Subtitles section Play video
-
Troops are in Japan for this year's Yama Sakura 57 exercise.
-
The Japanese treated their U.S. counterparts to a series of events to share aspects of their culture.
-
Producer Sergeant 1st Class Jeffrey Hilton takes us along on a home visit.
-
[shouting in Japanese] Pull up. Pull up.
-
We're preparing to go meet with a Japanese family and enjoy some of the culture and lifestyles of the Japanese.
-
So my expectations are that we're going to actually have the opportunity to meet, sit down, perhaps eat dinner with, and exchange gifts with a Japanese family and learn a little bit about their culture and lifestyle.
-
I got to take part in a Japanese family home visit.
-
It was a really neat experience.
-
We went to a family in Chitose.
-
They had prepared a big meal for us.
-
It was absolutely incredible.
-
It was a farm owner and his wife.
-
We went out to their garage, and there was a barbecue pit in the middle of the garage.
-
We cooked all the food on there and ate.
-
When we went to the Japanese family's home, we were escorted by an interpreter.
-
It was a great experience having him there because it helped with that language barrier.
-
The U.S. military enjoyed pounding the steamed rice cake.
-
It looked very fun.
-
[Knight] One of the neater things that we got to do was take steamed rice and put it in this big bowl and then start pounding on it with a hammer to turn it into kind of a gooey paste.
-
The wife of the guy came back with soup, and that pounded rice was now in the soup, and it was delicious.
-
It was kind of a marshmallowy texture.
-
Both our military and the U.S. military made a good connection.
-
I hope the U.S. and Japan make good connections in the future.
-
I'm very happy. Very happy.
-
One, two, three. [shouting in Japanese]