# 027 [ENG SUB] JAPANESE 100-YEAR-OLD HOUSE DIY & SIMPLE LIVING - Almost Ruined Barn and Garden Tour

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  • Опубліковано 30 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 19

  • @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO
    @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO  3 роки тому +2

    いつもご視聴、応援ありがとうございます😊
    🐜Don't forget to Subscribe us!(チャンネル登録をお忘れなく!)ua-cam.com/channels/c4ACSF6Qk6JFt4aQtyCu1Q.html

  • @心の親父
    @心の親父 3 роки тому +1

    長い生活を考えると物置兼作業場の小屋が一つ要ります。リノベーションが終わっても、次々やりたいことが出てきます。そのための作業場です。

    • @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO
      @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO  3 роки тому +1

      たしかにそうですよね!見通しを立てつつすすめていこうかと思います😳!

  • @nicolasm3217
    @nicolasm3217 3 роки тому +1

    Un boulot de monstre qui vous attend.
    Bon courage.

    • @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO
      @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO  3 роки тому +1

      I didn't understand French, so I used the app to translate. Thanks a lot! I'll do my best😁😁

  • @kou5048ify
    @kou5048ify Рік тому +2

    ふきのとう発見 私だったら、解らない

  • @calzoleriaalexander
    @calzoleriaalexander 3 роки тому +1

    Big property

  • @TOMII5906
    @TOMII5906 3 роки тому +1

    猫は適度の距離がいいよ、餌付けすると避妊などの費用が掛かる、責任もできるし。

  • @superiordirk
    @superiordirk 3 роки тому +1

    I really like this video! I appreciate the little details and discoveries. The fuki-no-tou is in Canada, but it is a giant variety. I wonder if it is the same? I also saw a wheelbarrow in one of the barns. I hope it is usable :-)
    One question about taking down the barns. Is it because they are too old? Or, do you have to take them down because you are not farmers, and the town is telling you too?
    I feel it is sad to waste things too. I grew up on a farm, we reused everything! Haha

    • @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO
      @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO  3 роки тому

      Thanks a lot Dirk😊 I didn't know there's fuki-no-tou in Canada too! but I'm not sure it's the same one... our one is an edible flower bud of the fuki (Petasites japonicus) plant.
      Yes, we got an old wheelbarrow☺️☺️with flat tire... but I'm thinking I could use it for something! And about taking down the barns, that's because it's too old, and if they collapse, the neighborhood will be disturbed😳

    • @superiordirk
      @superiordirk 3 роки тому

      @@JapanCountryLife_ALINCO thank you. I forgot to ask about the farmland. I have been researching old properties in Japan, and am familiar with the issue of attached farmland. In the video you mentioned you have to rent the farmland. Did you mean you got it with the old house, and have to rent it out to farmers? Or you can not own, and only rent for yourselves? I guess there are certain rules you need to follow to be classified as a farmer?
      I only ask because I read about the trouble buying old houses in Japan with farmland can be. But not much details as to why.
      In Canada, you can buy very small farms and as long as the farm business meets a minimum dollar amount of business, you are okay. Those requirements are not usually hard to meet, so these "farmers" are okay. These people do not need to be a 100% farmer. They can have whatever career they want, and go home and farm.

    • @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO
      @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO  3 роки тому +2

      @@superiordirk  You know a lot about farmland! I don't know much about this rule, but there are certain types of land that can only be bought by people who farm for a living, and we couldn't buy it because we are not farmers.

  • @みち-u9m
    @みち-u9m 3 роки тому +1

    解体は相見積もりを色んな業者から取りましょう
    納屋で300〜500は…高杉です( o̴̶̷᷄ ·̫ o̴̶̷̥᷅ )

    • @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO
      @JapanCountryLife_ALINCO  3 роки тому +2

      たくさんのコメント嬉しいです!
      とても励みになります😊
      納屋複数と、コンクリートをはつるのなども含めてだったので高かったのかなあと。あと廃棄にもお金がかかるので...どうしようかまだ検討中です...たぶん、いつか自分たちで解体します笑