Wednesday, May 11, 2011

For all anime lovers...

My brother and I recently found two new awesome adventurous animes. One is called Ao no Exorcist (Blue Exorcist) and the other is called The Money of Soul and Possibility Control. The first has to of course deal with demons, two brothers are orphans and one is an exorcist and the other a demon but the demon one wants to be an exorcist. Their father wants the demon one to rule the world together...Its still new so I'm excited about it. The second one is confusing at first but once you watch a few episodes its great. I deals with people going to a world where they battle for money to use in the real world. Lose all your money and things happen.

Check out these two awesome animes!!!

A Guide To Japanese Money



A Guide To Japanese Money

Here is some Japanese money. If you've never been to Japan before it may not seem like real money to you and you're more likely to let it pass through your hands more quickly--best to resist that temptation.
For the most current exchange rates, go to Oanda or to Xenon. Note that there are slight differences for the exchanges in New York, London, and Tokyo.








Japanese Coins


From the left, there is the aluminum one yen coin, which costs more to make than it's worth, then the 5, 10, 50, 100, and 500 yen coins. Vending machines accept all coins except the ones and fives, as well as 1000 yen bills. However, recently some machines may have disallowed use of the 500 yen coins due to some nefarious types using altered Korean coins to trick the machines. Pay phones take only 10 and 100 yen coins, or pre-paid phone cards.



And now here is something you don't see much. In 2000 for the Okinawa Summit this 2000 yen note was introduced, along with a year 2000 special 500 yen coin.
But there wasn't much acceptance for the new bill. Vending machines won't take it and the public doesn't feel any real need for it.


Wednesday, April 27, 2011

I Will Continue Posting

I apologize for not posting lately. I've been trying to straighten out some facts on the trip and gather information. We ARE still going to Japan. Visit http://blog.jtbgmt.com/ for more information on the recent disaster in Japan and the opening and continuation of tourism. I will continue to provide more information of Japan for those of you who have the same interest in Japan so you can learn and I can study.

Izzy