Blizzardboy

Psymeg & Chooch

Photos, Linux, Travel

Kiwi Pumpkin Bumpkins!

sunflowerHaving a look around for ideas for dinner and stumbled upon nzkabocha.com. Kabocha is the Japanese word for pumpkin, and this looks to be a site promoting the beauty and opulence of the Aotearoan ball of gold. Ok, I wish them luck with their marketing, but is this something that we really want to add to kiwifruit and sheep as the image of New Zealand?

Don’t get me wrong – I have nothing against pumpkin (nor for that matter kiwi fruit, especially if they have been soaked in gin for at least 6 months). But sheep! Odorous animals with IQ’s lower than the average South African front row. People of the world! New Zealand is not famous for sheep! England is famous for sheep!

I hope Lloyd Jones wins the Booker Prize with his wonderful Mr. Pip. That would be one small step in rescuing New Zealand from the evils of the Demeterian tryad!

Kendrick Smithyman Online

I was browsing around for something else, when I came across a wonderful site with the collected works of Kendrick Smithyman. He was a New Zealand poet who passed away in 1995. I always enjoyed his work, particularly the steadiness of his voice. There is something haunting about his work in the way that it invokes an era of New Zealand history.

Quite an amazing effort to render his poetry into an online format, especially considering the works are mostly still under copyright. Still I am sure that he would have liked knowing that anyone in the world with an internet connection was able to browse his writing.

Here is my favourite poem by him:

All grid co-ordinates on this sheet are in terms of

false origins

Today when I was leaving you were gone

to the Library, hunting. So I couldn’t say

what I wanted to say. No matter.

At nine I phoned about the mice and rats

which infest us, and departmental cats.

Are they procurable or not? No matter.

On the wall in front of my table are four

map sheets of Hokianga. One weakly faded,

the main part of a research scheme gone

mainly own the drain. Even when bought

it did not tell the truth (if truth I sought)

about that district. Some roads were gone

already, some were petered out to tracks,

some only projected. I quibble. It was truth

I pressed after to the blazing four

dusty points of the local compass, ground

by ground hunting for Mahimai and found

how legend bred him still, not one but four,

five or more versions of his Life and Times

in their ways different but yet held true for some

around those parts. They’ve not roads, mere tracks

in scrub or scruffy bush, beaten, halfway lost,

uncertain where they go, or stay. What cost

to follow them? What gains? Tracks are just tracks.

Or legends of them, getting nowhere much;

otherwise, fictions of any parish’s mild dreams

mounted towards a future where times

would not work out of joint. Those sad dreams ailed

materially, the vision in them failed,

Sailed off like so much junk caught up in Time’s

hard-driving westerlies or blustering tides,

dumped among mangroves, slumped like driftwood on water

frontages. “The tourist will find much

To interest him, from …” From here to there,

hunting or haunted. Finding, found out where

roads disappear or don’t amount to much.

Like schemes which I may think of, truth to tell.

No matter – no, that isn’t true. Dusty, bitter

our ways work out, crudely move like tides,

nonetheless turn; comes turnabout in flow

and ebb, they matter. Down at the Head glow

finely the dunes. Promise still rides the tides.

                                   *

TO GIVE GRID REFERENCES ON THIS SHEET

                                   [SCAN]

Now I know where I stand, where I stood.

Within limits. All grid coordinates on this sheet are

true only in terms of false origin.

                                   *

Leave the highway just past a store

almost opposite this shortcut through the gorge.

You want to bear west beyond the store,

back of the district high school. As you go

you raise an abandoned church (which is here)

with a small marae. Shortly, the river.

Follow its bank for a bit, until

a farmer’s yard, between the cowbail and pigpens.

So drive slowly. You’ll need to.

The map says the road ends there. Not true.

You are now right under a stone face.

See the quarry sign? Drive

into the quarry, keeping to the hill side

(because of a fall on the other hand to the river).

You skirt a shoulder. Look for an unformed road

lifting suddenly, steep. But get over the crest,

you’re on top of packed sand.

Carry on to the Head. You cross

the old tramway which used to go up to

the Harbour, remains of the one time main road

to gumfields (south of the river and this next

river) out from the edge of the Forest. It went on

down the coast, then climbed inland on the line

Of a Maori trail. Of course, the map doesn’t

say anything about that. Maps can

tell you about what is supposedly present.

They know little about what’s past and only

so much about outcomes. They work within

tacit limits. They’re not good at predicting.

If everything is anywhere in flux

Perhaps we may not read the same map twice.

                                   *

A DEFENCE OF RYME

Nor must we thinke, viewing the superficiall figure of a

region in a Mappe that wee know strait the fashion and

place as it is. Or reading an Historie (which is but a Mappe

of men, and dooth no otherwise acquaint us with the true

Substance of Circumstances, than a superficiall Card dooth

the Seaman with a Coast neuer seene, which alwayes

prooues other to the eye than the imagaination forecast it)

that presently wee know all the world, and can distinctly

iudge of times, men and manners, iust as they were.

                                                                       Samuel Daniel

                                    *

THE BOOK OF THE ROAD

Out on A 61 for Ripon

Left at Ripley on B 6165

    to Patley Bridge

Patley Bridge through Grassington

    on B 6265, to connect

B 6160, through Kettlewell, Starbotton

    and Buckden

Turn left at Buckden and follow

    Lanstrothdale Chase to Hawes

    (not numbered)

Hawes-Bainbridge on A 684, cross to

    Askrigg and on (no number) to

    Castle Bolton

Have lunch there?

Castle Bolton, over Redmire Moor to Reeth

Reeth into Arkengarthdale

Turn right beyond Langthwaite over

    Scargill High Moor to meet A 66

Right again to B 6277, there left to

    Barnard Castle

Allow time to see castle, medieval bridge and

    inn where Dickens wrote Nicholas Nickleby

    (so the Treasures book says) and esp.

    Bowes Museum (if open??)

From Barnard Castle backtrack on B 6277

Watch for turn off (unnumbered) to

    Egglestone Abbey

(Have tea there or in town?)

Then follow River Tees to get back to

    A 66 for Greta Bridge (isn’t that Dotheboys

    Hall?)

Carry on A66 to Scotch Corner, down A 1

to turn off on A 59 through Knaresborough

NOTE: Roman road beyond Oughtershaw on way

              to Hawes and site of fort at Bainbridge

              From Greta Bridge A 66 follows a Roman

              road (no name)

                                    *

We may not read the same map twice,

especially where sands are on the move.

I speak loosely because thinking

not of a map’s ineptitude but of

some shiftless nature which is prior.

Maps merely feign to represent the case.

Shiftless? A shifty case, more like,

unsure in its election as well as

in its origin, oin its ground

of being as well as in its becoming –

neither works any way too well

for this instance. Are we not assuming

that what one has here to purport

to use as an example will survive

scrutiny? Somehow, has survived?

You follow me: I talk of what we have

and have not, of a sandhill lake

which comes and goes. Or maybe, came and went

since when I was last probing there

forestry men and engineers intent

on reform were then debating

how best to right an aberrant nature.

Their maps could not properly cope

with it. It was offence to natural

justice, natural right, and law.

It came and went. Worse, it was essential

when not existent. Boundaries

tentatively it had, often flouted.

It had? Check my legal fiction.

Rather, they had. Sometimes three lakes flaunted

themselves, sometimes two, or only

one, or none. Not only sands were on the move,

the lake dissolved, moved, reappeared,

will dwindle, again quicken. In remove

a presence, in presence a fact

substantial, insubstantial form

no less? This play with arid words,

dry as lake beds where cloudy midges swarm

until extinguished, the dunes made

to conform to rational order and

rabid, but useful, their surgent pines

established turn to increase wayward sand.

Something we know lost, gained by that.

Then how, best right aberrant nature?

Terms of reference not precise,

you guess, we may not read the same map twice.

                                   *

REFERENCE

On the sheet in front of me on the wall

two sections of REFERENCE

The section on the left has

[SCAN]

with some other things about Main Electric Transmission lines,

Distribution lines, Conventional spacing, Wooden poles and Actual

positions

                                                                 Pylons No

I am leaving out all signs for them, you understand? Also,

anything to do with telephones, tramways and the distinctions of

Principal from Smaller stations.

The section on the right has

Keys to bush, trees, plantations, scrub, scattered scrub, hedge

or short row of trees, fence (prominent), swamp, mangrove, drain,

sand, shingle, cliffs & terraces, stop bank, rocks, building,

church, cemetery, windmill, radio mast, additional clues for

trigonometrical stations with permanent signals, spot heights in

feet above mean sea level, sketch contours at 100´ intervals, and

bits about post and telegraph services. Outside the limits of the

code are two other notes, how to recognise a pa, and rock

outcrops with large boulders.

Given all that you should be able to operate

Within or without prescribed or designated limits.

You may yet have to go to the wall.

How was I ever able to find my way there?

                                    *

HOW TO GET BACK BY MAGNETIC BEARINGS

          True North, now, that is one thing.

          This another, how to get back

          (whenever that was magnetically drawn

          to harbour. Instruct me, all I ask,

          instruct me how – this plus, or lack

          as minus, evidently apply — to unmask

          a not altogether dissembling

          map? True, is true of false origin.

          TO CONVERT A                               TO CONVERT A

MAGNETIC BEARING                         GRID BEARING TO A

TO A GRID BEARING                           MAGNETIC BEARING

     ADD G–M ANGLE                            SUBTRACT G–M ANGLE

                                    TO OBTAIN G–M ANGLE

                                add the Annual Magnetic Change

                                multiplied by the number of years

                             since 1965 to the G–M angle for 1965

                                   1° = 60′

                                   Annual Magnetic Change + 3´

                                   G–M Angle for 1965 16°30´ for

                                the Central Grid Line of this sheet

You may not read the same map

twice. On such least point we may agree

without implying more. Or may we? Add or subtract,

something’s still to be read as before

contemptuous of cartography

as of art or art’s surrogates, its sniffling poor

relations which I ape, thumb at lip

lacking bearing, puerile seen-through act

so you say. As you say.

                                    *

SYMBOLS

I cannot see our land clearly.

It comes and goes because covered with symbols.

Isn’t this the symptom of a psychotic state?

Take England now. In England I was given

to hold in my hand a necessary guide to

SYMBOLS USED ON THE MAPS, to hold as I was driven.

‘O take fast hold’ – that’s Sidney, in CS 32.

Eleven different sections of symbols on one sheet,

twenty of them in one section. Here’s from

another:

                Castle or house with interesting interior

                Abbey, priory or other ecclesiastical

                     Building (usually in ruins)

                Parish church

                Castle or house in ruins

                Archaeological monument

                Garden (usually attached to private house)

                Botanical gardens

                Zoolological gardens

                 

               but no Interesting church. Interesting churches are

                in Symbols Used on Town Plans, another section.

Another section, of another life.

Here I am told how to find a Frontier post

I shall go down to the river which may be

demented. I shall go on hoping to cross over.

Perhaps this is a frontier. We have crossed

frontiers before this.

Here is a sheet of paper. Write on it for me.

Go on, write on it. Why do you write No.?

What number do you mean?

                                   *

LEGEND

                                    I

this landscape landfall.

                                    II

A map so new you wouldn’t read about

it, a loop road which hadn’t been built

in hill country Tokomaru Bay.

Way forward proved the way back.

Like a one track mind it pressed as far,

died under a mount, a none too significant

mound. So have we all, well truly spent.

Well, there was the mount. On its round

emphatic the bull, who rose to design.

His neck arched, the masculine pouch,

his weapon cooling, out to prove

that way forward is the way back

                                   III

Where maps may need a change in legend for

                                   IV

this masculine landfall/`landscape

and seascape. Together, your un-

certainty in seeing, grit and spray

confronting or bedevilled, those dun

sands drove at berm and cliffs while away

in their distance sea leagues with

the land’s league collogued were one,

classically distant. Could you well say

how far in space or time you were astray

from plainjane rivermouth, that plebeian

rivermouth beyond the quarry,

beyond the mundane?

                                   On the wall

fronting me I pinned, years ago, a wry

black toro from a Spanish bottle

to further esemplastic

legend’s proclivity

for becoming and there would do as well

as anywhere, near Mahimai’s burial

place. As chance worked, it’s not very

far from the beach where (December

’69, was it?) the skyline

crests learned how to break with their severe

old puritan habit, its condign

bearing, stood – preliterate,

hieratic – risen clear

above confusion the young bulls in line,

preternaurally clear. They define

and redefine what you perhaps swear

is land that cannot wear myth’s host

plausibly, an unlikely stock.

Surveyors missed them running out the coast

but legend needs. We are what dreams shock

briefly to become; this you heard

long since. Then where, at cost,

shall we amazed be forced to press the rock

channel deep, final, face him who will lock

and batten on us? Fictive, will most

prove fact? Way forward is way back

baffling to wayward plan or chart,

a maze the end and origin, track

not made good though trick you got by heart

sorely. I speak of the Minotaur

at the heart of us, the black

kruptos , that animates each crafty art?

All pay him tribute, kill him off, and start

to run his course again shiftless, bleak

                                    V

as fallen masculine scape tumbled

Headlong. Sprawls, fold on fold. Heaves,

scarred hide. Promise still rides.

South and east they have fire by night

in their skies. Here, to the north a mast,

a television repeater station catches

signals. What sign/signal/symbol for

the Muse? Perhaps

                                   VI

on a hilltop a crossbred Jersey sire.

His progeny champ below, mouse-coloured

in their rat run. He bellows, hefts clods.

They caper excited, I am shit-scared

clinging then to one strand of No. 8

fencing wire the guard rail of a swing

bridge over a creek. Just discovered

that several planks ahead are missing.

The bulls come gathering either end and

as well as my pack there’s all the camera gear.

He bellows and buttocks. They collect, they dance.

We are offered, in season. In season

not at the dark heart, out in the open

                                   VII

are taken, being promised. As/Was

Mahimai and probably Rutherford

(if that was his name) who disappeared

in a cloud of bullshit, who said he spent

ten years of himself back of Tokomaru.

That was the first season I went looking

for Maihimai and Rutherford, sidetracked

into hunting after graveyards’ wooden

headboards, their iconography lost style.

About them maps are reticent.

I swung between: a family burial ground,

And the Wesleyans’ plot. With those boards

which we cannot read and the grave of

their millenarian teacher, Heke’s tohunga

Papahurihia. The vates? They deny

                                   VIII

but we need more to the legend, and for

                                    *

A QUESTION OF SCALE

To bring it all to scale, the given

   is 1:63360, 1 inch to 1 mile,

     and is outmoded.

That, given. Also false origin

   is given as base from which we work, almost capable

     until outmoded.

To bring it to scale. I was driven

   or drove headlong, taking whatever a telltale dial

     on an outmoded

dashboard said was nearly true of Then

   and There, the literal. Metaphor too, and parable

     long since outmoded.

                                                                       March – April 77

Editor’s note
Reading the Maps an Academic Exercise : first published in Islands 24 (1978), 131; also  In Stories About Wooden Keyboards and Selected Poems; KS’ note in Stories reads: ‘Mahimai is John Marmon, also known as Tiaki, the first and most notorious white settler in the Hokianga, who figures in various memoirs including his own. John Rutherford—which is almost certainly not his real name—was the once celebrated tattoed white man whose account of living with Maoris appeared in The New Zealanders (1830). I regard it as the first sustained piece of fiction about this country’; Daniel: Samuel Daniel (1562-1619), English poet and prose writer, author of Defence of Rhyme (1602); sandhill lake: see ‘Tomarata’; Tokomaru Bay: situated on East Coast of North Island, north of Gisborne; minotaur: in Greek myth, a monster, half man and half bull, offspring of Pasiphae and a bull; lived in the labyrinth, slain by Theseus; The Book of the Road>describes a specific journey in Yorkshire undertaken by KS in 1969

Ours not to wonder why…

Hand Soup

Some interesting Japan related websites and then some! Enjoy;)

a nod and a handshake to the big E.

0MG! My W3B$I73 W@5 h@cK3D

Have a nice day!

Blizzardboy New Design

Bird!If you are reading this blog with a browser then you probably have noticed that the look of the site has changed a bit. If you read this blog through RSS then you might want to pop up a browser and have a look.

I updated the software – wordpress – that powers the blog to the current version – 2.1. The upgrade was really easy, all I had to do was to ftp the new files on to the server. It took about half an hour to get the files up and then about 20 seconds to run the install script. Have to hand it to the people who put together wordpress. They sure have things set up smoothly.

That done I thought it was time to update the look of the site. Apologies if things look strange, but I promise that I wont changes things once I get everything tidied up. Well at least for a couple of months. In my experience changing a web sites design is quite a dangerous thing to do, there are a number of sites I have stopped viewing as much, gaijinpot and the press being a couple of examples. Of course there aren’t that many people who read this blog, so I am not so worried about that.

Pink October WordPress Skin

The previous blog template was a slight modification on the Pink October WordPress theme kindly put together by Derek Punsalan at 5ThirtyOne.com. I put that one up as Bitshifter pointed out the comments weren’t working properly, and even though Upstairsforthinking liked the triangles it never really felt like “me” so hence we have a new skin. (btw comments have been tested this time, and they seem to be working! they haven’t been tested on windows though).

I wanted to go for a more traditional blog look with a number of posts on the main page, rather than one full post and then excerpts from another five. I think if people drop by occasionally then it is easier for them to read through the posts. I still have to fix up the link blog, and a few other little things.

Hope you like it!

Rent My Flat in Feodosia website redesign up

Rent My Flat in Feodosia LogoAbout a week ago we released the updated Rentmyflatinfeodosia.com website on the world. The website is a very simple site, introducing a rental apartment in the Crimean city of Feodosia.

Feodosia is in the Crimea which is a part of the Ukraine. I must say that when I started working on the site I knew nothing about the area. Of the Ukraine, my image was of heavily moustached ex-Soviet weight lifting women (I may be confusing Bulgaria there though) and the Chernobyl tragedy.

Regarding the Crimea my image was of a playground for Russian intelligentsia and nobility on the Black Sea and the exchange of poems between the lawnpoet Tennyson who wrote The Charge of the Light Brigade, and Rudyard Kipling’s Baxteresque response The Last of the Light Brigade.

As I found out while working on the site, the region has a very long and fascinating history. Feodosia, where the apartment is located, was founded back in the 6th century B.C. under the name of Theodosia, by Greek settlers from Miletus. This settlement was destroyed by the Huns in the 4th century AD and then again by the Mongols in the 1230′s. Around this time it was controlled by the Venetians and then by the rival doge state of Genoa. At this point it was known as Caffa.

In 1475 the city was seized by the Turks and renamed Kefe. As part of the Ottoman empire Kefe became one of the most important Turkish ports on the Black Sea. Turkish control lasted until 1783 when the expanding Russian empire conquered the Crimea. The city was renamed Feodosiya in 1802 – a Slavic interpretation of the ancient Greek name.

The city remained part of Russia until World War II when it was twice captured by Nazi Germany forces. In 1954 it came under the administrative control of the Ukrainian SSR along with the rest of Crimea.

Aivazovsky PaintingToday Feodosia is a popular resort town on the Black Sea. Highlights include museums to the painter Ivan Aivazovsky, the poet, painter and philosopher Maximillian Voloshin, as well as the Soviet Social Realism writer Alexander Green. Feodosia is also close to the town of Koktebel – location of the largest nudist beach in the former Soviet Union!

I met the owner of the apartment when we were staying in Istanbul. He was asking around for who knew about search engine optimisation for his website. We had a bit of spare time so I said sure, I know a bit about that. Did a bit of tinkering around and he was quite happy with that. He got the top position on google for the keyword Feodosia.

I didn’t like the design he had for the site. So it was quite enjoyable to work on the redesign. He has very good content – the most important thing for search engines, but the design was somewhat lacking. I wanted to make a very simple site, that was fast to load and easy to navigate. It didn’t need any funky web 2.0 bells and whistles as it is an information site. Besides, creating some sort of interactive web system would have created more work for him than was really necessary.

For the design I incorporated a lot of the principles expounded by Information Architects. I am sure the site is not as nice as Information Architects, but the ideas they expressed were very helpful. For the image galleries I used the javascript css image gallery thumbnail script solution from dynamic drive. This allowed me to keep away from using flash – I think using flash is one of the biggest mistakes a person can make when designing a web site. Flash does have its uses – Eyezmaze being a great example, but for ordinary websites it is overkill, making sites sluggish and frustrating as well as being incomprehensible to screen readers and almost as bad for search engines.

All in all a very rewarding experience. Check out the Rent my flat in Feodosia website. Some images are not safe for work (NSFW) – thanks largely to that nudist beach near Koktebel. I haven’t been able to check the site on Internet Explorer so any feedback about that, or feedback about the site in general would be greatly appreciated.

Cricket Tsukuba

Cricket TsukubaDespite being introduced late in the nineteenth century by the British in Yokohama, cricket has never been a big thing in Japan. Baseball has always been more popular – probably as a result of the lower cerebral threshold required to play and watch the game.

I know the Japan Cricket Association (日本語)has been doing an excellent job to develop the game throughout Japan, but I didn’t realise it had spread as far as my little neck of the woods. So I was quite happy to discover that Tsukuba has a cricket team. There is a quite a large international population in the area so it isn’t that surprising.

They have a website up – you can check out the Tsukuba Cricket page here. A quick look at the wicket and it suggests plenty of bounce and movement off the seam early on, with prodigious spin by days four and five – depending on the amount of tape on the tennis ball.

Who knows – if any kiwis out there make double figures in a couple of games they should be a shoe-in for a prestigious place in the much vaunted Black Caps top order.

FTP Client for OS X

FireFTP imageIt has been about a year and a half since I bought this powerbook and made the change to using a mac. From a design point of view Apple have done a wonderful job and overall I think OS X is an excellent operating system. Coming from a linux background I am used to using open source software and tools, and that is probably the biggest limitation to using Apple computers.

One of the main tools that is missing is a free ftp client. I grew up using gFTP, which is about as solid as a piece of 2 by 4. The most popular FTP clients for OS X are Fetch (off topic, but in Japanese that means fetish), and Transmit – both have 15 day trial policies, after that you have to pay to use them.

I did a bit of a search around last year for an open source ftp client and couldn’t find much of a solution. The answer came when I updated firefox. Now I know a lot of Mac users are reticent to use anything other than safari, but if you install a firefox plugin called FireFTP then you have an FTP client.

FireFTP doesn’t support some things like sFTP or SSH or unicode character filenames. But I haven’t had any problems with using it. When it installs it takes you to a page asking for donations for orphans in the Balkans which is a nice idea – you don’t have to pay, but you can if you appreciate the hard work the developer put into creating the software.

If you need a copy of firefox you can download one here,

and the FireFTP client can be downloaded from the FireFTP site.

Christo-Satanic Accord

Christo-satanic accordFrom Post Rapture Post’s website – a new business model bringing together atheists and their funky fundamentalist brothers and sisters.

“Watch ye therefore: for ye know not when the master of the house cometh, at even, or at midnight, or at the cockcrowing, or in the morning: Lest coming suddenly he find you sleeping. And what I say unto you I say unto all, watch.” (Mk. 13:35-37)

The time of the rapture is at hand. The signs described in the Bible that foreshadow the return of Jesus Christ are becoming all too clear. Not all who live during coming Great Tribulation will be spirited away to be with God. The Bible tells us that only those who repent of their sins and follow the teachings of Jesus Christ may enter the Kingdom of Heaven.

Do you know someone who is in danger of being “left behind” because of a sinful life? Imagine if you could write a letter to a friend or loved one after the Great Day of Reckoning. Maybe a message to your family telling them to trust in God, and that everything will be okay. Perhaps you would leave instructions to care for your pets after your departure. It could be that your message is the light that opens a sinner’s eyes to the Glory of God and allows them entrance to Heaven during the trials before the Second Coming. This is where the Post-Rapture Post comes in.

Just write your letter and it will be hand-delivered immediately following the exodus of the pure from the Earth. But you must be thinking to yourself, “How can the letters be delivered after the Rapture?” The answer is simple. The creators of this site are Atheists. That’s right, we don’t believe in God. How else would we be able to deliver your correspondence after the Rapture?

Nothing to do with Japan. But I think they are onto a winner. Go on lads, make a million!

Mantra – A Taste of Himalaya in Omiya

Mantra - A Taste of Himalaya, Omiya, TokyoThey are the back bone of cricket in Japan, and if you are vegetarian they offer choice and variety rarely found in other ethnic food on these pacific isles. Where would we be without our friends from the sub-continent?

Mantra is a restaurant proudly boasting the best the sub-continent has to offer. Located near Omiya Station , (close to Tokyo on the Keihin-Tohoku, Shonan-Shinjuku as well as numerous other lines) this restaurant brings a taste of the Himalayas to both visitors to Tokyo and locals alike – at very reasonable prices.

We were lucky just after returning from our overseas jaunt to visit Mantra while we were on our way back to Akita (the friends we stayed with, and who kindly took us to the restaurant have just finished designing Mantra’s new website). We had had Pakistani food in Kashgar quite some months before, so we were really hanging out to get our chompers around some tasty curry and naan. And they didn’t let us down.

My pick of their menu would have to be the Palak Paneer, a mouth-watering spinach based curry just waiting to be scooped up with their delicious garlic naan (I recently had a similar dish here in Tsukuba, but unfortunately it wasnt quite up to the same standards). For the more knowledgeable patrons out there, they are also quite chuffed when you ask them to prepare something a little more esoteric.

The atmosphere is pretty laid back with some cool Buddhist statues on display. The owner is from Nepal, and the chef’s hail from India.

So if you are looking for a change of pace, and are in the Omiya area (some cool parks around there too, if you want to escape the concrete jungle) then head on down to Mantra for some great Indian and Nepali fusion and enjoy. I heartily recommend it!

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