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  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ F*cked News

Walking around the world

Odd news from Japan and all things Japanese around the world.
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7 posts • Page 1 of 1

Walking around the world

Postby Bucky » Fri Aug 27, 2010 1:07 am

Image
Gotta get those wheels fixed!


Japanese 'planet' walker rests up in Philly

A journey of 3,000 miles begins with a stop in Philly.

Masahito Yoshida, a 29-year-old mechanical engineer from Japan, plans to walk across the continent to Vancouver, British Columbia. The whole way, he'll be lugging a wheeled cart holding his tent, sleeping bag, clothes, and other belongings.

Just as he says he did from Shanghai to Lisbon.

That's right. China to Portugal. About 7,000 miles. The biggest leg of his legging it around the world.

More or less. He did fly from Europe to Philadelphia, and, months from now, he'll fly from Vancouver back to Shanghai, to complete what he says is a more than two-year journey.

His mother, of course, thinks he's crazy, he said in Japanese, his words translated by staff photographer Akira Suwa.

Bulgarian doctors considered amputating parts of Yoshida's fingers because of frostbite from braving frozen mountains, he says. In Russia, a shepherd, unprovoked, started punching him in the face. In Ukraine, thieves took his gear, but it was recovered by police.

Yoshida's greatest second-guessing, though, came when his grandfather died. He said he almost ended his quest in Lisbon, but decided to fly west instead of returning home.

But the trip has apparently lived up to his dreams - of seeing the world up close and meeting lots of people.

This planet has lots of different inhabitants, he said.

He loved desolate Kazakhstan, where welcoming Muslims showed wonderful hospitality, and where the night sky blazes with stars. He'll never forget standing atop a 9,000-foot mountain, touching the clouds. Or seeing a wild camel.

His only aches were in his feet, the first 10 days in China. He is on his third pair of hiking shoes, and his cart has worn out more than a dozen wheels.

The youth hostel at Chamounix Mansion in Fairmount Park is his temporary base while he waits for a South Philly bike shop to repair his cart.

Yoshida did find time to make his North American leg more shore to shore, by taking a bus to Atlantic City and walking back.

The shoes, the "rear cart," and much of his gear were supplied by sponsors in Japan, but he said he expected to shell out about $40,000 from his savings for the trip. He hopes to publish a book of his writings and photographs when he's done.

And no, he wasn't inspired by a broken heart, he said. No bad breakup back in Japan.

His journal and some pictures can be viewed at his website: http://alkinist.blog111.fc2.com (To see it in English, go to http://translate.google.com, paste in that Web address, select "Translate from Japanese" and "Translate into English," and click "Translate.")

Yoshida was unsure what route he would be taking west. His U.S. visa is good for only three months, so he'll probably be crossing into Canada by mid-November.

What will he do when he gets back to Japan? Sit and watch TV for a month?

Yes, he said, simply.

But he does hope to trek across the Sahara in Northern Africa, too.

His message for Americans: Please drive carefully. If you see a man lugging a cart along a highway because the local sidewalks are too narrow, please slow down.

from here
[font="Arial Black"][SIZE="7"]B[/SIZE][/font][font="Palatino Linotype"][SIZE="6"]u[/SIZE][/font][font="Comic Sans MS"][SIZE="5"]c[/SIZE][/font][font="Impact"][SIZE="6"]k[/SIZE][/font]
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Postby Taro Toporific » Fri Aug 27, 2010 3:23 pm

Bucky wrote:Image
Masahito Yoshida, a 29-year-old mechanical engineer from Japan...from here


They ought revoke his mechanical engineering degree for not building his own special-purpose "rear-car" and for using such crap equipment, sponsorship or not. In Yoshida's blog, he talks about he not being able to perform simple repairs like changing the hubs (which would not be necessary if he used hi-tech sealed racing hubs).

His "rear car" from his sponsor Nagano-alumi, it is waaaay too heavy and a primitive design. There are dozens of super light-weight bicycle trailers on the market that would serve him better---Just connect a bicycle trailer to a padded hipbelt that pivots off a Y-yoke (REI sells 'em cheap) and voila, 40-60% weight reduction over that crappy rear-car for kojiki.

I am planning a 88-temples-of-Shikoku walkabout for fall and I have considering pulling a monowheel bike trailer or maybe a bamboo rearcar for the proper O-henro-san pilgrimage look.


ImageImage
[floatr]Image[/floatr] During my summer breaks from college, I once walked from Mexico to Wyoming (4,200 km) and another time I bicycled Chicago to Denver (1,617 km |1005 miles), so I have plenty of sacred stones in my head to try a walkabout again.
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Postby Taro Toporific » Fri Aug 27, 2010 3:48 pm

His message for Americans: Please drive carefully. If you see a man lugging a cart along a highway because the local sidewalks are too narrow, please slow down.
from here



My message for Japanese faux-engineers:
Please obey the fucking law and affix the slow moving vehicle sign on the back of your Flintsones rearcar.

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Postby Coligny » Fri Aug 27, 2010 5:03 pm

Taro Toporific wrote:My message for Japanese faux-engineers:
Please obey the fucking law and affix the slow moving vehicle sign on the back of your Flintsones rearcar.

Image

I think in Japan the proper sign for slow moving vehicle is this one:

Image
Marion Marechal nous voila !

Verdun

ni oubli ni pardon

never forgive never forget/ for you illiterate kapitalist pigs


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Postby Ol Dirty Gaijin » Fri Aug 27, 2010 7:40 pm

Thanks Taro for the reminder.
All hail Chris King.
[color="white"][SIZE="1"]And the days of disposable income being spent on mountain bikes.[/SIZE][/color]
Never underestimate the power of very stupid people in large groups.
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Yoshida is a total tard!

Postby Taro Toporific » Fri Aug 27, 2010 10:16 pm

Ol Dirty Gaijin wrote:Thanks Taro for the reminder.
All hail Chris King.
[color="white"][SIZE="1"]And the days of disposable income being spent on mountain bikes.[/SIZE][/color]



Sorry. I'm old skool--the original, Phil's Hubs rule!

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Postby Kanchou » Sun Aug 29, 2010 10:23 pm

Shimano Dura Ace is superior.
THE RADIOACTIVE FG!
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