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Date: 2003-01-19 05:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-01-20 12:03 pm (UTC)So yes, Celebrate Spring! Yay!
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Date: 2003-01-20 12:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-01-20 12:08 pm (UTC)The ornamental pears near here (Cuesta Park) were in full blossom last week and actually have now lost most of their petals. The iris in my photo seems to have rushed to blossom... none of its sibling bulbs (I did a massive division last summer) have followed its lead, as yet.
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Date: 2003-01-20 10:22 pm (UTC)We've had a few eruptions in Hokkaido in recent history...
Komagatake volcano - erupted March 5, 1996
Toka Lake - Mount Usu - erupted in 1977 and 2000. Parts of the town and roads around there are still waiting to be uncovered.
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Date: 2003-01-21 09:22 pm (UTC)Re:
Date: 2003-01-21 10:18 pm (UTC)Although I've been here a year and a half, I still haven't gotten used to the earthquakes.
I am also still amazed me that, in winter, they use thermal energy to heat the hilly roads and melt the ice. Sounds good, in theory, but they fail to have a method to get rid of all the melted water at the bottom of the hills, resulting in much traffic craziness.
I wish people here would use thermal energy to heat their houses - it is such a cheap and effective form of energy. Unfortunately, I haven't encountered much central heating, nor insulation so maybe a thermally heated home is out of the picture. (Houses in Hokkaido tend to be built like they are on Honshu where it is generally warm and humidity is a problem.)
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Date: 2003-01-23 02:55 am (UTC)It is hard to believe that they heat roads, but not houses... it must be a cultural architectural convention. Style or tradition over efficiency? Without central heating, how are most houses heated? Do they still use small open-flame heaters?
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Date: 2003-01-23 04:36 am (UTC)As for the lack of central heating here, it's due to tradition. Things are built a certain way and that's just they way it is. You ask a farm why he burns areas around his crop and he'll tell you that it's what his father did. Roads are built narrowly in Hokkaido, even though we have the space for wider roads, because that's the way they are built in the south. I've got a ventalation hole in my wall, literally a 20cm x 30cm hole to outside, because you need that in for the humidity (which Hokkaido doesn't have but the south does). They don't use insulation because of the "humidity."
Things are slowly changing. There are immigrants here building "Canadian-style" homes with insulation and central heating. People do tend to oppose change here, but that happens all over the world.
Public buildings do tend to have central heating. My school has all the classrooms heated, although the hallways generally aren't. I was just speaking to one friend who says that he believes his school, built within the last 10 years, actually has insulation.