Pai-chan is a Japanese Tuckpussy High School Gurl .... Smooth silky SKIN, and a beautiful, virgin HOLE for your ultimate joy .... Lick or Fuck .... and whatever .... Read more
June 06 / Yukio Mishima (三島由紀夫) 1925-1970
Yukio Mishima’s enduring, unexpected influence - As the country marks the 45th anniversary of the prolific postwar novelist’s death this week, we take a step back to examine his ongoing legacy by Damian Flanagan ( Special To The Japan Times | November 21, 2015 ) Forty-five years ago this week — at just after 10 a.m. on the bright, cold morning of Nov. 25, 1970 — a telephone rang at the Tokyo home of popular enka singer Hideo Murata. On the line was author Yukio Mishima, a man who in the short space of his 45 ye Read more
Tokyo Also Entered Rainy Season Today
Shibuya, Tokyo Read more
June 05 / The "Rose" Tribe - 薔薇 族
Barazoku (薔薇族) was Japan's first male gay magazine commercially circulated. It began publication in July 1971 by an editor Bungaku Itō (伊藤 文學 Itō Bungaku). It was Japan's oldest and longest running monthly magazine for gay men. The title means "the rose tribe" in Japanese, hinted from King Laius' homosexual episodes in Greek mythology. The contents had been printed in Japanese only. (The 5th year issue "Barazoku" cover page) Gay magazines in Japan, along with much gay culture, are segregated by "type"; most are aimed Read more
The Wet Season is coming
Today, Kyushu, Shikoku ,Chugoku, Kinki and Tokai(Shizuoka etc or southern part of Chubu) regions are said to enter "Tsuyu = 梅雨",the Rainy Season. (Okinawa already in season) (Precipitation Map as of 16:00 Japan Time | June 04) ps Pai-chan's Map shows Wet season is already on ...... Read more
June 04 / Fireflies in Japan (Nippon-no-Hotaru)
Lights fantastic : Fireflies engage in courtship dances in a wood at night, producing flashes of light — known as bioluminescence — from a chemical in the abdomen called luciferin which is stored in cells lined with a reflective layer of crystals. Oddly, among species in North America it is the males who flash for mates; while among the Asian variety (Luciola parvula) found in Japan, females do the advertising. June is already summertime in Tokyo, but it’s still a bit too early for fireworks and festivals with Read more
Your Oriental Girlfriend
Shall we play here ? How do you like Japanese Fem-Boi Pai-chan ? What do you like to do now ? Read more
June 03 / Flower of June - Hydrangea
Ajisai (あじさい=紫陽花), a Japanese name for Hydrangea is known as the symbol of Tsuyu=梅雨(Japanese Rainy Season), accompanied with the snail. There are some famous Ajisai grown spots in proximity of Tokyo : Meigetsu-in, Kamakura, Kanagawa-ken (鎌倉 明月院) (Address: 189 Yamanouchi, Kamakura, Kanagawa Prefecture) Meigetsu-in is a Rinzai Zen temple in Kamakura. When they bloom, the temple bursts forth in different shades of blue and the walk up to the temple from the entrance then feels like a magical path. Sumida Park Read more
Today's Mount Fuji
09:00 am Japan Time (00:00 UTC) June 02, 2016 Not yet, but Tsuyu (Rainy Season) is soon coming to Central Japan .... Much less snow on top of Fuji-san .... Read more
June 02 / Ready to Get Wet in Japan ?
More than a month-long Rainy Season is coming to Japan soon. It's called "tsuyu=梅雨" (or baiyu), literally meaning "plum rain", because it coincides with the season of plums ripening. The rainy season is caused by the collision of cold northerly and warm southerly air masses, which results in a relatively stable bad weather front over the Japanese archipelago for several weeks. In most of Japan, the rainy season lasts from the beginning of June to mid July(in case of Tokyo : Usual day of start is June 08 and en Read more
June 01 / Kifune Matsuri (貴船祭), Kyoto
In the middle of a forest and high up in the mountains seems like an unlikely place for a shrine to the protector of those at sea. Yet in the mountains north of Kyoto sits the small town of Kibune(Kifune), home to a shrine dedicated to the god of water and rain. People celebrate matsuri (festival) here hoping for more/less rain or good fortune at sea on June 01. Kibune (貴船) translates literally to “yellow boat”(originally). Legend has it that the goddess Tamayori-hime travelled up the river all the way from Osaka Read more
Paipan Pai-chan
I'm waiting for a BIG injection .... from behind .... Read more
May 31 / Takigi-Noh (薪能)
Noh (能) is a major form of classical Japanese musical drama performed exclusively by men with recitative chants (called "Yokyoku") and a small orchestra (a flute and 3 drums only) accompanying the play. ( Kyoto Heian-jingu Takigi-noh, June 01 - 02 ) It is unique in its slow grace and its use of elaborate masks (lacquer-coated, wooden). Originating in dramatic performances at religious festivals in the 14th century, the present form of Noh was developed in the Muromachi Period by Kan'ami and his son, Zeami under Read more
Pai-chan's School Girlie VID coming soon
NEW Pai-chan's "BurleSchool Gurl" Outdoor VID The School Girlie Strip Tease coming soon .... Read more
May 30 / News on Japan Rail Pass
JR rail pass to be available in Japan, ending frustration for tardy tourists - The Japan Times | Kyodo April 2016 (Japan Railways Group is considering selling Japan Rail Pass, which allows foreign visitors to ride JR trains at a discount, at certain stores across Japan) Cries of “dang” have long rung out from the nation’s major railway stations as foreign visitors find Japan Rail Pass vouchers are unavailable after arrival. Now, Japan Railways Group (JR Group) plans to make the value-for-money passes availabl Read more
Today's Shibari
Her Duty After the Flight Japanese Cabin Attendant Read more
May 29 / The New "Minpaku" Business (2)
Kyoto’s concerns mount over mystery ‘minpaku’ lodgings - The Japan Times | Kyodo May 22, 2016 KYOTO – Japan’s huge tourism influx is greatly welcomed by politicians and select local service industries that are benefitting from the boom. But it’s also created a shortage of hotel rooms, leading to the rise of online bookings at private residential establishments, known as minpaku, that fall outside the law on public lodging facilities. Nowhere is this more evident than in the traditional cultural ca Read more