View fullsize ![Taketomi is known for its traditional Ryukyuan houses, stone walls, and sandy streets. Photo taken just after sunset.](/assets/images/b057b-20130909-dsc07510-taketomi.jpg)
_Taketomi_ is known for its traditional Ryukyuan houses, stone walls, and sandy streets. Photo taken just after sunset.

Sometimes the stars align in such a way, that one is convinced of fate. Staying on Taketomi-jima (jima means island in Japanese), was one of those moments. We’ve looked into visiting here long ago, but ruled it out when we decided to keep the budget low and just visit Okinawa’s main island. The problem is, that on the main island, a hire car is pretty much a necessity. This means that it worked out cheaper to use ANA airmiles for a flight to nearby Ishigaki (more on that island later), and a 15 minute ferry trip to Taketomi - an island like no other in Japan (or the world, for that matter).

View fullsize ![If it weren't for the subtropical weather, and brilliant light, this could have been somewhere in the UK...](/assets/images/a5d95-20130907-dsc07411-taketomi.jpg)
If it weren't for the subtropical weather, and brilliant light, this could have been somewhere in the UK...

The drystone walls in Taketomi are just over 150cm high, so I have no trouble snooping around. The island is a raised coral atoll, which explains its extremely flat topography.

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The plan here was simple. Sit in the sun and read, dip in a pool, drink beer, disconnect from the internet and all of the daily noise we’re used to, and reset ourselves. 

View fullsize ![A modest, but essentially perfect dip-pool](/assets/images/973cc-20130908-dsc07420-taketomi.jpg)
A modest, but essentially perfect dip-pool

Our plan worked. I’ve been much further from home, wherever that may be, but rarely have I felt so separate from the goings on of the world. Each day was taken as it came; there was little-to-no planning.

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There’s a beach famous for its star-shaped sand (which is actually not sand, but crustaceans). Apparently it brings good luck to those who find it!

View fullsize 20130907-DSC07391-Taketomi.jpg20130907-DSC07391-Taketomi.jpg

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It’s when travelling around Japan, outside of my daily routine, that I’m often surprised at how surprised the local people are that I can speak Japanese. I take it for granted - there are numerous expats in Tokyo speaking the lingo. Come out here though, and usually the only tourists will be asian (mostly Japanese, then Chinese, then Korean). If there are any Westerners, they usually don’t speak Japanese.

I’m not saying that it’s easy to understand the Japanese terms for fruit you’ve never seen before…

View fullsize ![No picture gives justice to the fresh mango juice](/assets/images/f88d5-20130908-_dsc1205-taketomi.jpg)
No picture gives justice to the fresh mango juice
View fullsize ![ 竹富そば - Taketomi soba ](/assets/images/f5972-20130906-_dsc1104-taketomi.jpg)
 竹富そば - _Taketomi soba_

Well, this posting turned into another long one, loaded with photos! I’ll end with two more. Each night, we went to the beach (the island is only around 3km wide) and watched the sun set. It does so very quickly this close to the equator. The sun would set over the nearby Iriomote island (西表島) which we visited in 2011.

View fullsize ![Sunset over Iriomote island (西表島)](/assets/images/e4e5b-20130907-_dsc1160-taketomi.jpg)
Sunset over _Iriomote_ island (西表島)

It was after sundown, in the pitch black, that we heard a group of Japanese tourists scream. They’d found a hermit crab, crossing the road… hardly worth a scream, you say? Well, this particular crab was at least 10cm across, and about 20cm long…

View fullsize ![EDIT: I think this is Coenobita brevimanus, オオナキオカヤドカリ. For scale, look at the ground (sand). ](/assets/images/55a80-20130907-_dsc1203-taketomi.jpg)
EDIT: I think this is _Coenobita brevimanus, オオナキオカヤドカリ._ For scale, look at the ground (sand).

As I was trying to take photos of stars at the time, and had drunk quite a few beers, I completely messed up this photograph. For those interested, the EXIF data is: 13s f/22.0 ISO1000 35mm. Illuminated by a flash of a torch, I turned the camera away after I’d realised the shutter hadn’t closed. Then I held the camera in disbelieve. I entered the settings… and then the battery died! Yes, I possibly exclaimed at this point. OK, I did (sorry Charlotte!). The crab was then long gone, into the vegetation. The moment had gone. It was only when I got back to our house that I was blown away. Somehow, I had a useable photo! Huzzah!

I should count my lucky stars

Note to self: never, ever, ever, under any circumstance, go out drinking and forget to bring your spare RX1 battery.