるとの見方が強まっています。

Travel to Japan

Post Date: June 1, 2012

During our visit to Japan in April-May 2012, we decided to spend a day in Hiroshima. We have been through the city many times, only stopping at the train station briefly while aboard a Shinkansen. It is a place where I have always wanted to visit, but we were always in too much of a hurry to get someplace else. When planning this trip, we set aside a day, and put it into our travel plan.

After spending a few days in Southern Kyushu, we departed Satsumasendai early on a Saturday morning, boarding a Shinkansen headed north. We arrived in Hiroshima just before noon, left our bags at the hotel, had lunch near the station, and then ventured on to the Genbaku Dome, Memorial Peace Park, and Hiroshima Memorial Museum.

Hiroshima Genbaku Dome - a somber reminder of the destructive force of nuclear weapons

The Genbaku Dome was originally constructed in the early 20th century to serve as the Hiroshima Prefecture Commercial Exhibition Hall. After the atomic bombing on August 6, 1945, it was one of the very few structures in the central part of the city of Hiroshima that were not completely reduced to ash and rubble. As the city was reconstructed, the remaining structure was preserved as it was after the bombing.

Today, the shattered structure stands as part of a memorial in the middle of the once again vibrant port city of Hiroshima. The dome, Memorial Peace Park and Memorial Museum have been designated as a UNESCO World Heritage site, serving as a memorial to the 70,000 people who were instantly killed when the bomb detonated, and to the additional 70,000 people who were fatally injured during the blast and perished later. It was a humbling and solemn experience to stand on the ground where so many perished instantly at the unleashing of such an enormous power, and a somber reminder of the devastation caused by nuclear warfare.

Here is a video slide show of some photos that I took that day.

I would recommend for anyone to visit Hiroshima if they have the opportunity. The memorial is a haunting reminder that the destructive force of nuclear weapons should never again be unleashed upon humanity.

 | Published by: Japan Days  logo
 | Date Modified: July 26, 2023

Japan Culture

Post Date: February 6, 2021

"With luck, it might even snow for us." -- Haruki Murakami, from After Dark

I am sitting in our home in Iowa on a cold and snowy day in early February 2021, warmed by the glow of my computer screen. I am doing so because events from earlier today provided me with ample inspiration and motivation to sit down and write this article. Reminiscing about a time long ago, I had gone searching through a box of old slides and negatives, and found pictures from a day in what had to have been about the same time of year as now, 46 years ago, on a cold and snowy day in Fussa Japan.

In early January, 1975, Ritsuko and I began our lives together by renting a tiny apartment in Fussa city, about 3 blocks from the east entrance to the train station. The flat consisted of a single 6 tatami mat room for living and sleeping, a toilet (fortunately a western style flushing type), and a minuscule kitchen. To bathe, we walked a block down the street to the neighborhood Sentō. It was a magical time; we have many fond memories of the few months that we spent living in that diminutive abode. However, after the passage of more than four decades, recalling the details of those memories often requires some discussion between us in order to reach a collaborative agreement on their accuracy.

While neither of us remember very many details from that day, looking at the pictures, we came to an agreement that the morning must have progressed something like this:

After we built the "snow people", Ritsuko wrestled the camera away from me therefore I will add ...

 | Published by: Japan Days  logo
 | Date Modified: June 4, 2025

My Air Force Days

me with camera 1977

Me with movie camera - 1977

I was going through some boxes of old pictures and slides, when I came upon a small box full of 8mm movie films. And no, they weren't the "training films" that used to sometimes surface on poker nights at Yokota. These were movies that I shot with my Canon 814 Super 8 movie camera back in the early to mid 1970's.

In that box, one was labeled WB57 taxi. I had not thought about having made that film for many years. Thinking back to the early part of my Yokota tour, I remembered shooting a short clip one winter day, I think it was in Dec 1973, or possibly January 1974, of a WB-57F, aka RB-57F, taxiing on the parking ramp toward the runway.

I was standing on the wing of a WC-135, working on a U-1 foil, and luckily, I had taken my movie camera onto the aircraft with me that day. When I noticed that the B57's engines were starting, I ducked inside the aircraft, grabbed my camera, and went back out on the wing to get ready to film. As you can see in the video, standing on the wing of the 135 was the perfect vantage point from which to shoot. Unfortunately, I only had enough film left in the camera to shoot part of the taxi, and didn't have an extra film cassette to film the takeoff. Anyway, I am very happy to have taken the movie that day. I just had the super 8 converted to digital so that I could enjoy watching it in a more convenient format, and so that I could share it via this website.

Notice how low the wing tips are; the airplane must have had a full load of fuel. It looks like the left wing tip almost clips a snow bank as the plane rolls by.

Here are a couple of images that I captured from the video.

This is a WB-57F high altitude reconnaissance plane taxiing toward the runway at Yokota Air Base in 1973

WB57F

Another view - WB-57F Yokota AB

 
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WB57F P-systems and spheres in the Yokota AB MET/ARE shop

The WB-57F was a pretty amazing aircraft. It had a wing span that was almost twice the fuselage length, and was powered by two TF-33 fan jet engines (sometimes two smaller J-60 engines were mounted outboard of the main engines). The aircraft had a max altitude of about 70,000ft. Although it could be equipped with a variety of special equipment, the standard configuration consisted of a B400 detection unit, an I-2 foil and single U-1 foil for particulate air sampling, and a P-system, which consisted of two platforms mounted in the nose. Each P-system platform, several of which are on the floor in the picture on the left, had two compressors, and held four 900 cu in steel spheres that could be pressurized to 3000psi. This equipment was the basic gear used to sample debris from nuclear tests performed, at that time, primarily by our cold war adversaries, USSR and China.

Prior to my tour at Yokota, these aircraft had been assigned to the 56th Weather Reconnaissance Squadron. After the 56th WRS was deactivated, 9th Weather Reconnaissance Wing left an operational detachment there, to which was assigned 3 of these aircraft along with the flight crews and necessary operational staff. Maintenance personnel, including MET/ARE were re-assigned to the 610 MASS.

I don't remember exactly when the 9th Weather Wing detachment was de-activated, and the aircraft left Yokota, but I think that it was very late 1974 or early 1975. That was the end of my experience supporting these unique aircraft.

The last news article that I read about the WB-57F was from about 4 years ago in a piece that discussed an operation in Afghanistan run by NASA utilizing the last two remaining operational WB-57F's as a platform for a highly specialized communications system. It was good to know that a couple of them were still flying high.

 | Published by: Japan Days  logo
 | Date Modified: March 1, 2025
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