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  • Well, I've been driving in Japan for a month now

  • and I think it's finally time to show you everything, absolutely everything!

  • Well, absolutely nearly almost everything

  • So, fasten your metaphorical seatbelts

  • and let's go and experience Japan in glorious High Definition video

  • Oh fuck it why do seatbelts do this?

  • Okay so the first thing i noticed is that this car is right-hand driven because in Japan they drive on the left hand-side of the road.

  • like in Britain

  • I thought this was a bit strange at first

  • until I remembered that Japan was ruled by the samurai

  • in the Edo Era between 1603 and 1867

  • And the preference was to move on the left hand side of the road

  • coz the samurai drew their swords with their right hand

  • So they could draw their swords and fight easier

  • Although it wasn't made official until 1872

  • when the British engineers helped the Japanese build their first railway

  • which was of course left-hand operated

  • So that's why Japanese people drive on the left hand-side of the road

  • Right then let's actually get going

  • Oh it's Japanese radio..

  • Japanese of course love Wham!

  • Okay so there are two reasons that might be obvious why I'm renting this car

  • The first is the pink Save the Earth sticker on the back

  • The second reason is that the Nissan March is a girl's car

  • It might be efficient, fun to drive and smell like the meadows of Narnia

  • But....it doesn't hide the fact that it's still referred as a "handbag car" for women

  • And the reason why I chose this car is because all the other cars in the rental place

  • looked like they were gonna fall apart after a 24 minute drive

  • I had originally intended to get a very specific type of car

  • when I came to Japan

  • called a Kei Car

  • Japan's very unique for having a very defined category of cars called Kei Cars

  • Basically it's a motor vehicle with a 660cc engine or below, God forbid

  • Because of its small size, Kei Cars are very economical

  • You can actually get to the outer rings of Saturn and back on a single tank of fuel

  • and still have enough to go to the Seven Eleven

  • and get Fried Chicken

  • And you can tell Kei Cars quite easily coz they have yellow number plates

  • whilst regular cars have white number plates

  • As I said i would've got one because the cost of running it is lower and the taxes are lower

  • But i'm inheriting a friend's car next year

  • So it might work out cheaper to rent my first year

  • Another reason why I got this big engine car

  • is because where I am turns to Antarctica next month during the winter

  • Not only that but where I live is on a plain, and it gets really windy

  • And it was my hope that having a bigger engine vehicle

  • come this winter I wont be starring in a live-action version of Chitty Chitty Bang-Bang

  • Still, regardless of what car you get

  • there is one thing that takes some getting use to

  • Drinking alcohol and driving in Japan

  • In most countries to my knowledge you can have a glass of wine or a beer

  • and get behind the wheel so you can have a few units

  • In Japan, if you so much as smell of alcohol and get behind the wheel of car

  • it's GAME OVER

  • There are no units allowed and if you get caught driving

  • with any alcohol in your system

  • You'll lose your job, you'll probably get deported

  • and you'll most certainly be thrown out the back of a plane over the sea of Japan

  • Just to make sure you don't do it

  • I've seen it happen, it's not pretty, don't do it!

  • Instead, drink the Pungency

  • Drink that instead, coz you don't want to get deported

  • Oh ssssshit

  • But if you do want to have a drink with friends or work colleagues

  • and if you want to do that in the comfort of your own car, get there and back in your own car

  • There is one alternative to a taxi

  • It's actually cheaper and it's called Daikou

  • Daikou translated to Acting as Agent

  • Basically you ring up the company

  • They will send out a car with 2 guys in it

  • And when they get there, one guy will get out the car

  • You give him your keys and he'll drive you and your friends home in your own car

  • The other guy will follow you in the Daikou Taxi

  • And when you get back home, the guy who drove you will just pop back up in his DaikouTaxi and disappear in the night

  • So it's great coz obviously the next day when you're hungover, feeling like crap

  • you don't have to walk out to get your car you already got it at your place

  • And as I said before it actually works out cheaper

  • which I don't quite understand how but it does

  • It's popular in rural areas where public transport becomes a thing of the past after midnight

  • What it basically means is that nobody is left out

  • everyone can go out, drink and have a great night

  • Except Hitler

  • If you like the thrill of recklessly driving through the countryside on a sunny winter's morning

  • with a total disregard for the mortality of small creatures

  • Japan is not for you

  • Driving in Japan is quite a slow experience

  • With speed limits ranging from about 40km/h

  • which is 24 miles per hour

  • to a 100km/h which is 62 miles per hour if you're lucky

  • So whilst it's good for animals and creatures who like to dance on the way of oncoming traffic

  • It actually means that most journeys take longer than time itself

  • If you're honestly thinking about taking a long journey in Japan

  • I would honestly consider taking a coffin

  • Because you are gonna need it by the time you reach the end of your destination

  • Should you reach the end of your destination

  • Perhaps if you are thinking of taking a really long journey

  • I'd recommend you take the highways I mentioned earlier that go up to a 100km/h

  • Oh no, please be in English...

  • So if you are a millionaire you can actually drive around Japan on the highways

  • which are all toll-operated

  • The only trouble is I found you need one or two things

  • Either a car stuffed with cash

  • Or a car stuffed with passengers with cash

  • to be able to afford the journey

  • I recently had planned to travel down to Osaka which a few hundred kilometers south from where I live

  • And the actual cost of going down there one way, was 21000 yens

  • which is of course, enough money to start your own religion

  • You could also avoid the highways and go down smaller roads, a friend recently did that and avoided toll rates

  • so it's do-able, you just have to decide what's important

  • your time or your money

  • and for him it was his money

  • So if you're thinking about driving round Japan

  • Have a lot of money, or have a lot of people in your car

  • or catch a train

  • Driving in Japan, this time of year

  • is an absolutely breath-stealing experience

  • the scenery, the leaves, the mountain and everything

  • it's just beautiful, it really is

  • and it's very dangerous coz you spend your time looking at it all, and not on the road

  • And to me it's obvious why Japanese lead the way in camera technology

  • why they have so many companies that make such great cameras

  • Because they take one look around at the mountain, the leaves, the streams, the rivers and everything

  • and thought "how could we share this with our friends and family on facebook and instagram?"

  • And that's how all these companies (Nikon, Fujifilm, Canon), were born

  • Probably

  • Now I think that's as good a reason as any

  • to get a car, to drive around

  • to be able to see and experience it all

  • whilst listening to Ray Charles

Well, I've been driving in Japan for a month now

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