Jump to content

Ocean11

SnowJapan Member
  • Content Count

    9708
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Ocean11

  1. Originally Posted By: snowbender
    Going back to the Chocolate Beer.
    Trying to imagine what that would be like.
    Wouldn't mind trying.


    My missus bought some of this on offer a short while back. The 'sweet' variety was perhaps the most horrible beer I've ever drunk. It was so sweet it was bitter, in an awful metallic way. Nothing to redeem it at all.

    The bitter version however is sweet in a mildly pleasant way, with a good chocolate aroma and rich flavour. It doesn't go well with food, but it makes a great preprandial snifter. It's a shame it only seems to be around for Ballantines Day.
  2. Originally Posted By: soubriquet
    The probability is very low, but we don't know it, and it can't be calculated.

    Life isn't without risk.


    Well the probability of what actually happened wasn't taken into account in the design of Fukushima, but nevertheless it happened. And indeed, the probability of further major earthquakes happening is quite high, if the historical record is anything to go by.

    This Arnie chap isn't to be trusted as an authority at all, but inasmuch as his message is "it ain't over yet", you must concede, he does have point.

    The outcome of the Fukushima thing seems to be hinging on things like workmen making sure they've got their valve handles on the right way. But seeing as Japanese valve handles have markings that are as hard to tell apart as space invaders with their wings up and their wings down, there are going to be mistakes. There will be 'industrial accidents', and nuclear proponents are going to say that they've got nothing to do with radiation. But that won't be strictly true either, just as what Arnie is saying isn't strictly true.

    What happens if one of the guys working in Fukushima eats deadly mutant bacteria and has to take a shit right there and everybody starts puking like in Jackass...?
  3. I've got a little musical problem I'd like to consult y'all on.

     

    I used to have a tune on my PC which I think I got from a bad girl in town who I no longer associate with. It was a trip-hop, down-tempo kind of song. It actually featured in a TV ad for a Yanmar fishing boat about seven years ago. The ad was a cool, minimal cartoony thing and the track went with it really well. It nearly made me go out and get me a couple of fishing boats.

     

    Anyway, I forget what the track was called, and who it was by, and what album it was on. If anybody saw the Yanmar ad and knows the track, do please let me know and take an awful burden off my mind.

     

    Oh, and if anybody knows anything about snobee, that would also be a great help.

  4. Quote:


    Ikeda, to his credit, created these poop burgers in an effort to be resourceful and recycle human waste.


    That is actually not really creditworthy - misusing a resource that could be used at less cost in some other way that doesn't cause normal people to retch.
  5. I'm trying to get in contact with 'snobee' who used to post here about 8 years ago or more. At the time he used to post, he lived in Takamatsu, Kagawa in Shikoku or thereabouts. I exchanged emails with him about the joys (or lack thereof) of snow in Shikoku.

     

    snobee was involved in hospitality and tourism. I'd like to get in touch with him about a business opportunity in Shikoku in this field.

     

    snobee, if you're there, do give me a ping on rod at walters dot net. If anybody has any contact details for snobee however old, or knows his full name, please let me know.

     

    Thanks!

  6. It's apparently the goal of the Japanese government to replace the current housing stock with houses built to last 100 years. Some of the housing companies are incorporating that sort of thing in their advertising now. Most of the imported housing should last a long time, as long the foundations were built properly. We ran into builders of quality Northern European style houses who claimed that their houses were consistently maintaining their value.

     

    The benefit of designing your own house is that you can have a chin-up bar with a custom slot in the ceiling for your head. But to my mind the real point of getting a house is to have some land as well to grow stuff on.

     

    bobby12, 4000 man is a bit more than what we paid for a solid house and a decent garden, with shops, schools and library nearby.

     

    And rather spiffing views.

     

    Untitled-45.jpg

     

    SN3D0023.JPG

  7. You normally have a 'jiban kensa' where a guy comes with a boring machine and bores holes in the ground. You get the results back a while later. I seem to remember it costs around 100,000 yen. Generally people get it done after they buy the land, which is putting the cart before the horse really. However, your 'developer' may already have done that and may be able to show you the data. Definitely ask for it, and try to make having the data in advance a condition of purchase.

     

    Incidentally, rice paddy isn't soggy all the way down. I've seen rice field topsoil being scraped off and carted away, and there's typically firm, well-drained soil about 20 cm down. Rather than the concern about the rice-field, it's more important to look at the geology of the area as a whole. Also, if there are any hills nearby, check the 'doseki' maps provided by your Prefecture to make sure there isn't a thick blue arrow pointing right at where you plan to build your house. Many people are not surprisingly unaware of this precaution.

  8. I'm not sure why people don't paint their walls, but I think it has something to do with cracking when the walls inevitably move, and not being bothered to think about it very carefully. We have a very nice product from www.pavistamp.com. It's a kind of putty plaster with little stones in it. It's natural-looking, easy on the eyes, and free of all nasty smells and emissions.

     

    2x4 is a bit behind the times. For many builders, 2x6 is now standard, and the more expensive builders are even going up to 2x10. You can pack in a lot of insulation with 2x10.

     

    Another thing to remember when building a house is that children don't stay children for ever. They may not thank you at first for putting their bedroom on the other side of the house, but they will later.

     

    > but everything would cost extra of course

     

    "of course"? What do you mean, "of course"? Komi yo, komi!

     

    Soundproofing is another broad, involved and generally expensive area. Charcoal-coated sheeting is supposed to be a cheap, thin, and effective approach.

     

    Most of the people we know did very little research before building, and paid no attention to future running costs. Consequently, they paid over the odds for uncomfortable housing which is a permanent drain on their finances. They tend to stagger about and splutter a bit when Mrs11 tells them how little our monthly bills come to.

  9. Hi ger,

     

    I strongly recommend that you don't bother looking at Aifull and stuff like that. A friend of ours was building a Tama home at the same time that we were getting a Canadian home built, and as our builder was very carefully stuffing great wads of insulation in absolutely everywhere, our friend's builder was gaily stapling what looked like sanitary pads in a most eccentric pattern here ... and ... there.

     

    Gosh, I hope it doesn't ever cold where they live. Or hot.

     

    We got a Selco Home http://selcohome.jp/ from Canadia, and if you want to know how their houses hold up in our climate, ask them. They'll tell you.

  10.  Quote:
    Originally posted by Davo:

    Incentives and infrastructure set up to discourage people from going there in private vehicles. In short, madness. It'll never happen unfortunately. This is a world where even people who're concerned about their carbon footprints fly way for ski/snowboard weekends. Not because they feel good about doing so, but just because we're conditioned into thinking of this as normal.
    It'll never happen with an attitude like that, that's for sure. 'It's somebody else's fault. There's nothing I can do it about it alone. So I'll just go on doing what I do.'

    How about if you stopped going for a while and waited for the resorts to wonder why and start asking you about what you want?
  11. I'm not convinced that alternative medicine like chiropractic or acupuncture works, so I wouldn't be any more comfortable about having my spine manipulated than I would about taking a powerful drug of unknown efficacy. I don't actually believe in chi and other 'life forces', but I do know that having pins stuck in my muscles is effective in drawing my attention to them so I can concentrate on relaxing them.

     

    I would tend to believe that the less chiropractic your man does and the more of whatever else he does, the better he would be.

  12. Kent and that area may not be any good, but whenever I go back to Bristol, Gloucester, and London where my family are, I drool at the wheelboarding opportunities the whole landscape presents.

     

    Japan is unfortunately either perilously steep, or deathly flat, with none of those rolling slopes that put a twinkle in the wheelboarder's eye.

     

    noSno look like serious boards - no bailing, and very hot feet.

  13. Heheh, good stuff. The Stik from the same company is a really nice ride.

     

    Remember to sit by the fire on Christmas Eve with your gaff in hand, because those Carveboards are big and Santa may get stuck.

     

    I've been invited to review a Flexboard but I'm torn between my loyalties at the moment.

×
×
  • Create New...