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Kraut_in_HongKong

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Posts posted by Kraut_in_HongKong

  1.  Originally Posted By: thursday.
    What people don't realize is that the Chinese middle class are hiding their wealth for fear of having it forcibly taken from them. They are stashing it in Canada and the States and throwing ridiculous money into shitty pigeon hole flats in HK.


    There is some truth in there, but they usually spend their money on tangible assets rather then just "fun". I am also not sure that Japan really wants to open the floodgates to large groups tourists from China which usually have behavioral problems. That would scare away local tourists.

    It will stay a niche market, such as golf.
  2.  Originally Posted By: Rag-Doll
    I agree with Thursday. It's just a matter of time before the PRC middle class start spending overseas. The enormous numbers involved will swamp the Japanese ski industry, even if only a small fraction take up snow sports. What would 10 million (=0.8% of the PRC population!)or 20 million extra visitors do to the ski industry in Japan, especially if those visitors were focused in a couple of high profile regions.


    I am not sure about that. Ski is not big in China yet. Most of my Chinese friends see ski more as an unsafer form of suicide.
    Just potential doesn't mean it will happen. I am even not sure about package tours to Japan from China (there are plenty from Hong Kong though).

    But I am just guessing, I don't know anything....
  3.  Originally Posted By: TJ OZ
    Hakuba has already had it's time as one of the most popular resorts in the world, be it a domestic market. Current figures show that the western market makes up 3% of the total visitors in the Valley.


    Hakuba will NOT become a major western ski place, because:

    Ski is not that big in Asia outside Japan
    Japan is relatively expensive (at least in the imagination of many)
    Japan is expensive to reach
    Japan is too far for most
    No very nearby int. airport

    I can't see a big influx of US or EU tourists, which have great ski places at the same time in their own backyard. And I wonder how many Oz and NZ people escape their summer heat to Japan.

    I am not sure were the figure "3%" comes from, but it should be split into "real" foreign tourists, and foreigners that work in Japan. Saying that, when I was there a few weeks ago our whole place was booked by people from Hong Kong (were skiing is not a big sport at all).
  4. Bushpig, it was Lucie Blackman, not Sara. She worked as a hostess and disappeared in July 2000

     

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucie_Blackman

     

    But that case may not help your standpoint much, as the murderer was ethic Korean.

     

     

    As the occasional tourist in Japan I don't really feel any negative racism. I think some locals have a fear of speaking English and therefore try to avoid contact, or keep it to a minimum. Happens in other places too. IMHO Japan is still a great, fantastic and amazing place.

  5. Most important is, that after washing, you need to re-impregnate the fabric. You can get re-impregnation spray in outdoor shops.

     

    My Spyder jacket was washed and we didn't do that, it got a bit heavy on heavy snowing days. I still stayed dry inside though.

     

    I doubt that goretex really has that miracle effect to keep you dry. Even with a breathy cotton shirt you start sweeting when you jog.

  6. If you have a Maestro debit card you can use the ATM in the post offices and in 7Eleven shops.

     

    7Eleven also takes a range of credit cards for cash withdraw (incl. AMEX)

     

    PS: I used my EC Card (=Maestro) in the Hukuba 7/11. Maximum is 50,000 per withdraw. And you can do at least 2 withdraws in a row.

  7. I stayed in Astil Ueno a few weeks ago. I can fully recommend that hotel. It's 2 Minutes slow walk from JR Ueno station. Room rates are low for Tokyo standard. Room size is ok, and the hotel is quite new and spotless clean. Despite the location it's not noisy at all.

     

    Room rates start at 8500 - and that is per room and not (as very common in Japan) per person.

  8.  Originally Posted By: bobby12
    I was surprised to find out recently that the 'abortion pill' is not available in Japan.

    If you find out you are pregnant you have to have a kind of operation that costs around 130,000yen.

    Apparently they consider the abortion pill (also known as Mifepristone, RU486, Mifegyne, Mifiprex) unsafe. At first I thought it was to protect the doctors profitable operations but on second thoughts I guess it is to discourage abortion and thus increase number of new babies here. Or may they just genuinely think it is unsafe, despite being used for years overseas?


    It's not about doctors income. RU486 is also only applied in hospitals. It's not like an asperin. Home use would be most likely deadly for the women.

    The morning after pill is chemically the same as RU486, but the dosis is only 1/8 (I think).
  9. For thursday's method, they should be also unused. And avoid those with ribs or dots. Use also the latex type, the new 0.02 (like Okamoto Nude) are made from a plastic material that doesn't stretch as well as latex.

     

    Alternately you can buy a soft waterproof poach. Google for DicaPac :

    dicapack01.jpg

     

     Quote:
    Do they sell shockproof memory cards?

     

    Yes, there is for example "SanDisk Extreme". They are more expensive. I would rather backup more often then paying those extra ¥¥¥¥. IMHO memory is also not THAT shock sensitive, seems I bad luck that one time.

  10. So much to shockproof:

     

    My casio dropped from maybe 50cm to the floor. It was in a very soft (case logic) poach. The camera had of course no scratch and was perfect. But the 1Gb SD card had an error afterwards. The cam was of course not ON and there was not any writing when it dropped down.

     

    So if you really need shockproof look also for shockproof memory cards.

  11. I heard a few times about the Tokyo <> Hakuba bus connection but this year was the first time I tried it. I used Alpico buses before, from Nagano to Hakuba, and return.

     

    I took the 07:00 bus from Hakuba to Shinjuku last week. It's of course the same size as the Nagano one, but it has less seats. I didn't count, but I think about 40. You have really good leg-space and the seats recline well.

     

    The bus has toilet. Journey time is 4:30 (usually) and the bus has 2 times a 10 Minute stop on the highway in a sort of well stocked highway shopping center.

     

    All together it was a really comfortable journey and I would do it anytime again. It's with ¥4700 (return 8500) also much cheaper then the Shinkansen (about ¥8000 + 1400 for the Nagano bus).

     

    Added bonus: you come quite close to Mt. Fuji, have your digicam ready.

     

    5 Stars!

     

    PS: The overnight bus from Shinjuku to Hakuba takes 7 hours and arrives Hakuba at 05:30 - 2.5 hours before the lift opening. I am not sure I would like to try that, sounds like a type of torture.

  12. It works perfectly in 7/11 - but watch the cost!

     

    The 7/11 Machine mentioned a ¥210 charge for each withdrawal. But my bank (Postbank in Germany) uses a lower exchange rate (-1.85%) + €4.80 per withdrawal with my German EC Card.

     

    I haven't checked if the post office is cheaper, too late for that, next year (hopefully).

     

    It's probably still cheaper then getting cash advance from a credit card though.

  13. Some late feedback: I was at Happo THAT weekend Feb 9-11!

     

    Sat 2/9 - just arrived lunchtime. Only stayed in Nakiyama area. Not too crowded. Had to wait for a lift maybe 1-2 Minutes. Heavy snowing all day.

     

    Sun 2/10 - Had to wait 5 Minutes maybe twice. Otherwise waiting times were short, or zero. Didn't seem crowded to me. Overcast, no new snow.

     

    Mon 2/11 - Still holiday, but all day empty slopes and lifts. Perfect blue sky.

     

     

    I would not consider crowd condition when going to Happo.

  14.  Originally Posted By: Skimum
    I'm coming up tomorrow morning and am getting mixed messages about whether we need chains. We have a Volvo 4WD (yes I am a true Skimum) - but we can't seem to get chains to fit due to low clearance.


    What you mean "low clearance"? I once had a Volvo XC70 as a rental in Germany and to fit chains was no problem.

    For winter tyres, there must be plenty of shops around that sell them. You don't need any specific brand. Just all 4 should be the same.

    And if you never used chains, try them at least once on a clear road, so you know how it works. Next time you need them could be high snow or night time.


    @soubriquet
    Interesting video. That was about the Volvo I had as rental once. It's looks good, but is really not that off road suitable. Automatic is always a disadvantange in winter, and no differential lock! Mean, I can't give power to all 4 wheels, just 2. And I did got stuck in deep snow and had to be pulled out by a truck. No surprise that the Subaru is better - even if tested by swedes.
  15. I drive in Hong Kong, unfortunatly most cars sold here are automatic. Manual cars are only in the sports section. My Hyundai was manual, but my news Smart ForFour is automatic (was the only choice). Feels like far less power (for a small 109PS car).

     

    I would like to testdrive a new VW with the double-clutch automatic though. It's an automatic with 7 gears and you don't notice any gearshift anymore. They call it DSG:

     

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct-Shift_Gearbox

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