dyna8800 3 Posted March 2, 2006 Share Posted March 2, 2006 At Arai Mountain I was surprised to see the revival of the sticky ticket with plastic wicket (the lift ticket is a sticker that must be folded over the wicket to be worn on your jacket or pants, threaded through a zipper pull or non detachable loop). It looks like a step backwards, especially considering that some resorts in Japan are using the newer technology with smart IC chip cards that are used to open lift gates or bar coded tickets which are read with a scanner. Also, I like the environmentally friendly, reuseable IC card system. Disposing of the ticket/wicket in the past also required wire cutters (the wickets were made of wire). The nondetachable wicket system was created so that you could not share a lift ticket or sell it. At many US resorts, for example, there is no morning ticket, only a full day ticket or an afternoon ticket. People would ski/ride for half a day, then go out to the parking lot and sell the ticket. In California the resale of a lift ticket is illegal. Most resorts in Japan I have been to allow you to put the paper lift ticket in an armband holder or clear pass holder which can be clipped (carabiner, etc.) onto clothing. At Arai, there was a notice saying that these holders could not be used for Arai lift tickets but I used my armband holder and was not stopped. Are there other resorts in Japan with the sticker/wicket system? Link to post Share on other sites
sava 0 Posted March 2, 2006 Share Posted March 2, 2006 Man, I hate those sensor gates. You have to make love to them to get through Link to post Share on other sites
uggggllllyyyy 0 Posted March 2, 2006 Share Posted March 2, 2006 Yup, I used to do the lovemaking dance with the sensors. Then i got some gloves with a small pocket which fits the chip thing perfectly. Now i practise my homealone five knuckle shuffle at the sensor gate. At least its quicker...ahem!. Fits with the thread title as well!!!! Link to post Share on other sites
Cornelius 0 Posted March 2, 2006 Share Posted March 2, 2006 Those ones at Nozawa were too low for me definitely. Link to post Share on other sites
rigor mortis 0 Posted March 3, 2006 Share Posted March 3, 2006 good old NZ still has plenty of the sticky wickets. the sensor ones at niseko are shit. they kept catching me in the shins Link to post Share on other sites
number9 0 Posted March 3, 2006 Share Posted March 3, 2006 Gloves with pockets rock! Link to post Share on other sites
3da5snow 0 Posted March 3, 2006 Share Posted March 3, 2006 Mountain High in Southern California would have these thin plastic tickets you have to feed into the ticket gate and have spit back out everytime you go to the lift. Annoyed the hell out of me! Link to post Share on other sites
damian 0 Posted March 3, 2006 Share Posted March 3, 2006 I keep forgetting to get my IC refund. I have several IC's from Hakuba and a friggin pile from European resorts. It gets costly. But they are a good system. I can understand one of Arai's possible motivations. A few seasons ago a bunch of gaijins would use Lawson colour photocopiers to duplicate day passes. I was associated with this group and to be honest, I refused to partake (it is theft and you are only as strong as your weakest link). No one in that group of gaijins use this forum anymore, but they used to. The resort in question was not Arai. Link to post Share on other sites
quattro 1 Posted March 3, 2006 Share Posted March 3, 2006 Scanner, laptop and a printer and one can go into business. Sell tickets at half the price of the resort. Pure profit. Link to post Share on other sites
bushpig 0 Posted March 3, 2006 Share Posted March 3, 2006 yeah that's the kind of dodgy illegal stuff I won't get involved in either spud. get caught and it's fraud charges. Which is one of the things they take very seriously! Not just a matter of swapping a season pass with a mate. Link to post Share on other sites
uggggllllyyyy 0 Posted March 3, 2006 Share Posted March 3, 2006 Quote: Originally posted by Bushpig: yeah that's the kind of dodgy illegal stuff I won't get involved in either spud. get caught and it's fraud charges. Which is one of the things they take very seriously! Not just a matter of swapping a season pass with a mate. Nah its no problem. If you get caught, you go on TV, bow, say you're sorry and something along the lines of "I will think long and hard about how best to atone for causing distrust in the public...blah blah blah!". Link to post Share on other sites
bushpig 0 Posted March 3, 2006 Share Posted March 3, 2006 If you are Japanese! If you are a gaijin, then you get busted do some time, lose your job, get deported back home, thus proving once again how us gaijin are driving the crime rate seriously high in this country! Link to post Share on other sites
uggggllllyyyy 0 Posted March 3, 2006 Share Posted March 3, 2006 Quote: Originally posted by Bushpig: If you are Japanese! If you are a gaijin, then you get busted do some time, lose your job, get deported back home, thus proving once again how us gaijin are driving the crime rate seriously high in this country! Dont forget the hosing at the detention centre. Just to clean yer of course! Link to post Share on other sites
joshnii 2 Posted March 13, 2006 Share Posted March 13, 2006 Quote: If you are a gaijin, then you get busted do some time, lose your job, get deported back home Bushpig, I'm sure that was said jokingly, but are there many cases in which foreigners really are treated unfairly like that? I'd be interested to know. In my experience I would say the people I know have been treated with a lot of leniency because they are foreign, almost the opposite. Link to post Share on other sites
bushpig 0 Posted March 13, 2006 Share Posted March 13, 2006 To be fair Joshnii I can only go on stories I have heard or read about. And yes, that was said jokingly. No first hand experience. I do recall one guy on the JET program getting shit-faced drunk, climbing onto someones roof and throwing down tiles. The police rocked up with an English interpreter expecting a foreigner who spoke English (which he did), but he said he was French and refused to speak to them, probably trying to get them to just overlook the whole thing and send him home to sleep it off. But, they locked him up and then discovered in the morning that he did in fact speak English! Anyway, he was charged with whatever applicable law there was, lost his job on the JET program, and was deported. Link to post Share on other sites
BillTheBinMan 0 Posted March 15, 2006 Share Posted March 15, 2006 JETS are ambassadors (sp?) for all foreigners and should behave as such. Link to post Share on other sites
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