Attempting to accurately order food off a menu written in Japanese is one of the many adventures to be had here and, like the All Blacks so far, there have been personal successes and what may euphemistically be described as work-ons.
Pictures can help, but while it's said they may tell 1000 words, they don't tell the full story. What appear to be beef or chicken skewers can in fact be flavoured chicken skins wrapped tightly around a stick. Yes, skins.
Some restaurants have electronic tablets to help ease the ordering procedure, but even they're not much help without an English language option. A bit of rough sign language can be useful and the wait staff are at pains to never offend; it's why some restuarants cater for only Japanese speakers.
The ordering of sushi is easier to master – you generally know what you're going to get. But if you don't like rice and raw fish your World Cup experience here could be particularly challenging, cuisine-wise. It brings to mind a story about a Kiwi reporter covering the World Cup in France, that home of culinary delights, in 2007, whose default mood was frustration because he couldn't find a decent mince pie.
Change is coming for the All Blacks and those reporting on them as we have arrived in Beppu, on the southern island of Kyusha, after a two-hour internal flight from Tokyo. They play Canada in Oita, not far from here, on October 2.
Beppu is a spa and resort city famous for its more than 2000 onsen (hot springs), steam and scenery. Think of a coastal version of Rotorua, one of its sister cities. The All Blacks should feel right at home here.
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