My friend, Teresa from Lake Stevens, Washington, recently sent more pictures that describe the life she is now experiencing in Japan.
My favorite: A two-car garage!
Teresa explains that this globe-like building is the Nagoya Planetarium, the largest one in the world!
A ferris wheel!
I had asked Teresa about challenges in using her washer and dryer and in a recent email Teresa wrote:
Now, what you've all been waiting for, washers and dryers and recycling, oh my! said to the tune of lions, and tigers and bears......as i said a while back, our washer and dryer are from Germany. l am most grateful to have them, but they really try my patience. For some strange reason, they almost never work on the first try, especially the washing machine, so I have to keep pushing the buttons which can get frustrating after several tries-I swear between the washing machine and stove, I am going to have arthritic fingers by the time we go back home. The dryer takes at least 2 hours to get everything dry, even though I do very small loads, therefore if I want to keep up with the dirty laundry, I have to take care of it just about every other day or so. Unfortunately I often get behind then I spend hours doing it. Oh well.
I was also curious about recycling in Japan and Teresa said this:
As for recycling, which my friend Cynthia asked about, things have to
be sorted into 6 different bags-burnables, which is basically food refuse, paper, plastic, bottles, cans and non-burnables. We have 3 large containers into which we put different colored plastic bags and that is how we sort things. The non-burnables get picked up once a month, things like pots, glass, electronics, etc. and everything else gets picked up twice a week. I refuse to keep the stinky garbage inside, so it sits outside our door in its own container. I hide it under a tarp when we have company ;-) On pick-up day we have to put the burnable trash under crow nets. I wondered what those were when I first heard about them. Well, the garbage goes out in bags, not in their containers, and if it does not get put under the nets, the crows come and make a big mess. They have managed to make holes in the net so they still sometimes get into bags. They are determined, they are huge and they seem to know the value of teamwork!!!
Teresa and Steve ate at a teppanyaki restaurant that was pricey and short on the food portions.
Teresa gets around Nagoya and comments:
I went to feed the cats in Meijo Park this morning. Saw more than ever but Poco, the one that was injured, was nowhere to be found. He was improving a lot the last 2 times I saw him so hopefully he was asleep or maybe someone took him home. Last week when I was coming home from teaching in Sakae, I saw a family of beautiful kittens with their mama near our subway station. There was a huge crow hanging around trying to attack one of the kitties so I hung around and chased it away until the kittens went for cover. Dang crows!
The little red bike that takes Teresa on sight-seeing trips.
Teresa in a cooking class.
A farmer in her field.
Rice drying.
Thank you for sharing, Teresa!
Sheets tell the story
4 weeks ago
5 comments:
Nice summary of Teresa's emails, Cynthia.
thanks for posting that cynthia. funny, a lot of people liked the 2 car garage.
i'll write the folks who couldn't open up the pix so they can see them on your blog.
thanks again!
teresa
Hi Steve and Teresa! I remember the cars that tandem-parked in our Mexico City condo parking garage. They were lined up with three in each row. If your car was the first car in (at the head of your row), you had to go ask your two neighbors to move their cars so you could get out! CRAZY!!
really enjoyed this post about Teresa. When is she starting a blog! LL
Hi Linda Lou! Teresa's too busy livin' life to start a blog...but I'll try to keep up with her activities and post on my blog. Glad you liked it!
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