
Shibuya Never Sleeps
After spending majority of the afternoon watching Japanese rockabillies "coffee grind" in the park, we made our way to Shibuya by foot to take in all the sights. The cluster of foreigners that crowded the narrow the streets of Shinjuku and Harajuku was making it hard for me to breathe my own air let alone take out my camera to get some shots of the ocean of heads. This was not my first time roaming these streets so the "wow" factor had already faded. I was looking for unexplored territory but all I found were high end, boutiquey shops along the way to the main attraction. Of course, there's always enough neck breaking cars to get my attention. It's not hard to find exotic, rare, expensive cars in the streets of Tokyo, you'll eventually run into something that will have you drooling over.

Like this Mitsuoka Zero 1 Classic Type F that had people taking their cameras out to snap a few pictures. At first I thought I was looking at a Caterham but upon closer inspection, I spotted badges and a few body cues that this was not from the UK.

The next block over, I spotted this Skyline and I couldn't resist to get a shot of that sweet Nissan blue against a Shinjuku street background, sitting proper on Volk TE37SL's.

Yakisoba burger for the journey

Audi's Car Museum making a big impression


After an hour of walking, making stops to a few shops and grubbing on street vendor food, we finally made it to the one of the busiest intersections in Tokyo. Besides it being overcrowded, the lights of Shibuya never cease to to amaze me.

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