We did the walkthrough (but not the official tour) and then ate at Ghengis Khan grill. SO much fun. I miss Hokkaido.
Years ago I spent a summer studying at a nihongo gakkou. The owner of the school was friends with the manager at the museum. So we got a tour and a two hour nomihoudai. The manager happened to enjoy playing brass (trumpet) as a hobby. So the price for this treat was that we all had to sing our national anthems while he played accompaniment.
It was a lot of fun and is a great memory 😀
I could barely finish the 3 test beers I ordered at the mess hall
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Cool! Did you take a tour?
Did you hit up the Ghengis Khan grill?
Why is Sapporo written in Katakana on that chimney stack “サッポロ”?
Is it a stylistic choice or something?
edit: Just looked at it on wikipedia and it actually says “サッポロビール” in full (sapporo biiru) so I guess it’s because they don’t want to mix and match with the beer loan word
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sapporo_Beer_Museum#/media/File:Sapporo_Beer_Museum.JPG
We did the walkthrough (but not the official tour) and then ate at Ghengis Khan grill. SO much fun. I miss Hokkaido.
Years ago I spent a summer studying at a nihongo gakkou. The owner of the school was friends with the manager at the museum. So we got a tour and a two hour nomihoudai. The manager happened to enjoy playing brass (trumpet) as a hobby. So the price for this treat was that we all had to sing our national anthems while he played accompaniment.
It was a lot of fun and is a great memory 😀
I could barely finish the 3 test beers I ordered at the mess hall