While Mom was here visiting, Alan and I took advantage of the free childcare and made a getaway. We chose a nearby island called Ie-jima (jima just means "island"), which is a short 30-minute ferry ride away, and a resort called YYY Resort. The term "resort" is really loose. There's no spa, which is how I classify something as a resort. But, it was really nice and there were no kids with my last name there, which was good enough to compensate for there not being a spa.
When we originally planned the overnight, we were really hoping to get some diving in. But the weather didn't look promising (it was raining cats and dogs when we left and the ocean looked angry), so we finally decided not to lug our dive gear along and just relax. Luckily, our room did have a massage chair, so I did that while Alan wandered out to the balcony and took note of our awesome view.
After my massage, we explored the room. Here was the bedroom, with two full beds. Notice that there is only one pillow on each bed. Um...we purchased the "Couples Plan" and they think we're sleeping on separate beds? The Japanese have probably never been lauded for their luxury mattresses or pillows. Ever. The hotels are notorious for having the hardest beds you've ever slept on. And the pillows may as well not be there. Seriously. I couldn't help but see the irony in the fact that we went away to relax and ended up getting the worst night of sleep we've had in the past two years. Really bad. If you ever go, I would take your own pillow, at least.
This was the bath/shower room, which was all plastic (kind of like the little bathrooms in RVs) and had a confusing setup. There were two sets of water knobs. The ones on the left were for the bath - even though they aren't even centered over it. The ones to the far right, over the bowl (?) were for the shower. And see where the shower mount is? To the right of the tub? So odd. We still aren't sure what the bowl was for.
There was a separate bathroom with the toilet, which was normal - by Japanese standards, that is. Heated seat, background noise and small or large-scale bidets. I have to give the Japanese credit - for what they lack in luxury items, they make up for with their fancy toilets. I'll miss the warm seat when we leave here.
Next we decided to explore the resort. Here I am, looking for sea glass at low tide and here we are, on the beach:
Next, we decided to take advantage of the rain letting up and we rented some bikes to explore the island. I hadn't ridden a bike in a few years, so I felt certain I was going to bite it. But I didn't! It really is just like riding a bike - you never forget! Here I am not falling:
We rode by a field with about 20 giant tortoises in it:
Numerous randomly-placed vending machines:
"Australian Pine Avenue":
Ie Lily Festival (where we stopped to have an Orion, for our happy time):
A scenic overlook:
Then, we headed back to the resort, opened a bottle of wine and hung out in the jacuzzi for a little while before going to dinner. For dinner, we decided to venture away from the resort's restaurant and try a local one. It appeared to be a big mistake at first, because the menu had only kanji - no pictures, no words we could read...nothing. And the owner/chef/bartender spoke no English. Luckily, another diner did speak English, so he told us what was on the menu, we told him what we'd like and he ordered it. The food was fantastic. My tuna sushi melted in my mouth - hands-down the best tuna I've had (maybe not the best flavor overall, but the fish was the best). Alan had a nice steak and fried rice (surprise). Plus Orion, obviously. Always good.
The next day was sunny! The few hours we had before checkout, we spent at the beach:
Adam's only request was that we bring him back a starfish (like that's not too much to ask). Well, we finally found one! But, alas, we are not the type of people to snatch one from it's life, so we just had to settle with photographing it for him. But, we didn't disappoint - we made sure to buy him one from a gift shop on the way home.
Here we are, on the ferry back to reality. Ie-jima's Gusukuyama (the volcanic-looking mountain) can be seen in the distance. We did enjoy the getaway and got to relax on our own schedules for once in a long while. Despite the uncomfortable beds, I would highly suggest this little island for anyone on Oki looking to take a little break. It would be great for the whole family - as long as it's not my whole family ;)
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