Monday, September 30, 2013

grapes for over a hundred dollars each

Man, this is insane.  Over a decade ago I heard about melons that sell for a hundred dollars, but nothing like this.  When I go walking through the basements of department stores, I see melons sometimes.  I don't price them because I know I'm not going to  buy them.  The melons I buy at the supermarket might be 580 yen each, somewhere in that vicinity.  At Lawson's 100 they sell an eighth of a cantaloupe (in the summer) for a hundred yen. 

But melons that go for the price of brand-new cars. . .I believe that such things exist; I just haven't seen them yet since moving here.  I suppose if I changed my lifestyle. . .Geez man how can you pay that much for a melon?
http://news.yahoo.com/japans-luxury-fruit-masters-grow-money-trees-072811811.html

Or read below
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Japan's luxury fruit masters grow money on trees

 To go to the original url, click here: 

Tokyo (AFP) - With melons that sell for the price of a new car and grapes that go for more than $100 a pop, Japan is a country where perfectly-formed fruit can fetch a fortune.

An industry of fruit boutiques has defied Japan's sluggish economy to consistently offer luscious and lavishly tended produce for hefty prices -- and it is always in demand.

In July, a single bunch of "Ruby Roman" grapes reportedly sold for 400,000 yen ($4,000), making the plump, crimson berries worth a staggering 11,000 yen each.

Every May, a pair of canteloupe melons grown in the north of Hokkaido is auctioned off. They regularly fetch the price of a modest new car.

The hammer fell on this year's pair at a cool 1.6 million yen.

While such cases are at the extreme end, top-notch fruit is a valuable commodity in the world of business and as a seasonal gift, signifying just how much importance the giver attaches to the relationship.
"Most of our products are for gift purposes, so we collect large and high-grade products from all around Japan," says Yoshinobu Ishiyama, manager of a branch of Sun Fruits at Tokyo Midtown, a glitzy office-commercial complex that is also home to a Ritz Carlton Hotel.

"We offer rare products. Above all, they have to be delicious," he says.
'You never forget the experience'

Inside his bright, white-tiled emporium, an array of mouth-watering fruits gives off a heady, brain-tingling aroma as soothing music lulls his well-heeled customers.

While Ishiyama doesn't have anything you could trade for a mid-range auto, he does have a slightly more affordable example of the "Ruby Roman" grapes -- a snip at 31,500 yen for a bunch.

A single white peach -- flavourful, perfectly round and about the size of a newborn baby's head -- goes for 2,625 yen. A bunch of Muscat of Alexandria grapes has a 7,350 yen price tag.

Then, there is the unrivalled symbol of expensive gifts in Japan: musk melons.

Sitting in individual wooden boxes on the top shelf of a glass-door refrigerator at the back of the shop, they will set you back as much as 16,000 yen.

There are also square watermelons -- grown in plastic boxes and usually for decoration -- which start at 5,000 yen.

As with everything in Japan, presentation is key: serried ranks of cherries line up in boxes, their stalks all facing in the same direction; strawberries nestle in soft packaging, their highly-shined, deep red surface uniformly patinated by seeds.
It goes without saying that there are no blemishes. Nothing is bruised, everything is exactly the right shape, as if each fruit has been cast in wax by a master craftsman working off the original blueprints.

Of course, not everyone buys their bananas at places like Sun Fruits; much more affordable offerings are on display in the average supermarket.

But to lubricate the wheels of social exchange in a country that has a deeply ingrained culture of gift-giving, nothing matches high-end fruit.

At summer and year-end, households send packaged gifts to relatives, business associates and bosses to express their gratitude.

If the two sides of the exchange are of a broadly similar social standing the gift is reciprocated. A 4,000 yen box of cherries might be given in exchange for a 5,000 yen presentation pack of mangoes.

If the giver owes for social favours dispensed through the year, there could be no change from that 16,000 yen musk melon. But the boss who receives it will understand how grateful you are.

The giving of high-end fruits creates a lasting impression on Japanese clients, says Tokyo-based corporate trainer Farhad Kardan, who was strolling through Sun Fruits choosing possible gifts.

"You buy these delicious things and share a great time with people who are close to you," he told AFP.
"You never forget the experience of having eaten something so delicious. What you pay for is for the quality and the value."

How can fruit cost so much?
Despite more than a decade of deflation, prices for fresh food in Japan are considered high by world standards, partially as a result of farming practices and import preferences. Consumers are accustomed to paying a premium on Japanese-grown produce, with many believing it to be safer and better quality than imports.

But even so, many open-mouthed visitors to Japan wonder: how can a piece of fruit cost so much?
Ishiyama says his master musk melon grower Toshiaki Nishihara puts a whole lot of love into each fruit he raises in his computer-controlled greenhouse in Shizuoka prefecture, southwest of Tokyo.

He hand-pollinates his crop and selects only one melon on each plant so that all the nutrients, sugar and juice are concentrated in the chosen fruit.

Like their $16,000 cousins from Hokkaido, the best-quality melons are perfect spheres with a smooth, evenly patterned rind.

"The prices are very high because of the care and cost that go into the fruits," Ishiyama said.
The AFP team who visited Sun Fruits was about to walk away empty-handed when they spotted two regular apples by the door -- a bargain at a little over $4 for the pair.

Friday, September 13, 2013

The Story of Hello Kitty

I think the most surprising revelation in this story for me was that the identity of Hello Kitty's creator has been kept secret all this time.  It wasn't as surprising that Shintaro Tsuji is a billionaire.  Growing up in Hawai'i, I've been surrounded by Sanrio characters since, I don't know, preschool. . .I have the faint memory of female classmates walking in Hello Kitty slippers that squeaked with every step.  But maybe it's just a conjured memory; I can't be sure without photographic proof.  Anyway, the girls that I knew from that wee age loved Kitty and friends no more than did the adult women I worked with decades later at a drugstore (Longs), where I believe employees had a 50% discount on Sanrio products.  They bought that stuff up like crazy.

Fast forward to Japan, where I started out at an English conversation school in Tokyo, teaching alongside Becky from Great Britain.  Becky's on a trip round the world, put on pause so that she can properly experience Japan and build her savings a bit before continuing her journey.  She and her boyfriend have seen some things, trekked the hard way through South America and Australia.  She carries her own humongous backpack, a seasoned traveler who's pulled her own weight through multiple continents.

I can't recall the name of the student, but Becks and I both taught her.  Very nice young woman.  So whenever she and Becks get together, they whip out Hello Kitty stickers or Hello Kitty compact mirrors or, I honestly don't know because I wasn't really paying attention, but I guess there are literally thousands of other cute, cute products available.  The ladies sit in a corner and share these products and scream out "Kawaiii!  Kawaii!" as they revel in the cuteness and femininity.  I swear those were the only times I've seen my dear friend Becky be like that.  It was transformative, and endearing of course.  That's when I knew that Hello Kitty and Sanrio were a worldwide phenomenon.  Apparently Becks fell in love with Kitty before she set out  from the UK.

A short bit on the creator's life on this page, and in the video below.


Thursday, September 12, 2013

Mt. Fuji's mixed blessings

A story from the Canadian Press recently came out (through the AP) about Mt. Fuji's recently-bestowed status as a World Heritage site:

 World Heritage status a mixed blessing for Mount Fuji, as region braces for crowds

 MOUNT FUJI, Japan - They trudge up well-trod cinder paths by the thousands, headlamps glowing in the dark, and then settle in, shivering, to await and cheer the sun's blazing ascent over the horizon.

Climbing Mount Fuji, Japan's most iconic landmark, is a group activity: Seldom is it climbed in solitude. The recent recognition of the 3,776-meter (12,388-foot) peak as a UNESCO World Heritage site has many here worried that it will draw still more people, adding to the wear and tear on the environment from the more than 300,000 who already climb the mountain each year.

Safety is another concern. At least seven people died and 70 were hurt climbing Fuji In 2012, and traffic jams of climbers in the pre-dawn darkness can add to the risks, says Shomei Yokouchi, governor of Yamanashi, the area to the west. The official climbing season runs July to August, and the trek — nine hours round trip in good weather — is especially treacherous other times of the year.

Mount Fuji's near perfect cone was created by an eruption thousands of years ago that buried earlier peaks, and pilgrims have been climbing it for centuries — though women have been allowed only since 1868. It towers over the Pacific coast, ringed by lakes, national parks, temples and shrines that are also part of the World Heritage site.

The new status, granted in June, will likely help area businesses — a welcome boost given the economic decline in most of rural Japan. Local authorities are puzzling, however, over how to preserve the mountain's natural beauty while improving traffic access and other facilities to accommodate the anticipated increase in visitors.

Some have suggested limiting access by raising tenfold the 1,000 yen ($10) climbing fee. But that might lead climbers to risk hypothermia by roughing it outdoors instead of staying in the 16 huts along the top of the trail, which charge up to $100 a night for cheek-by-jowl communal accommodations.

"With more foreigners visiting, we will need to think of improving the facilities," Gov. Yokouchi says, noting that the installation of composting toilets has helped. "They are cleaner than before and the smell's not so bad, but there are not enough of them."

Then there's the litter.  Each year 40,000 to 50,000 volunteers clean up garbage on the peak. Groups collected nearly 900 tons to prepare for June's World Heritage vote by UNESCO, the U.N.'s cultural organization.

The designation is something to be proud of, says Hisataka Kurosawa, a 16-year-old high school student who recently joined a group of volunteers who climbed part of a trail and then scrounged around a car park near a visitor centre, collecting several big bags worth of oil cans, cigarette butts, car parts and candy wrappers.

"It's getting polluted and so many people are running around. I'm a bit disappointed about that," he says.
The volunteers were led by Toyohiro Watanabe, a former local government official who runs a civic group called Groundwork Mishima.

It's not just the crowds that worry him. He also frets over acid rain from sea water mixed with emissions from factories on the coast. And over invasive plant species, such as the bamboo grass that grows thick along the roadsides, obscuring some of the litter tossed from passing vehicles.

Global warming may be contributing to huge fissures on Fuji's slopes, prone to erosion and landslides, he says. "Although Fuji has a power of its own, it is being influenced by global warming and other factors," Watanabe says as he looks for trouble spots in some of the most frequented areas. "It is getting weaker."

Though it last erupted in 1707, Mount Fuji remains an active volcano and Japanese seismologists watch it closely. The bigger risk, though, is from accidents.

Fuji is hardly steep, but its high elevation and fickle weather can make it a hazardous climb. "There are rock falls, and sometimes people are unable to get out of the way," Gov. Yokouchi says.

UNESCO has long acknowledged the risks to World Heritage sites, both from natural disasters and unsustainable levels of tourism. Even for a country as wealthy as Japan, tight budgets mean fewer resources available to support conservation.

Click here to go to the website source.



Saturday, September 7, 2013

Tokyo Olympics 2020



The first thing I found out when I woke this morning was that Tokyo had won its bid to host the 2020 Olympics.  I'm not sure why but I was a little surprised; maybe it's because it seems like people have been trying for so long to bring the event here.  Some people, I should say.  It was about eight or so years ago that I heard the mayor was campaigning hard for it to happen.

To tell the truth, during the months leading up to this I hardly heard people talk about it.  I had one somewhat lengthy discussion with one of my fellow teachers at work, and he felt that most Japanese people were indifferent to the Olympic bid.  (He's from the UK.)  We talked with a couple of our Japanese colleagues, and they expressed some mild hopes that 2020 would happen for the city.

So after learning the news, I had a second small surprise; my Facebook newsfeed shows almost nothing but shouts of joy over this morning's announcement.  Here are a handful:

  • YAAY!! 2020 Olympics in Tokyo!! Now all of u have to visit me in Tokyo!XD
  • Tokyo Olympic in 2020!!!!:))) feeling excited.
  • YAYYY!!! YESYESYES !!!! TOKYO OLYMPICS 2020!!! I KNEW IT!!
    AND IT WILL BE ME TO SING AT THE OPENING CEREMONY!
  • Tokyo won the Olympics in 2020?? I can't imagine Tokyo will be more crowded than it already is...
  • TOKYO 2020!!!:D #summerolympics
  • Tokyo Olympics 2020 babyyy♡
  • Tokyo Olympic 2020:)
  • Congrats Tokyo!!!!! オリンピックを観に行くわー!てかその時の私はどこにいるかしら(笑)有明のテニスセンター新しくなるみたいんで楽しみ!
  • TOKYO Olympic 2020!!! Yay!!!
  • I'm proud of TOKYO!!! TOKYO 2020おめでとうございます!!!
  • Tokyo Olympic 2020. so who is gonna come visit me
  • Congrats JAPAN!
  • Yes!!!
  • オリンピック、東京開催決定!
    本当に嬉しい・・・本当に嬉しい!
    滝川クリステルの美貌のおかげもあるでしょう!!!!!!!!!ありがとうジャパーン☆ おめでとジャパーン☆
    開催時は何らかの形で関わりたいなー!
  • Tokyo will be hosting the Olympics in 2020 but I'm not too keen on the idea... Tteiuka thinking that far ahead makes me a bit depressed. I will be 38 and my parents will be 75 and 67!!!
  • Tokyo 2020!!!! Yaaaaaaaaay! Woohooo!!
  • Olympic city, cool!
  • Can't believe, the Olympic will be held here!? Hope it willl do good for many people. Btw, my friends in foreign countries, are able to come here hahaha
  • Tokyo Olympic:)))
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I really didn't know that so many of my friends cared. . .