nuitari k nah, every level of government here is already extremely broke due to the large amount of old people getting paid by the government, but an extremely small work force to tax, and it’s getting smaller.
nuitari k only if they’re working and paying tax, no one already in the country is going to ditch the city for nowhere, towns all over the country are turning into ghost towns, I used to live in the rural country side, literally nothing but old people, young adults, kids and teenagers were extremely rare, it was kind of scary, but nothing is really going to change this trend, unless wages go up and work hours go down, the birth rate is just gonna keep dropping.
Velvet & Toads that’s what I was thinking I mean isn’t that the story of this channel. In these types of videos also help with foreigners I mean me and my husband genuinely or fascinated about this opportunity.
I'm always interested in seeing semi-abandoned houses with artifacts left behind. I'm an antiquer, a junker and an amatuer anothropologist. I bought my house as is and I'm still using the left behind things. They were useful because my previous house had burned from bad electrical which at the time, I couldn't afford to upgrade.
There is definite potential with some of the houses, while others probably can't be saved. I've heard of a program here in the U.S. where architecture and trade schools will buy old houses that students must work on to give them hands-on experience. Or as part of scholarship programs, students will need to renovate so many projects (carpentry, electrical, plumbing, etc.) to help fund their schooling, as well as providing work experience. Others do it as a possible final project. When the houses are fully repaired and/or renovated, the schools can either sell or rent out the homes to various interested parties.
Walter A what a great idea!! I didn’t know about that program, but it sounds terrific and what a great thing that people are learning the trades! It’s funny here in the Washington DC area, because we have so much technology industry, which is supposedly rare to find the skilled IT and data analytics professionals. But you can wait weeks to get a plumber, electrician, and just try to find a carpenter ~ that’s harder than finding a software developer in these parts!
I'm sure you're much too busy with your own house and life, but I think I it would be a good idea for the local governments to do more house tours of other abandoned and for sale homes in Japan! It would definitely help to get interest in them. Glad to see you're doing well, cant wait for the next update!
In the future there won't be any other choice but to heavily promote and streamline abandoned house acquisitions. Otherwise there are going to be a lot of towns returning to open spaces, with nature taking back over as it inevitably will.
I'm a carpenter here in America and I could absolutely fix any of those houses. My only thought would be codes, rules, taboos, etc. I wouldn't even know where to start when it came to fixing things by the books. Well, by their books.
7:27 This stopped clock is an apt metaphor for these houses. They seem to be frozen in time, yet slowly succumbing to it. It's a little sad to see these houses, so carefully constructed, gradually fade away. At one time they were homes and businesses. Now, there's only the sound of the wind and the rain. Thank you for this little tour. I can see marvelous potential in these homes, if only they could attract people with vision (and lots of spondulix!). Looking forward to the next video.
the abandoned farm-house is my absolute dream. All that land and the beautiful architecture, I wouldn't change a lot. I think I would only fix it up and modernise the kitchen and bathroom.
Thank you for showing us around places in Japan that most of us do not know or even heard about. I think if I ever got to visit Japan I would like to see the rural areas.
Beautiful. And a shame it's empty. I would love too go once to Japan.the seamstress house. I'd open it back up as a Taylor shop. Iam a seamstress and would be honored too cont that tradition in the home.
@@sylvrscorpyn I suppose you are correct. You couldn't sell local and make any money so with a good online presence you could be located anywhere and the postal/delivery service in Japan is second to none.
Why do I feel so emotional about abandoned houses? I immediately start to imagine the people inside ....living their daily lives..... plus there is something so unique and special about Japanese culture.
Love your choices of music, it really adds a mysterious, melancholic vibe to the island. As you've said, it must really be different living there, and great for those seeking a quieter existence.
What a beautiful “tiny” house!! If I had the money and a small family, I think that would be a lovely place to move too. Just the right size where it would be easy to maintain.
I am fascinated by old Japanese architecture. I have always wanted to design a home based upon the older traditional styles in Japan, while incorporating some American conveniences.
Anybody interested in living there - bear in mind that gold mining quite often means heavy mercury pollution. I'd test soil and water samples from the plot and a few different spots on the island before moving in. Especially if you have or planning children.
I used to work 5 years at a plant nursery, I love gardening. If I lived in Sado I'd volunteer to tend to the abandoned yards and gardens there. It would be like a dream some true to make all those outdoor spaces beautiful again. Working with old growth trees and shrubs, seeing heirlooms flowering bulbs, discovering which self-seeding "volunteers" survived and grew in old abandoned gardens. What fun. ^_^ I have no skills in carpentry or renovation but I imagine that's the satisfaction the people who fix those houses feels. My own home has daffodils and crocuses that were planted over 40 years ago. It's surprising what plant life thrives throughout years. In the south you can identify old homestead sites by the daffodils in the land long after the houses are nothing but stone rubble in the woods.
This video was really wholesome in a way, it’s not only helping the world get encouraged about these much needed love houses but also appreciating them for what they are and what they can be.
Very interesting as my late grandmother had her origin in Sado Island. One thing to point out is that the corner you assumed as Butsudan (a Buddhist altar) should have resided, should be in fact a decorative alcove space (tokonoma), where we used to cast a hanging scroll-style picture on its wall (you can see some hanger belts at the top), or place some small ornament (like a statue, arranged flowers etc.) at the bottom. The presence of a tokonoma usually indicates the principal room of the house.
I loved this video and have been giving some serious thought about moving to Japan. Great houses featured, and I am looking forward to seeing your progress!
Thank you. I stayed on Sado Island in 1973 as a part of my high school’s exchange program. Went back to visit in 2019. It is good to see that some houses are being saved.
I can't express how much I love these videos. So much beautiful houses that require love. I really hope these island will attract more people to kick-start back the population and preservation of the island
I love that house in the cemetery so much. The surrounding garden was overgrown but beautiful, and some of the remaining outbuildings had so much history and character. I think it would be amazing to fix the place up, clean up the graves, and discover what you could about the history of the former residents, the local town, and people buried there.
Every time I am in a traditional Japanese house I feel like being at home. I am sure I will follow this felling in a few years my heart is in Japan. These houses deserve to be rescued. ♥️
*sells all possessions immediately* Now to buff up on my Japanese, so that I can live in a secluded town doing research and making UA-cam videos FOREVER! Muwhahahahaha! All joking aside, THANK YOU! This is wonderful. Very little in the way of real estate is available on the American Web friendly sights right now. Everything is brand new mansions (apartments) and share houses.
I know right? I was thinking maybe I should move to Japan looking at this lol! The introvert in me would love living in that house. But I'd eventually miss my loved ones here. Guess I care about my family after all.
@@elfiefromangelcity6142 That is what Skype is for. Lolol. And guilt tripping family into visiting YOU, so you don't have to pay for the plane ticket. XD
Not gonna lie, my current house has doubled in value and if I sold it now I would walk away with around $230.000 clean profit. I could buy an akiya and renovate it. I just don't know what my job would be over there. Currently I'm a software tester and can only speak a bit of Japanese
Fantastic this last house with more than 300 years. Of course they are all amazing and as an architect I feel enchanted by all of them. Congratulations on the initiative, nice trip.
"It's kind of like a Japanese Ballarat." You can immerse the boy in Japan, but you can't take Victoria out of the boy! It was a brave, but admirable, move by that local builder to renovate that townhouse to save it from demolition, considering the state of the local real estate market. You mentioned that the island has fibreoptic cable. As far as you know, is that fibre right to the home? If you move into a house where the previous occupants have maintained a shrine to their ancestors, is it acceptable to retain that shrine to honour your own ancestors as well, or is it expected that you will replace it with a shrine dedicated to your own ancestors?
I'll double check - I THINK in many places it's to the home but I'm not sure. I haven't started researching our installation yet so not on top of this topic.
@@TokyoLlama Hey man, don't sweat it, though. I'm not thinking of moving to Japan, so it's not critical. I was just curious whether the Japanese routinely got fibre right to their home, or just to a node somewhere nearby in the neighbourhood, with the final run to the home being legacy copper cable. Under the Australian National (so-called) Broadband Network project, most of us back here are being delivered merely the second-rate option of fibre-to-the-node, but I imagine that fibre right to the home would be more economical in Japan on account of the higher residential density.
@@willpugh-calotte2199 Huh? Meanwhile, up here on the opposite end of the world in Maple Country, we're not being given a choice about getting fibre-optic cable right to our houses. They're going through our neighbourhoods and digging up our streets, driveways, sidewalks and lawns to install fibre-optic right up to our house', even if we already have something else thats possibly even faster. Now, i wouldn't mind if they were willing to install utilities to our garden sheds and greenhouses while they were at it, but noooooo. We have to pay for that destruction ourselves while they just destroy the rest of our properties for free to bring us the service we may or may no want. Go figure. }8P
¡Gracias!, por fin un nuevo vídeo y además interesante. Al mostrar tan detalladamente cada sendero, cada callejón, cada camino, me hace sentir que estoy presente. Las casas y sitios abandonados son un imán para mí, dan nostalgia y mucha paz, me lleno de preguntas como quiénes fueron felices o desdichados en esos lugares, cuales fueron los sentimientos que unieron a sus habitantes, qué están haciendo ahora, para qué o en dónde están...como siempre, este vídeo me encantó. Saludos desde CALI Colombia.
I LOVE your videos. You put so much work into creating wonderful production quality and I love seeing these beautiful places. Your house renovation is amazing.
I feel in love with the house in the cemetery. In all honesty its kinda cute for some reason you could clean it all up and honor the dead who are buried there. I also think the last place was also kinda lovely it has so much space and just needs a little work done.
As always, great video's that are so very informative. As a history buff in architecture and building techniques, it always saddens me when I see so many lovely homes, homes that for some have stood for more than a century, being left neglected and abandoned, and having government regulation making it so difficult for people to come along and purchase this places so they can fix-up or restore them to some semblance of their original looks, Native Japanese or foreigners alike. Keep up the great video's there and I, like many, many others, look forward to the future video's of the progress you're making on your own, no-longer-abandoned house (is that a possible second floor being established in the background there? If so, then good on you mate). Ja ne! XD
I love your videos! I live in a land locked state in the US and to see Island countries and what home renovations and what they look like is a great joy. Thank you for all you do!
12:20 when you went into the cemetery, MY reaction was... "uuuh...whah... OH, gravestones! how GORGEOUS to be snuggled into the previous generations like that - their houses, our houses, how super-cool!!"- we are [very] close to our past ones, they are still around us...
Your b-roll powers are growing stronger! But seriously, great work on the video. It's awesome to see your home progression and japanese adventures, while also watching your film making skills grow by proxy. Keep up the great work, much love from America.
Your videos are always very entertaining. This time I felt like I was transported back in time with the music being spot on in setting a melancholic and nostalgic mood. When you finish your house, you could make a career out of doing a series on Japanese Home Renos and traveling around Japan looking for great little spots to settle down in.
Your videos are awesome, I love each one! I just get so homesick watching them that I can't stand it sometimes. Really makes me want to go back to Japan.
This was fun to watch. I enjoyed watching you explore old abandoned homes. Sort of like a ghost hunt but we get to see what the houses look like on the inside.
thank you, this is lovely and calming.. honestly if I were to buy an Akiya on Sado I'd move there, lightly clean the house up and live out the next 20 or so years of my life as a near hermit and love the tranquility, the weather and a slower pace of life. It would give me the time to learn the language to be able to chat with the few friends I'd make and to respect the beautiful countryside.
I would get the bathroom, kitchen and a couple of rooms for sleeping operational, then work on the rest slowly. It would be so much fun to go through all of the things and supplies in there as a crafter! Also, I wonder if there is some sort procedure you have to observe for taking down that Altar. It's presence in my home would conflict with my beliefs but I wouldn't want to offend locals by just tearing down either.
I have another video of us preparing to take down the altar. You need to perform a “oharae” Shinto purification ceremony with a Shinto priest. Then it take be taken down and burnt.
I gather it's pretty much the way to have one of those ceremonies done even if it *doesn't* conflict with your beliefs, just cause it's to do with another family even if you put your own one of those right back up, so it seems that's pretty 'routine' over there, just out of respect. (I happen to be quite the pantheist but it'd still be the Thing To Do, I understand. ) But yeah, there's a lot of crafter-candy about these old houses, not to mention a lot of work to do, which can be appealing, if daunting. :) Those of us from elsewhere may have more enthusiasm about 'old stuff' than the locals necessarily do, that way. It does seem a lot of them mean that at least you wouldn't have to do a lot of shopping for dishes. :)
The landscapes of Japan are impressive, I would love to travel and see the rural areas with traditional houses. At the moment I thank you for sharing your videos with us!
I'd love to go to Japan once and visit these old houses. I love these types of old houses since they usually exude this sort-of nostalgic and organic feel for me. It's as if they are now part of the natural environment; extremely opposite to the design of modern houses today where they want to stand out as much as possible. Edit: Just to add, what amazed me is the fact that these houses did not have any marks of vandalism on them.
This was a great video; the sort of incredible, niche content that is the true beauty of the internet. I absolutely love how detailed and intimate you go into whatever subject you're discussing on this channel, its always fascinating!
That's fair comment. I had no Ill intent in asking just that it's getting the context of you being there and it's just all very interesting. But the best to you all. Looking forward to seeing how the house progresses. :-)
I wish to share that I really enjoy the content you create on your channel. I know you’re very busy with work, family and of course, renovating your own house. But I hope more videos will follow soon! All the best and thanks for sharing all that you have thus far!
Very interesting Video! Thank You for sharing! I'm looking forward to the progress on your house. I really admire your energy in keeping up with all that work.
hoping you'll upload your next video soon. i'm loving all the information about akiya and seeing your renovations being done! would be an interesting series to go to japanese towns and look at their local akiya!
This video was so well done. At the beginning it was like watching a pro documentary. Good " backdrop" info of the Island and surrounding areas. Amazing job. The 1st house was HUGE, but I too would prefer the smaller one w/ gate and front yard.Look forward to your next video!
Seems like a nice project to renovate, it did remind though of how I'm always been wondering after visiting Japanese friends how they all seem to accumulate such a plethora of stuff that should've been thrown away ages ago...
It's because getting rid of anything in Japan is a nightmare. Not like the UK where you Chuck in the black bin or take it to the recycling centre for free (they take pretty much anything)
@@jenniferpayne8432 Ah, I see, makes sense. I'm probably used to the same thing here, that although we're supposed to sort everything I can just go to the city dump with bigger things and throw it in the correct garbage container for free. Seems like bad idea for Japan though, when people accumulate so much *crap* that people would think they were hoarders.
Great video. I have always loved Japan and I have wanted to visit but I am afraid if I do I will not leave I just love Japan and Japanese culture and I would move to a island just like that and take care of my bonsai trees.
Beautiful island. Missed this haunting location with these stunning views last time I was there. Will take a gander next time I'm over there! Excellent video!
Thank you for making these videos! I eventually want to buy an akiya as well and your videos have definitely helped getting a better idea on how to do it, ありがとうな。
I really love your videos, thanks for sharing them. I love all the old traditional houses and shrines. The 300 year old house is beautiful I'd live there straight away if I could.
I feel like local government should sponsor you going around and doing this! I think you’re inspiring a lot of people!
nuitari k nah, every level of government here is already extremely broke due to the large amount of old people getting paid by the government, but an extremely small work force to tax, and it’s getting smaller.
Alice Volkov thanks why more people living there would help :)
nuitari k only if they’re working and paying tax, no one already in the country is going to ditch the city for nowhere, towns all over the country are turning into ghost towns, I used to live in the rural country side, literally nothing but old people, young adults, kids and teenagers were extremely rare, it was kind of scary, but nothing is really going to change this trend, unless wages go up and work hours go down, the birth rate is just gonna keep dropping.
Aren’t there a lot of old people because people in cities don’t have the living space to raise children? Seems like the perfect opportunity!
Velvet & Toads that’s what I was thinking I mean isn’t that the story of this channel. In these types of videos also help with foreigners I mean me and my husband genuinely or fascinated about this opportunity.
Not gonna lie... I really wish you could of looked inside that second house coz I may or may not have instantly fallen in love with the exterior...
Yeah, I really wanted to too. I did ask but they couldn’t get in contact with the owner. That was my favourite house just looking from the outside.
Same it looks so nice I wish I could find a house like that with a big garden
I'm always interested in seeing semi-abandoned houses with artifacts left behind. I'm an antiquer, a junker and an amatuer anothropologist. I bought my house as is and I'm still using the left behind things. They were useful because my previous house had burned from bad electrical which at the time, I couldn't afford to upgrade.
There is definite potential with some of the houses, while others probably can't be saved. I've heard of a program here in the U.S. where architecture and trade schools will buy old houses that students must work on to give them hands-on experience. Or as part of scholarship programs, students will need to renovate so many projects (carpentry, electrical, plumbing, etc.) to help fund their schooling, as well as providing work experience. Others do it as a possible final project. When the houses are fully repaired and/or renovated, the schools can either sell or rent out the homes to various interested parties.
I've seen one Japanese school doing that with akiya here. I'll check it out, might be an interesting topic for a video at some point.
Walter A what a great idea!! I didn’t know about that program, but it sounds terrific and what a great thing that people are learning the trades! It’s funny here in the Washington DC area, because we have so much technology industry, which is supposedly rare to find the skilled IT and data analytics professionals. But you can wait weeks to get a plumber, electrician, and just try to find a carpenter ~ that’s harder than finding a software developer in these parts!
I'm sure you're much too busy with your own house and life, but I think I it would be a good idea for the local governments to do more house tours of other abandoned and for sale homes in Japan! It would definitely help to get interest in them. Glad to see you're doing well, cant wait for the next update!
In the future there won't be any other choice but to heavily promote and streamline abandoned house acquisitions. Otherwise there are going to be a lot of towns returning to open spaces, with nature taking back over as it inevitably will.
I'm a carpenter here in America and I could absolutely fix any of those houses. My only thought would be codes, rules, taboos, etc. I wouldn't even know where to start when it came to fixing things by the books. Well, by their books.
Thank you for showing a world that I could never imagined ever seeing
That last 300 year old house and garden is beautiful. I would so live there. Stunning island. Lovely video, thanks.
Yes, that one’s available for rent I believe. They want to restore it but don’t have the funds right now.
@@TokyoLlama what a lovely thought!
7:27 This stopped clock is an apt metaphor for these houses. They seem to be frozen in time, yet slowly succumbing to it.
It's a little sad to see these houses, so carefully constructed, gradually fade away. At one time they were homes and businesses. Now, there's only the sound of the wind and the rain.
Thank you for this little tour. I can see marvelous potential in these homes, if only they could attract people with vision (and lots of spondulix!).
Looking forward to the next video.
In Japanese culture they have this concept "Mono no aware." It's a melancholy reflection on the fact that nothing lasts.
the abandoned farm-house is my absolute dream. All that land and the beautiful architecture, I wouldn't change a lot. I think I would only fix it up and modernise the kitchen and bathroom.
The open roof at 3:15 seconds in the restaurant must validate your open roof concept for your kitchen ❤️
Yes, I can’t lie - I was thinking of my place and the wood burning stove. The place was nice and warm!
I thought the same thing!
Thank you for showing us around places in Japan that most of us do not know or even heard about. I think if I ever got to visit Japan I would like to see the rural areas.
Interesting houses shown, it shows too of how much of a gem you have found in yours.
His home is a priceless work of art imo.
Me, has barely enough money to survive:
This video:
Me: I should buy an abandoned Japanese house right now!
This llama dude has loads of dough
Fascinating. Gives me a strangely nostalgic feeling.
Me too! It reminded me of a Japanese version of my Grandma's house in Cambria California.
I feel sad while I was watching your walk around video. There were people, there was glorious time, all gone.
Thank you for sharing! I love these little travel logs. You are too kind to take us with you.
Beautiful. And a shame it's empty. I would love too go once to Japan.the seamstress house. I'd open it back up as a Taylor shop. Iam a seamstress and would be honored too cont that tradition in the home.
Sounds like a good idea but with an ageing and declining population I think it would be hard to sell your wares.
Michael Magill it could be pricy, but I’m sue elaine could sell online.
@@sylvrscorpyn I suppose you are correct. You couldn't sell local and make any money so with a good online presence you could be located anywhere and the postal/delivery service in Japan is second to none.
Did you look into it?
Wonderful base for six months’ vacation each year - especially the older house. Thanks for the video.
No worries, thanks for watching!
The one in the cemetery is very cool because of the history behind it all.
Why do I feel so emotional about abandoned houses? I immediately start to imagine the people inside ....living their daily lives..... plus there is something so unique and special about Japanese culture.
Love your choices of music, it really adds a mysterious, melancholic vibe to the island. As you've said, it must really be different living there, and great for those seeking a quieter existence.
What a beautiful “tiny” house!! If I had the money and a small family, I think that would be a lovely place to move too. Just the right size where it would be easy to maintain.
I am fascinated by old Japanese architecture. I have always wanted to design a home based upon the older traditional styles in Japan, while incorporating some American conveniences.
That would be interesting to see.
@Steve Slade the stairs too, narrow, too steep, short treads, definitely built before codes were a thing.
Anybody interested in living there - bear in mind that gold mining quite often means heavy mercury pollution. I'd test soil and water samples from the plot and a few different spots on the island before moving in. Especially if you have or planning children.
Thank you so much for sharing this. It's fascinating.
I used to work 5 years at a plant nursery, I love gardening. If I lived in Sado I'd volunteer to tend to the abandoned yards and gardens there. It would be like a dream some true to make all those outdoor spaces beautiful again. Working with old growth trees and shrubs, seeing heirlooms flowering bulbs, discovering which self-seeding "volunteers" survived and grew in old abandoned gardens. What fun. ^_^
I have no skills in carpentry or renovation but I imagine that's the satisfaction the people who fix those houses feels.
My own home has daffodils and crocuses that were planted over 40 years ago. It's surprising what plant life thrives throughout years. In the south you can identify old homestead sites by the daffodils in the land long after the houses are nothing but stone rubble in the woods.
This video was really wholesome in a way, it’s not only helping the world get encouraged about these much needed love houses but also appreciating them for what they are and what they can be.
Very interesting as my late grandmother had her origin in Sado Island.
One thing to point out is that the corner you assumed as Butsudan (a Buddhist altar) should have resided, should be in fact a decorative alcove space (tokonoma), where we used to cast a hanging scroll-style picture on its wall (you can see some hanger belts at the top), or place some small ornament (like a statue, arranged flowers etc.) at the bottom. The presence of a tokonoma usually indicates the principal room of the house.
Very interesting, thanks very much for the insight!
I loved this video and have been giving some serious thought about moving to Japan. Great houses featured, and I am looking forward to seeing your progress!
Thank you. I stayed on Sado Island in 1973 as a part of my high school’s exchange program. Went back to visit in 2019. It is good to see that some houses are being saved.
I can't express how much I love these videos. So much beautiful houses that require love. I really hope these island will attract more people to kick-start back the population and preservation of the island
Awesome as always! Love the Ballarat reference.
Thanks!
I love that house in the cemetery so much. The surrounding garden was overgrown but beautiful, and some of the remaining outbuildings had so much history and character. I think it would be amazing to fix the place up, clean up the graves, and discover what you could about the history of the former residents, the local town, and people buried there.
Every time I am in a traditional Japanese house I feel like being at home.
I am sure I will follow this felling in a few years my heart is in Japan.
These houses deserve to be rescued. ♥️
*sells all possessions immediately* Now to buff up on my Japanese, so that I can live in a secluded town doing research and making UA-cam videos FOREVER! Muwhahahahaha! All joking aside, THANK YOU! This is wonderful. Very little in the way of real estate is available on the American Web friendly sights right now. Everything is brand new mansions (apartments) and share houses.
Would be perfect for PewDiePie since they have optic fibre internet.
I know right? I was thinking maybe I should move to Japan looking at this lol! The introvert in me would love living in that house. But I'd eventually miss my loved ones here. Guess I care about my family after all.
@@elfiefromangelcity6142 That is what Skype is for. Lolol. And guilt tripping family into visiting YOU, so you don't have to pay for the plane ticket. XD
But all those tiny homes tho...
Not gonna lie, my current house has doubled in value and if I sold it now I would walk away with around $230.000 clean profit. I could buy an akiya and renovate it. I just don't know what my job would be over there. Currently I'm a software tester and can only speak a bit of Japanese
What a beautiful house! I hope someone can rescue it!
12:13 I'd live there in a heartbeat. This video was lovely. The music during the last part made it seem all magical, Ghibli style. Good job!
Thanks, when I came across that music I thought straight away it might fit there.
Fantastic this last house with more than 300 years. Of course they are all amazing and as an architect I feel enchanted by all of them. Congratulations on the initiative, nice trip.
"It's kind of like a Japanese Ballarat." You can immerse the boy in Japan, but you can't take Victoria out of the boy!
It was a brave, but admirable, move by that local builder to renovate that townhouse to save it from demolition, considering the state of the local real estate market.
You mentioned that the island has fibreoptic cable. As far as you know, is that fibre right to the home?
If you move into a house where the previous occupants have maintained a shrine to their ancestors, is it acceptable to retain that shrine to honour your own ancestors as well, or is it expected that you will replace it with a shrine dedicated to your own ancestors?
I'll double check - I THINK in many places it's to the home but I'm not sure. I haven't started researching our installation yet so not on top of this topic.
@@TokyoLlama Hey man, don't sweat it, though. I'm not thinking of moving to Japan, so it's not critical. I was just curious whether the Japanese routinely got fibre right to their home, or just to a node somewhere nearby in the neighbourhood, with the final run to the home being legacy copper cable. Under the Australian National (so-called) Broadband Network project, most of us back here are being delivered merely the second-rate option of fibre-to-the-node, but I imagine that fibre right to the home would be more economical in Japan on account of the higher residential density.
@@willpugh-calotte2199 Huh? Meanwhile, up here on the opposite end of the world in Maple Country, we're not being given a choice about getting fibre-optic cable right to our houses. They're going through our neighbourhoods and digging up our streets, driveways, sidewalks and lawns to install fibre-optic right up to our house', even if we already have something else thats possibly even faster. Now, i wouldn't mind if they were willing to install utilities to our garden sheds and greenhouses while they were at it, but noooooo. We have to pay for that destruction ourselves while they just destroy the rest of our properties for free to bring us the service we may or may no want. Go figure. }8P
¡Gracias!, por fin un nuevo vídeo y además interesante. Al mostrar tan detalladamente cada sendero, cada callejón, cada camino, me hace sentir que estoy presente. Las casas y sitios abandonados son un imán para mí, dan nostalgia y mucha paz, me lleno de preguntas como quiénes fueron felices o desdichados en esos lugares, cuales fueron los sentimientos que unieron a sus habitantes, qué están haciendo ahora, para qué o en dónde están...como siempre, este vídeo me encantó. Saludos desde CALI Colombia.
I LOVE your videos. You put so much work into creating wonderful production quality and I love seeing these beautiful places. Your house renovation is amazing.
Sado can be saved by : history + turism, and or artisans . Plus : tax free zone . P.s. perfect heaven for an writer.
tax free zone, really?
@@EraldoFilms Yes. To develope some places , any state can declare an zone VAT , tax free. Like Alaska . Only for a period of time .
an writer
I feel in love with the house in the cemetery. In all honesty its kinda cute for some reason you could clean it all up and honor the dead who are buried there. I also think the last place was also kinda lovely it has so much space and just needs a little work done.
Notification squad!! I never miss an upload :)
As always, great video's that are so very informative. As a history buff in architecture and building techniques, it always saddens me when I see so many lovely homes, homes that for some have stood for more than a century, being left neglected and abandoned, and having government regulation making it so difficult for people to come along and purchase this places so they can fix-up or restore them to some semblance of their original looks, Native Japanese or foreigners alike.
Keep up the great video's there and I, like many, many others, look forward to the future video's of the progress you're making on your own, no-longer-abandoned house (is that a possible second floor being established in the background there? If so, then good on you mate). Ja ne! XD
Thanks mate! Well spotted - yes it's a mezzanine - will explain in my next video.
Great video as always, please post more!
Really interested to see the pricing of the houses, especially the remodeled one, looked really nice!
I love your videos! I live in a land locked state in the US and to see Island countries and what home renovations and what they look like is a great joy. Thank you for all you do!
12:20 when you went into the cemetery, MY reaction was... "uuuh...whah... OH, gravestones! how GORGEOUS to be snuggled into the previous generations like that - their houses, our houses, how super-cool!!"- we are [very] close to our past ones, they are still around us...
So you are opening a real estate in japan ? 😁
Ha ha, no.
I think He's starting up "This old House Japan Edition" :>)
I would definitely love more of this aka that
Your b-roll powers are growing stronger! But seriously, great work on the video. It's awesome to see your home progression and japanese adventures, while also watching your film making skills grow by proxy. Keep up the great work, much love from America.
Haha, thanks very much. Yes, been working on my b-roll game, but still room for improvement.
We love your videos on homes and home repairs It true family friendly for all ages and so interesting Bless you keep up the good work
You have made me extremely interested in visiting Japan. So beautiful and serene!
Your videos are always very entertaining. This time I felt like I was transported back in time with the music being spot on in setting a melancholic and nostalgic mood. When you finish your house, you could make a career out of doing a series on Japanese Home Renos and traveling around Japan looking for great little spots to settle down in.
Your videos are awesome, I love each one! I just get so homesick watching them that I can't stand it sometimes. Really makes me want to go back to Japan.
Thanks so much!
This was fun to watch. I enjoyed watching you explore old abandoned homes. Sort of like a ghost hunt but we get to see what the houses look like on the inside.
What a beautiful melancholic video
Awesome! Thanks for sharing!
I looove this! These old houses are so beautiful! They deserve a second life!
I love to sew! I was drooling over the fabric and such as you toured the first house. What a find!
thank you, this is lovely and calming.. honestly if I were to buy an Akiya on Sado I'd move there, lightly clean the house up and live out the next 20 or so years of my life as a near hermit and love the tranquility, the weather and a slower pace of life. It would give me the time to learn the language to be able to chat with the few friends I'd make and to respect the beautiful countryside.
It is really informative to see the same locations from different people. Thanks Jaya!
I would get the bathroom, kitchen and a couple of rooms for sleeping operational, then work on the rest slowly. It would be so much fun to go through all of the things and supplies in there as a crafter! Also, I wonder if there is some sort procedure you have to observe for taking down that Altar. It's presence in my home would conflict with my beliefs but I wouldn't want to offend locals by just tearing down either.
I have another video of us preparing to take down the altar. You need to perform a “oharae” Shinto purification ceremony with a Shinto priest. Then it take be taken down and burnt.
I gather it's pretty much the way to have one of those ceremonies done even if it *doesn't* conflict with your beliefs, just cause it's to do with another family even if you put your own one of those right back up, so it seems that's pretty 'routine' over there, just out of respect. (I happen to be quite the pantheist but it'd still be the Thing To Do, I understand. )
But yeah, there's a lot of crafter-candy about these old houses, not to mention a lot of work to do, which can be appealing, if daunting. :) Those of us from elsewhere may have more enthusiasm about 'old stuff' than the locals necessarily do, that way. It does seem a lot of them mean that at least you wouldn't have to do a lot of shopping for dishes. :)
@@OllamhDrab Yes, you can look at it more as culture and tradition than necessarily religion.
Amamos Japón, ya queremos ver el próximo vídeo. Gracias por compartir esta experiencia, nos ayuda con muchas ideas por aquí. Un abrazo!!
Well, looks like I’m moving to rural Japan...
The landscapes of Japan are impressive, I would love to travel and see the rural areas with traditional houses. At the moment I thank you for sharing your videos with us!
I spent a considerable portion of my youth in Japan, and I can still remember the familiar scent of those houses...
I think those cementaries probably belongs to the ancestors/friends of the household. So nice to live close to love ones.
Excellent video, really interesting to see what it's like out in the Japanese countryside, and the editing is top notch!
Thank you!
Fantastic filming! Was eagerly awaiting this video and did not disappoint.
I'd love to go to Japan once and visit these old houses. I love these types of old houses since they usually exude this sort-of nostalgic and organic feel for me. It's as if they are now part of the natural environment; extremely opposite to the design of modern houses today where they want to stand out as much as possible.
Edit: Just to add, what amazed me is the fact that these houses did not have any marks of vandalism on them.
This was a great video; the sort of incredible, niche content that is the true beauty of the internet. I absolutely love how detailed and intimate you go into whatever subject you're discussing on this channel, its always fascinating!
Thank you!
Thank you for taking the time to do this. Really interesting place and so peaceful.
It would be nice to meet your family now and then.
Thanks, my wife is shy and I'm not sure about putting my children on youtube (unless in the background sometimes).
That's fair comment. I had no Ill intent in asking just that it's getting the context of you being there and it's just all very interesting.
But the best to you all. Looking forward to seeing how the house progresses. :-)
Thank you! A new paradise discovered. And four distinct seasons which is a pleasure to behold. Humid sub tropical climate.
I’m using your videos to teach my students about Japanese homes. They’re extremely fascinated and look forward to your upcoming videos!
Wow, thanks so much! All the best to your students.
Wow! So beautiful there.Thanks for sharing.Looking forward to more with your renovations.
I wish to share that I really enjoy the content you create on your channel. I know you’re very busy with work, family and of course, renovating your own house. But I hope more videos will follow soon! All the best and thanks for sharing all that you have thus far!
Thank you!
Beautiful! If I was able to would do the kitchen and bathroom first. Then work my way through taking care of what needed my attention
Oh, and the music you were playing was awesome. Nice and relaxing. I'll be looking that up!
Thanks, you can find the Mandala Dreams stuff on Spotify.
thanks for not "blinking" so much in this video ...lol .....great video keep up the great work!
Haha, thanks.
That house triggers my OCD ! :D I really enjoy watching your videos! I miss japan !
Very interesting Video! Thank You for sharing! I'm looking forward to the progress on your house. I really admire your energy in keeping up with all that work.
hoping you'll upload your next video soon. i'm loving all the information about akiya and seeing your renovations being done! would be an interesting series to go to japanese towns and look at their local akiya!
Yes, I'd like to do that when I have time! Working on the next video as we speak.
Very nice. Looking forward to seeing videos of your future Sado trip! And of your home.
I never hear about Sado Island until now. Thank you for sharing.
This video was so well done. At the beginning it was like watching a pro documentary. Good " backdrop" info of the Island and surrounding areas. Amazing job. The 1st house was HUGE, but I too would prefer the smaller one w/ gate and front yard.Look forward to your next video!
Thanks so much!
Can highly recommend the awesome Sado earth celebration held in August. Really great fun! And fantastic music😀👍
Yes, I'm very keen to go to that!
Such a beautiful Island wow, love the mountains and Sake as well. TY for sharing this.
Seems like a nice project to renovate, it did remind though of how I'm always been wondering after visiting Japanese friends how they all seem to accumulate such a plethora of stuff that should've been thrown away ages ago...
It's because getting rid of anything in Japan is a nightmare. Not like the UK where you Chuck in the black bin or take it to the recycling centre for free (they take pretty much anything)
@@jenniferpayne8432 Ah, I see, makes sense. I'm probably used to the same thing here, that although we're supposed to sort everything I can just go to the city dump with bigger things and throw it in the correct garbage container for free.
Seems like bad idea for Japan though, when people accumulate so much *crap* that people would think they were hoarders.
Also results in lots of roadside/forest dumping :(
really interesting video! the house in the graveyard looked nice too, it's sad to see so many abandoned buildings.
Great video. I have always loved Japan and I have wanted to visit but I am afraid if I do I will not leave I just love Japan and Japanese culture and I would move to a island just like that and take care of my bonsai trees.
Thanks. Sado’s certainly a nice place to lead the quiet life.
That it is and great views
Beautiful island. Missed this haunting location with these stunning views last time I was there. Will take a gander next time I'm over there! Excellent video!
So youre telling me I can quite literally live out my Harvest Moon fantasies?
Sold. Im in, im on, im about it. Sign me up three days ago.
Was I the only one in awe of how clean the streets were? Not one shred of litter! That alone is incentive enough to want to move there. 😍❤️
thankyou i really enjoyed this video and looking forward to see how your house is coming along. oh and you have a great voice for narrating 😊
Thank you for making these videos! I eventually want to buy an akiya as well and your videos have definitely helped getting a better idea on how to do it, ありがとうな。
love the richness of out side and inside of the sea side.. thank you for sharing
I really love your videos, thanks for sharing them.
I love all the old traditional houses and shrines. The 300 year old house is beautiful I'd live there straight away if I could.
Finally more Videos i just crave for it tbh
for someone who adore japanese culture, it broke my heart a bit when watching those abandoned house. 😭