It was a wildly hot day. As we took a rather long walk around the Tokyo Skytree and Naritasan-Shinshoji Temple, we perspired and really wanted to have a shower before departure. We expected that there would be several shower rooms in the airport and we were glad to find them on the plan of the airport. As soon as we received our luggage from the transport company at the airport, which we had sent from our home two days before, we checked in our luggage. The shower rooms weren't wide and were rather shabby, but it was really comfortable to clean my body before being confined into a small seat for around 12 hours.
I almost forgot. I had to write about the wireless router which I rented at the airport. I heavily rely on the map of the smartphone in Japan when traveling in an unfamiliar area, so I was going to use it in Canada, too. The router which I rented was supposed to work across Canada. I'll write about it later.
The plane which we got on board was a Boeing 777 and relatively clean inside. I had a rough impression that Air Canada wasn't clean from my several experiences of being on board an Airbus A330 between Vancouver and Japan. It was not true, however, this time. The picture shows the in-flight meal between dinner and breakfast. The combination of a cup of noodles and sandwiches was great.
(Vocabulary)
check in one's baggage 搭乗手続きをして荷物を預ける
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