In 2005, Watkins made her senior international debut with the Women's Eight, achieving a 5th place at the World Championships in Gifu, Japan.
She bested 45 other contestants to win the title in Gifu, Japan.
The Magic 45 Minutes describes the duration of one of the most rewarding sporting periods in the history of New Zealand during which four New Zealand rowing teams won gold medals in four successive finals to be the most successful country at the 2005 World Rowing Championships in Gifu, Japan.
A number of institutes are named after him, such as Shotoku Gakuen University and its associated junior college (both in Gifu).
They had a Residency in 1997 in the Japanese University town of Gifu and were broadcast by NHK, Japan's principal station.
Purchase became under-23 world champion at the 2005 world U-23 championships in Amsterdam, before taking silver at the 2005 World Rowing Championships at Gifu, Japan.
Gifu Prefecture | Gifu | Gifu, Gifu | Ōgaki, Gifu | Takayama, Gifu | Seki, Gifu | Gifu Shotoku Gakuen Junior College | Shōkawa, Gifu | Sakahogi, Gifu | Motosu, Gifu | Kani, Gifu | Hashima District, Gifu | Gifu Station | Fuwa District, Gifu |
Battle of Mount Austen, the Galloping Horse, and the Sea Horse in Guadalcanal in 1943, sometimes called the Battle of the Gifu
The Battle of Mount Austen, the Galloping Horse, and the Sea Horse, part of which is sometimes called the Battle of the Gifu, took place from 15 December 1942 to 23 January 1943 and was primarily an engagement between United States and Imperial Japanese forces in the hills near the Matanikau River area on Guadalcanal during the Guadalcanal Campaign.
Chūnō, the central portion of Gifu Prefecture in the Chūbu region of Japan
Hashima District, Gifu (羽島郡), a nearby district in Gifu Prefecture, Japan
In addition to the Hokuriku region, the bank has branches in Kyoto, Osaka, Niigata, Nagano, Tokyo, Kanagawa, Gifu, Aichi, and Hokkaidō.
The story is set in Kamiyama City, a fictional city in Gifu Prefecture that the author based on his real hometown of Takayama, also in Gifu.
During the Ritsuryō period, roads from Kinai to the Tagajō were divided into two: the Tōkaidō eastern sea road (via Nagoya, Hamamatsu, Tokyo and Mito) and the Tōsandō eastern mountain road (via Gifu, Shiojiri, Takasaki and Utsunomiya).
Gifu Station in Gifu, Gifu, originally called Kanō Station when it opened, served by Central Japan Railway
Jinzū River, a major river in Gifu and Toyama prefectures that is often called the "Miya River"
And, after two men of company employee's one man (20 years old at that time) and the part-time job (19 years old at that time) were obstinately assaulted with the iron pipe etc. in Nagara river area of Gifu, it murdered it.
Mino-Yamazaki Station, on the Yoro Railway Yoro Line in Nannocho, Kaizu, Gifu, Japan
Yokoya Station, a train station in Mizuho, Gifu Prefecture, Japan
Mount Haku (白山), an inactive volcano on the borders of Gifu, Fukui and Ishikawa prefectures in Japan