Snow monsters - trees caked in ice and snow from Siberia - on Mount Zao, Yamagata Prefecture
Martin George
Monday, January 21, 2013
1:16 PM
Reporter Martin George reports on how the Japanese cope with the snow.
Martin George at the Yonezawa ski slope in Yamagata Prefecture, JapanThere were many things about English schools that surprised the Japanese teenagers I taught for three years: our long summer holidays, our cleaners who scrub the classrooms instead of kids, and our lack of special indoor footwear.
But most of all, they were astonished to hear how 5cm of snow can see life in England grind to a halt.
Yamagata prefecture is rural, moutainous, and for three months a year receives daily dumps of snow swept south from Siberia. It’s an area where a supermarket trip can leave your car under a foot of snow, and trees have wooden shelters to stop them snapping under the weight.
But despite the extreme weather, none of my students had ever had a day off because of the white stuff. Life simply goes on around it.
Roads are not gritted – the salt would damage the rice paddies – but in many towns naturally-heated spring water is used to keep them ice free. Drivers put on their winter tyres and it is rare to hear of an accident caused by ice.
The snow is formalised rather than fun, with few snowmen or snowballs, but snow festivals with ice sculptures instead. When snow was thin on the ground in 2007, one nearby town, Yonezawa, asked every resident to donate a bucket of snow to help create its famous snow lanterns.
But despite so much preparation for the bad weather, it always amazed me how so many houses were built to be cool in the summer, rather than warm in the winter, and do not have central heating. I stored my contact lens solution in the fridge – the warmest part of my apartment – and never learned how to stop my toilet freezing solid.
The difference with England, of course, is predictability. If we were guaranteed three months of solid snow, I am sure we would be just as prepared.
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6 comments
Must be a snow news day !
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Rorping
Monday, January 21, 2013
Must be a snow news day !
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Rorping
Monday, January 21, 2013
Is this a genuine case of trying to compare a mountainous rural region with a flat rural region. Or are we just being treated to someone's holiday photos.
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G_of_Norwich
Monday, January 21, 2013
nrg - and of course Sizewell B was built in the safest place inBritain, right on the sea edge where just a couple of hundred years ago a devastating storm created a huge tidal wave (read tsumani) that washed a large chunk of that coastline into the sea.
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expat
Monday, January 21, 2013
Fish caught close to the Fukushima nuclear plant was 2,500 times over the legal safe radiation limit. The Independent 21 jan 2013.
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nrg
Monday, January 21, 2013
The difference between Norfolk snow and Japanese snow is simple, our snow doesn't glow...Fukushima power plant is spewing out radiation.
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nrg
Monday, January 21, 2013