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Taka-Okami wrote:Anyone ever heard of anyone relocating one of those old Japanese farm houses overseas?
AML wrote:The chapel where my wife and i got married was brought over from the UK. (only real thing about our wedding...)
Taka-Okami wrote:Anyone ever heard of anyone relocating one of those old Japanese farm houses overseas?
Catoneinutica wrote:Yeah, I've heard of people relocating to the US the big beams and as much of the supporting structure as they can salvage. Suppose the info's out there on the net.
FG Lurker wrote:There used to be one of those in Umeda but that wedding place got torn down a while ago. Is that where you got hitched?
AML wrote:Dont think so. We got married in Hachioji. Near a river. Nice place.
http://www.hotel-newgrand.com/wedding/index.html
AML wrote:Ha lol, maybe yeah. Dont remember.
The chapel was nice at least...
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:You're lucky...wher I come from, Chappells are loud-mouthed bastards with a predilection for dropping their pants or having a problem with their underarms...
GomiGirl wrote:OMG am I showing my age by understanding this underarm reference?
But after today's performance, I think the Aussies would be wishing for a return of the Chappells - any of them.
Screwed-down Hairdo wrote:Nah, you're still young....I remember Vic Richardson, their grandpa!
The decline has been fast and furious...and, just to rub it in, Melbourne looks like it will stay sunny enough for long enough to get a result. Still, the Poms are clearly the much better team and good luck to them. They cheerily put up with this stuff for decades, so giving us some humble pie for Christmas is not too bad.
Taka-Okami wrote:Hopefully the sudden decline in Australian cricket will be emulated in the decline of the disgustingly over priced house prices down here.
On a another note, I am starting to dected a lot of fear out there, people are starting to cut back and are worried about keeping their jobs. 2011 will not be a good year for Aus, or the world.
In the next few years we will see disease, crop failures, famine on a massive scale.
GomiGirl wrote:First the Aus cricket goes down the gurgler - next thing will be Armageddon..
Oh dear we are really living on the razors edge.
REPENT ALL SINNERS.
Taka-Okami wrote:Sorry, I don't see much hope for humanity.
Taka-Okami wrote:...the next few years we will see disease, crop failures, famine on a massive scale.
Taro Toporific wrote:I really hate to say it, but buying a Japanese minka/farmhouse and NOT moving it would be the best plan if "disease, crop failures, famine" worries you.
In terms of the best-bang-for-the-buck, Japan's insanely fertile soil, generous rainfall and wildly low prices for farms make it it an ideal place to own a farm if you have a secondary source of real income (or retirement savings). There are plenty 1 million farms available in Japan boonies---10 million can buy a farkquing palace.
I have an artist friend and family living at a world heritage site in Toyama who bought and restored a huge thatched minka for less than 6 million yen. The place is worth sixty trillion yen of happiness when you see his robust boys and rosy-cheeked young wife (rather than the typical pale, pathetic, neurotically-weaselly looking school-kids and cranky housewives of Kanto).
Refer to:
"Zenkoku Jubun MINKA no Tudoi"---Japan Historic House Owners' Society
http://www.jminka.gr.jp/about_e.html
http://www.jminka.gr.jp/
Taka-Okami wrote:Haha Japan? They can't even feed themselves. From memory I think they can only provide 50% of daily calorific needs the rest is imported.
Taro Toporific wrote:I have an artist friend and family living at a world heritage site in Toyama who bought and restored a huge thatched minka for less than 6 million yen. The place is worth sixty trillion yen of happiness when you see his robust boys and rosy-cheeked young wife (rather than the typical pale, pathetic, neurotically-weaselly looking school-kids and cranky housewives of Kanto).
Yokohammer wrote:
One of the reasons I moved to the "inaka" (other than the fact that I just like the inaka) is that if the shit ever really does hit the fan, at least we'll be able to eat.
Taka-Okami wrote:Your issue will be, if the shit does hit the fan, is dealing with millions (thats right) of hungry city folk raiding you and your neigbours vegie patch. And you won't be able to keep them out. (Guns hard to come by in Japan!).
The word is when Argentina went ass up, the ones that suffered most were those in the deep inaka. Basically there were roaming gangs, raping, looting and killing as they pleased, with not many around to hear their screams.
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