Japanese street gutters are NOT this clean

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 9. 08. 2022
  • While browsing the depths of the internet I came across images and articles about the clean gutters of Japan. Apparently they're so clean that koi spawn in their exceptionally clean waters. I explore this claim.
    The first 1,000 people to use the link will get a 1 month free trial of Skillshare: ​skl.sh/lifewhereimfrom07225
    Sources
    - mymodernmet.com/koi-fish-swim...
    - www.city.shimabara.lg.jp/comm...
    - www.mlit.go.jp/sogoseisaku/re...
    - asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Env...
    - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_U...
    - www.city.shimabara.lg.jp.e.dk...
    Video Gear I Use
    📷 Camera: amzn.to/2NEokdl
    📷 Drone: amzn.to/2GAURv8
    📷 Wide Lens: amzn.to/2BcJCGJ
    📷 Prime Lens: amzn.to/2C2LEpt
    🎤 Microphone: amzn.to/2BJi114
    📺 Monitor: amzn.to/2E8XzUI
    📷 All the rest: kit.co/lifewhereimfrom/youtub...
    Connect
    🗲Patreon: / lifewhereimfrom
    🗲Life Where I'm From X Channel: bit.ly/ytlwifx
    🗲Website: www.lifewhereimfrom.com
    🗲Facebook: / lifewhereimfrom
    🗲Instagram: / lifewhereimfrom
    🗲Twitter: / lifewhereimfrom
    Music by Epidemic Sound www.epidemicsound.com/referra...

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @thomas5585
    @thomas5585 Před rokem +4815

    I never thought I would enjoy watching a 10 minute documentary of Japanese city street gutters. Well done!

    • @user-no2mz9hl4f
      @user-no2mz9hl4f Před rokem +16

      Greg has a way!

    • @tankeryy1566
      @tankeryy1566 Před rokem +3

      same here!

    • @blackleague212
      @blackleague212 Před rokem +4

      @@user-no2mz9hl4f I would grab the koi fish out of the gutters, and cook them. Koi fried rice, fried koi fillets, everything. Im gonna eat them all up. Amen

    • @Kokanee604
      @Kokanee604 Před rokem

      Please subscribe to OkinaWanderer channel. He needs to get another 186 subscriber's to Live stream. Thanks Greg and supporters.

    • @Funebunne
      @Funebunne Před rokem +1

      Fuji be real quite since this dropped

  • @AnthonyStJames-yn8nr
    @AnthonyStJames-yn8nr Před rokem +2377

    In the Philippines, I can tell you straight away that street gutter water in major cities will never be clean and could probably kill the Hulk. However, I heard from the generations of my grandparents that water in Malabon City (a city in northern metro manila where my grandparents come from) was clean back then that they actually saw saltwater fish swimming in the canals. Another beautiful place in Japan that always amazes me are the "Satoyama" areas in the country where I've seen documentaries of houses keeping carp inside their houses, where the water is fed through a canal. Nice video Greg, I'd love to see more great content.

    • @noxintegral8506
      @noxintegral8506 Před rokem +125

      When dugyot Gangs Invade the Cities and Polluted it and some People there become worst than Stupid who don't know how to Clean even in their Front Door/Backyard

    • @nine-chan1785
      @nine-chan1785 Před rokem +118

      in some provinces actually, canals(irrigation) still have fishes and fresh water shells in them, not really impressive as koi but hey there's still life

    • @subotaiKhan
      @subotaiKhan Před rokem +1

      Filipinos will sit and eat at a sidewalk cantina while sewage water is flowing right pass them. I guess they're just used to it.

    • @ashenone3050
      @ashenone3050 Před rokem +6

      yep , in the past some japanese houses had those so they could eat fresh fish

    • @isabelagonzalezlopez8296
      @isabelagonzalezlopez8296 Před rokem +36

      @@ashenone3050 Not true at all lol. Houses had wells that had fish like carp and they purify the water by eating whatever’s swimming the water, they’re kept like pets so that people can use the wells to wash vegetable or drinking. You can see this NHK documentary about a town with canals that have this system czcams.com/video/_rwxsjzjDhs/video.html.

  • @asdfghjkl553
    @asdfghjkl553 Před rokem +616

    From my knowledge as a Japanese, those colourful Koi (Nishikigoi) were created by selective breeding for decorative purposes. Natural Koi are single-coloured.
    And as far as I know, Koi actually prefer to live in dirty water (idk about Nishikigoi tho), they grow up to a meter and there is no enemy against them in Japanese nature. I recently read news about Koi destroying the ecosystem because people released them into the water where Koi never existed before.

    • @princess7jasmine
      @princess7jasmine Před rokem +62

      Goldfish flushed down in toilets end up in lakes, rivers, etc and end up destroying eco systems as a result.

    • @mrahzzz
      @mrahzzz Před rokem +47

      "And as far as I know, Koi actually prefer to live in dirty water"
      My info from the US - what are called "koi" in Japanese are what we call "carp" in English (as Greg said).
      Just here to second what you said - I, too, have always known of carp as fish that can thrive in dirty waterways (quite opposed to the claim online that Greg said he found). In fact, I just looked it up, and it appears that carp do have an omnivorous diet, but are also detritivores - that is, they eat detritus 😳
      I have vivid memories of slightly aggressive carp in a lake nibbling at my toes as a kid. That lake water was clean enough to swim in (... supposedly), but it was not water I would attempt to legitimately drink...
      Fun side note, in case you weren't aware - where I'm from in the midwest US, we use the word "koi" when referring to "nishikigoi!"
      I think some of us separate them mentally from carp (at least, I do) because carp are so ingrained as almost a "dirty" fish that the beauty of nishikigoi might spare them from the image of being dirty.

    • @BenjiSun
      @BenjiSun Před rokem +24

      Most carp are very much capable, and are sometimes even introduced into rice paddies, muddy ponds and streams specifically to help clean out muck. They're the goats of freshwater and are hardy as hell. Nishikigoi are no different other than their bred colours.

    • @MelGibsonFan
      @MelGibsonFan Před rokem +9

      We had several Koi for some time and the only thing I came away with from that is that Koi are assholes.

    • @miloudbouchefra200
      @miloudbouchefra200 Před rokem +6

      @@MelGibsonFan lmfao
      Niw you need to explain why.

  • @Professorkek
    @Professorkek Před rokem +254

    I rememeber being blow away by the water infrastructure when I visited. The "normal" gutters may not seem as impressive, but it's still much more pedestrian friendly, and often have flowing water. Coming from a drought prone area, in my mind, that's pretty beautiful.

  • @samuelj8173
    @samuelj8173 Před rokem +174

    Just information for everyone, make sure you understand the difference between waterproof and water resistance. A good majority of phones have water resistance, Samsungs, iPhones, Pixels etc. Phones like that are not waterproof. The water resistance most phones have is a rating ip68 which means the device can be under water 1.5m deep for around 30 min before you have issues. There are only a very few amount of phones that i know of that are waterproof in which they can deal with water for a very long period of time.They can stay in water for a really long time but not forever. Water resistance will still keep water and dust out of your phone but you still void your warranty if you dip your phone in water

    • @G1NZOU
      @G1NZOU Před rokem +15

      This.
      And also as a watch collector I know of water resistance ratings being based on new condition. Those seals will weaken with time, especially as your phone flexes in your pocket or the glue expands or contracts with heat and cold. I'd always take resistance ratings with a grain of salt.

    • @Entertainment-
      @Entertainment- Před rokem +26

      Also avoid using a hair dryer to dry your phone, just let it naturally evaporate or use absorbing materials such as silica gel or rice.

    • @samuelj8173
      @samuelj8173 Před rokem +2

      Yep, that's a good tip

  • @Jordan-inJapan
    @Jordan-inJapan Před rokem +1791

    In rural Japan (at least where I live) the “mizo”, or irrigation-runoff canals are a central part of life for a lot of people. Well, the rice farmers most of all - they clean them out a couple of times a year, constantly adjust water levels, etc - but the surrounding community as well. We feel a kind of responsibility to keep them clean and sometimes report and even remove invasive species that can harm the rice crop. And on hot days kids play in them, and even catch fish and crayfish for fun. (The Cray fish are an invasive specie too, but they don’t hurt the rice so we let them be.😆)
    In spite of the small amount of upkeep we have to do, I love having the mizo canal next to our house. Except that every time we have heavy rain and it threatens to overflow into our yard & house. That part’s kind of scary. ⛈

    • @Jordan-inJapan
      @Jordan-inJapan Před rokem +6

      @@Automedon2 I’ve never seen anything like that where I live, but it sounds really cool.

    • @creo8359
      @creo8359 Před rokem +8

      @@Automedon2 Yes, NHK has a doc about it. I think Harie, Shiga?

    • @xueyang5967
      @xueyang5967 Před rokem +16

      'Mizo' is the name of our tribe help🤣🤣

    • @Jordan-inJapan
      @Jordan-inJapan Před rokem +2

      @@xueyang5967 Not trying to be disrespectful… 😂

    • @Zawnpuia1640
      @Zawnpuia1640 Před rokem +1

      @@xueyang5967 yup😂

  • @tanon823
    @tanon823 Před rokem +341

    In Alberta, Canada we have man-made storm water ponds that function to hold overflow from intense storms. They are designed to naturalize and eventually function as urban wetlands. Unfortunately, people have decided they are great places to dispose of unwanted aquarium fish, such as gold fish. These things are invasive, aggressive reproducers and have become a threat to native species of fish and amphibians. It has become a monstrous task to get them out of the ponds before they destroy the intended biodiversity. One city resorted to poisoning an entire pond and starting all over again. Another had city workers use an enormous net to scoop up the fish. They got something like 5,000 gold fish out of one medium sized pond. Now there is a campaign to teach people not to dump their pet fish in local ponds.

    • @Triaanx28
      @Triaanx28 Před rokem +1

      i’m from alberta too! where is this happening??

    • @alexandervowles3518
      @alexandervowles3518 Před rokem +1

      Interesting.

    • @invictus_1245
      @invictus_1245 Před rokem +31

      Gold fish are closely related to invasive Asian carp. No surprise they breed like rats and eat anything they can. It's also why they can survive in abysmal conditions in a kids bedroom.

    • @MollyHJohns
      @MollyHJohns Před rokem +10

      This makes me think I'm cruel because I'm thinking to suggest pet fish owners to give their unwanted fish to owners with pets that eat fish.

    • @forestcityfishing4749
      @forestcityfishing4749 Před rokem +4

      I would suggest a bounty system. $2 per goldfish turned in or something.

  • @aldin.2714
    @aldin.2714 Před rokem +218

    I worked on declogging gutters here in the Philippines and I found out through my cousin living in Japan that the gutters there was almost crystal clear I didn't believe it till I saw this
    And after working for about a year the gutters on the areas I'm working are all full of trash and can't remember how many dead rats I have found in it, there was even a time where there was a dead dog stuck in the gutters causing it to flood during heavy rain.
    But theres also a lot of the times where we get a ton of coins in it that could actually buy you a meal if your lucky enough
    One us was lucky to get a whole 100 pesos bill.

    • @smit17xp
      @smit17xp Před rokem +4

      Did you find anything alive down there ?

    • @aldin.2714
      @aldin.2714 Před rokem +34

      @@smit17xp sometimes live rats would jump out
      Jump scared me multiple times

    • @aldin.2714
      @aldin.2714 Před rokem +16

      @@smit17xp mostly cockroaches tho

    • @arrietty1619
      @arrietty1619 Před rokem +6

      The philippines' pasig river is the world's top dumper of plastic in the ocean. Its the most polluting river

    • @herrkommandank675
      @herrkommandank675 Před rokem +23

      @@arrietty1619 The Ganges River in India, and the Citarum River in Indonesia are one of the most polluted rivers in the world, not the Pasig River. In fact, the Pasig River Rehabilitatiom has been greatly successful, where the PRRC, the government commisiom that was responsible for the continued efforts received the Asiam Riverprize Award IN 2018.
      Not only your depricatimg the country for some shallow reasons, you have false information as well.

  • @mihomuffin
    @mihomuffin Před rokem +306

    When I lived in Tokyo in the early 90's many of the large cement drainage ditches/creeks had very large koi living in them, I could only think they had been released by someone that didn't want them anymore (just flushed them down the toilet when I was a kid in the states). As some were rather large and very colorful, I wondered how they compared to the multi million yen koi for sale on the roof tops of the big department stores

    • @gravel9270
      @gravel9270 Před rokem +10

      Yes, that makes sense since cement is not a good material to use in making fish ponds because it can make the water toxic for fishes.

    • @ryananggoro493
      @ryananggoro493 Před rokem +16

      @@gravel9270 the toxic material on cement will gone overtime especially if it's running water since the toxic material will washed away by water currents
      in my place we have cement pond for koi
      We have to fill the pond let it for a day and remove the water
      Repeat it 5 times or more
      It's may not be efficient but hey it's work out

    • @CivilizedWasteland
      @CivilizedWasteland Před rokem +2

      Imagine if the homeless scooped them up and sold them lol

    • @Asterite
      @Asterite Před rokem +1

      @@CivilizedWasteland Japan doesn't have homeless people as far as I know

    • @ltchip2593
      @ltchip2593 Před rokem +4

      @@Asterite they do bro. they are just treated poorly, many teens are homeless in japan and camp out in redlight districts to make money from older men.

  • @OldMan_PJ
    @OldMan_PJ Před rokem +213

    I'm in a desert climate in the US, the street gutters have dead weeds and a mix of dirt and sand that runs off from yards when sprinklers turn on. Surprisingly, there's little to no trash but that's probably because most people stay indoors due to the heat. When I lived in Santa Clara, CA (1980's) I had a Japanese-American friend and her Dad had a 2-level pond in the back with koi in the upper pond and goldfish in the lower.

    • @Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger
      @Your-Least-Favorite-Stranger Před 10 měsíci

      Also a US desert climate: our arroyos are dry, if they have water in them it's stagnant runoff full of parasites and pollutants (the water is black, has trash in it, and it stinks to be near. Parasites are mosquito larva, horsehair worms, and who knows what else).
      If anything lives in it it's hardy desert grasses that are happy with any type of moisture, but usually its just sand and filth.

  • @lil----lil
    @lil----lil Před rokem +11

    Yea, the "dirtiest" street gutters in Japan are like still 100x cleaner and better than most cities in the world

  • @etherdog
    @etherdog Před rokem +322

    Greg, I was truly shocked when you talked about the park (near the end) where people were keaving trash and they had to shut the water off because of it. That runs so counter to what we hear about how clean and responsible Japanese people are. What a great little quirky topic to cover! Now, if you can just discover why Japanese maps are all over the place with their orientations....

    • @LC-zi8jw
      @LC-zi8jw Před rokem +86

      Been to Japan many times and even stayed there for a month, and I can tell you, Japan's streets are really not as clean as they are portrayed to be, especially after the "happy hours" and Japanese people do litter and even spit. 😆😆

    • @user-zy3pg8qv7g
      @user-zy3pg8qv7g Před rokem +31

      それは日本人ではなく完全に外国人ですね🤣

    • @aaarrrggghhhh
      @aaarrrggghhhh Před rokem +75

      Japan is clean and tidy when people are being watched. After dark people dump stuff everywhere but the street cleaners are on it pretty quickly. I clear litter from my local beach early in the mornings. Worst of all, I think, are the fireworks left everywhere and the barbecues as well as all the fishing line, hooks and weights.

    • @user-zy3pg8qv7g
      @user-zy3pg8qv7g Před rokem

      外国人って決めつけて申し訳ありません
      たしかに最近の日本人は汚いね
      特に祭りがあった日なんかゴミだらけ
      特に東京の渋谷とか都会らへんね

    • @G1NZOU
      @G1NZOU Před rokem +42

      @@LC-zi8jw Yeah I think it depends on the area and the mood of the crowd, like you said in the "happy hours" people are less responsible but most people won't notice because they employ so many street cleaners to fix it up nice for the next morning.

  • @T1P1
    @T1P1 Před rokem +108

    Always a pleasure to watch your videos, Greg. A topic that I never thought would be this interesting.

  • @halashoib6084
    @halashoib6084 Před rokem +43

    Your videos are not only very insightful, but also very calming and peaceful. I always look forward to watching your videos and they are the most enjoyable videos to watch whilst I’m working on one of my embroidery projects🥲☺️

    • @prinxe4230
      @prinxe4230 Před rokem

      @@FangOfLight bro is a hater 💀

  • @gildedpeahen876
    @gildedpeahen876 Před rokem +26

    There’s little wee springs bubbling up where I live in Minnesota too-you can see the water coming up from the ground, disturbing the sand into little poufs, then flowing down the river bank through the forest into the mighty Mississippi…there’s also a place that has tapped a spring-and like you saw there in Japan-people come to fill up water bottles with the delicious, refreshing, and most importantly FREE spring water! 💙

  • @migeru2015
    @migeru2015 Před rokem +5

    Amazing! I appreciate this! I love hearing from locals and older generations!

  • @TechoByTori
    @TechoByTori Před rokem +33

    Wow, this was extremely thorough and well researched. Thank you for working so hard on it 👍

  • @kimc555
    @kimc555 Před rokem +8

    I didn’t know how calming a video about koi in street gutters could be until I watched it. Thanks Greg xx

  • @Tod_x
    @Tod_x Před rokem +4

    My drainage have swimming plastic

  • @geometric5103
    @geometric5103 Před rokem +35

    I was in Utsunomiya Japan in 2005 for business. Right outside the train station there was a gravel parking lot where the bus picked us up to take us to the factory we were working in and there was a gutter just like the ones shown in this video and there were some really nice Koi in there.
    It was not a tourist city or area so I was surprised. I took some photos of the area, gutter, and fish.

  • @rebeccacuthbertson1271
    @rebeccacuthbertson1271 Před rokem +43

    OMG Greg, I had no ideas this was something people were talking about online but I love how it caused you to create this video.
    Thank you for the smiles today. I needed it.

  • @TheStackeddeck77
    @TheStackeddeck77 Před rokem +20

    Depending on where you are in my state in the US the street gutters are actually just dirt ditches and some can get around 12 ft deep.

  • @famuel2604
    @famuel2604 Před rokem +7

    The spectacular thing is not that Japanese street gutters are so beautiful, but that no where else in the world could you place a decorative pool in this spot and have no one interfere with it with litter ect.

  • @Mel-qr5ob
    @Mel-qr5ob Před rokem +57

    in NZ we have wild koi living in rivers we wouldn't let kids swim in because they'd get sick from Ecoli or get gastro from all the cow poo that gets in there 😂
    I don't know who on earth thought *wild* koi are sensitive, as far as I was aware they're hardy and survive nearly anywhere.

    • @jessehunter362
      @jessehunter362 Před rokem +2

      feral koi

    • @kuchikopi4631
      @kuchikopi4631 Před rokem

      Koi are extremely hardy, but organic waste dumped/ running off into river is no laughing matter.

  • @kevinkaufhold4292
    @kevinkaufhold4292 Před rokem +20

    Many smaller towns or small enclaves of cities in Japan have Koi swimming in the waters along roads. It may not be natural but it’s a source of beauty and pride in community as a small park or garden may be in the US. Those abundance of natural springs is staggering. I enjoyed hiking while living and traveling in Japan and nearly every trail led to or passed near a natural spring and you could freely fill water bottles to take with you.

  • @Micsma
    @Micsma Před rokem +34

    at the most, iphones are water resistant. IP68 for some common models. They're good for up to 2 meters for up to 30 minutes. This depends on the quality of the seal and such

  • @zeuswithak6765
    @zeuswithak6765 Před rokem +1

    Thank You For Making Such Beautiful Documentaries

  • @aaarrrggghhhh
    @aaarrrggghhhh Před rokem +20

    Where I live in Chiba, there are long man made canals from the sea which go far inland and meet up with rivers and storm drains. I live about 3/4 mile from the sea and the canal rises and falls with the tide but also carries in jellyfish, crabs, eel and loads of fish of all sizes. I also see lots of cormorants sitting on the overhead electric cables waiting for an easy meal. Sometimes, I see people on the bridge fishing for sea fish and they are a mile away from the beach or more.

  • @XenonKirito
    @XenonKirito Před rokem +16

    Before covid hit during Nov 2019 on a tour to Japan with my family
    Our tour itinerary had us going to one of the more rural areas in Japan. I think it was called Shirakawa in the Gifu Prefecture.
    I remember seeing houses that uses straw as it's roof and then I noticed that there were a bunch of Koi fishes swimming in the canals.
    There were probably in the almost over 100 of them I guess?

  • @bandicooper
    @bandicooper Před rokem

    Great video as always! Thanks so much for sharing!

  • @curiositecat-8315
    @curiositecat-8315 Před rokem

    Nice documentary, i really enjoy it so much. Thanks for the video!! 💕

  • @FatallyAttractive
    @FatallyAttractive Před rokem +7

    Ow I'm so envy with the clean and clear water in their canals... seeing kois around the canals made feel like they are in a huge aquarium because of how discipline the people are

  • @cliffianbustamante9913
    @cliffianbustamante9913 Před rokem +6

    Japan is indeed so clean... We just got there last May 2022... Those canals truly has crystal clear waters and wild Koi fish... Salute to the people of Japan...

    • @forestcityfishing4749
      @forestcityfishing4749 Před rokem +2

      Its pumped in water. Its basically an aquarium.
      Try watching a video about what Japan is really like. This guy is a phony.

    • @31oannamphong66
      @31oannamphong66 Před rokem +1

      @@forestcityfishing4749 for an aquarium that is not cover and public
      it is pretty or i would say very clean

    • @kuchikopi4631
      @kuchikopi4631 Před rokem +2

      @@forestcityfishing4749 what country are you from then? Lets see your people keep an open air "aquarium" like in the video. Lol

  • @paulccrimmins
    @paulccrimmins Před rokem

    Another excellent video! Thanks Greg

  • @carolynbillington9018

    lovely photos, info and your voice is pleasant to hear

  • @hiikarinnn
    @hiikarinnn Před rokem +4

    Great documentary! I live in this town, and it’s beautiful with all the springs everywhere. Having drinkable water flowing everywhere is super convenient as well^^

  • @FloridaFlipFlops
    @FloridaFlipFlops Před rokem +5

    Greetings from Naples, Florida. A very interesting video. Thank you so much for sharing this part of the world with us. 👍👍

  • @chungkiat
    @chungkiat Před rokem

    This something that fascinated me for a long while. Thanks for clarifying.

  • @yamabushi_nate7825
    @yamabushi_nate7825 Před rokem

    Greg’s video quality is something I love about this channel

  • @hopebadger
    @hopebadger Před rokem +12

    I work in Hot Springs, Arkansas. It's named for it's natural hot springs. There are places where you can relax in the hot springs water and there are fountains where you can fill up bottles for free like in this video. I work at Levi Hospital and we have a lot of patients that come to the physical therapy department to swim in the pool. The pool is one of the only ones specifically for physical therapy and it uses natural hot springs. It helps the patients because aquatic therapy reduces the amount of pressure put on joints and there are people who believe that they can absorb the natural minerals during their therapy. There is a misunderstanding with our pool because people think they can just get in it but its specifically for physical therapy. There's peddle bikes and hand rails. Theres a slopped area for wheel chairs and a lift as well to help patients get in. It's great because the pool is set at about 92 degrees farenheit and the heat helps with inflammation and joint pain. Greatly recommend aquatic therapy for anyone wherever you're at.

    • @nippononna
      @nippononna Před rokem

      Is Arkansas famous not only for its hot springs, but also for its volcanoes? Areas with volcanoes benefit from hot springs and clean spring water, but suffer from the terror of earthquakes and tsunamis...

    • @hopebadger
      @hopebadger Před rokem +1

      @@nippononna no it's not. There is a diamond mine in Murfreesboro and a festival surrounding toads called Toad Suck in Conway

  • @Joricano
    @Joricano Před rokem +10

    I like how these things are clarified. I was really under the impression that this one town in Japan had Kois living in canals naturally.

  • @coha348
    @coha348 Před rokem +2

    Our gutters are like this too. I live in a smaller suburb of yokohama. The kids love feeding the koi!

  • @halbmetallmensch
    @halbmetallmensch Před rokem +3

    I remember when I stay in Ota City in Tokyo there also was a little section on the side of the walkway with Koi in them! Very nice & interesting video!

  • @nish221100
    @nish221100 Před rokem +12

    Our gutters are better than they were 20 years ago. I.e. reasonably free of trash (like small paper, nicknacks) very few cans (if any), some plastic. The seal on the iPhone is pretty good. But bets are off once someone who is not professional replaces the battery w/o a pressure test. Thanks, Greg!

    • @LifeWhereImFrom
      @LifeWhereImFrom  Před rokem +5

      I was happily relieved when the speakers started working again!

  • @sam3353
    @sam3353 Před rokem +36

    You provide such a huge wealth of content to satisfy my Japanese curiosity.

  • @Rod-bp8ow
    @Rod-bp8ow Před rokem +2

    Cleanliness of the surroundings speaks in its exceptional and pictureque view. 2022 onwards. BANSAI JAPAN.

  • @kentokenyama3449
    @kentokenyama3449 Před rokem

    Bro, you just earned a new follower. Loving your vids.

  • @kellykwon2220
    @kellykwon2220 Před rokem +6

    This town is beautiful, I lost "the point" of the video a while ago. Living in such a beautiful and natural place would make a person more reverent.
    Thank you for sharing this beauty.

  • @jbdeadangel
    @jbdeadangel Před rokem +40

    Here in India, the street gutters mostly are so horrible that the water turns dark black during non-rainy seasons. Any habitat is almost impossible here.

    • @nsk660
      @nsk660 Před rokem +6

      @Six Pains even in least populated cities of India , we never find sanitation ... Population density can't be a pretext for hiding our disadvantages

    • @harshitrautela6585
      @harshitrautela6585 Před rokem +2

      @Six Pains yeah I have heard that thr cleanest village in whole asia is in north east.

    • @Hi_Mansi
      @Hi_Mansi Před rokem +3

      @@harshitrautela6585 I was just about to comment this, yes The Cleanest Village of Asia is in Meghalaya India , so it depend upon people not govt.
      Garbage trucks, sweepers are there too in india but they won't clean 24hrs , it's our responsibility!

    • @mayankprajapat4591
      @mayankprajapat4591 Před rokem +1

      Have you heard of indore???
      We don't have black smelly gutter, they are clean and we have gardens and trees on the side of gutters also now we are the only city with 7 star ratings in inda.

    • @matan7899
      @matan7899 Před rokem

      @Six Pains isnt this my city only mindset the main problem of India? If your city/area is the only clean area in India, that doesnt mean that India is clean.

  • @amitchaurasia697
    @amitchaurasia697 Před rokem +1

    Thank you soo much for showing us the world.Appreciated💯

  • @JuneGarciaPH
    @JuneGarciaPH Před 4 měsíci

    Love this. Informative! 😊

  • @kendelion
    @kendelion Před rokem +5

    In Okayama i always see fishes and turtle in normal irrigation and canals. Kois are rare only in protected areas

  • @veronican.9798
    @veronican.9798 Před rokem +3

    There's kois in the gutter in Chiran, Kyushu as well! It's quite a whiles away from this town, but thought I mentioned, since it's not the only town that does this.

  • @tintindahan3216
    @tintindahan3216 Před rokem +1

    Somewhere in Sagay, Negros Occidental, the same happened in the gutters of Paraiso, a small town. 25 years ago (not sure when this happened exactly, I was still small back then) a big flood rose from the river near our house, our neighbors would take care of kois, carpas, mollys, and other kinds of fish. All these fishes ended up living in the gutters when the flood subsided. These fishes lived for many years in the gutters of Paraiso

  • @RafRoads
    @RafRoads Před rokem

    You're awesome. I enjoyed this video.

  • @marcogallo2811
    @marcogallo2811 Před rokem +47

    NYC has disgusting street gutters unfortunately because many lack respect for the place they live. Too many people throw trash into the streets, and many people throw or push trash straight into gutters which causes many of the issues with flooding. There's a little sidewalk island or triangle between streets around the corner from my house where on a daily basis, people will drive by in the middle of the night and dump many bags of trash and broken furniture so someone else can deal with it. Its mind blowing to me how disrespectful and lazy people are. (my rant on how frustrating New Yorkers are and I'm born and raised in Queens).

    • @owarida6241
      @owarida6241 Před rokem +4

      Comparing a metropolis to a rural area is kinda unfair don't you think? Then again tokyo is one of the cleanest city I've seen so far.

    • @trustytrest
      @trustytrest Před rokem +11

      It aint just new york... america as a whole is like this even in suburbs and rural areas. Its just a part of American culture to not care about the environment

    • @Shrouded_reaper
      @Shrouded_reaper Před rokem

      New York is truly disgusting, whole city smells like urine (and now an inescapable weed smell too) and is filthy from top to bottom.

    • @abimaellopezmaylord27lopez7
      @abimaellopezmaylord27lopez7 Před rokem +2

      @@owarida6241 Tokyo is the dirtiest city in japan because foreigners live in Tokyo

    • @abimaellopezmaylord27lopez7
      @abimaellopezmaylord27lopez7 Před rokem

      @@trustytrest actually it’s not part of USA culture but USA is a diverse country also japan is not a diverse country

  • @theharper1
    @theharper1 Před rokem +13

    I've seen Koi and Trout in a gutter beside the road in Shirakawa-go. I didn't trace the water to see if there were grills to prevent them from escaping. I also saw very clear water in the street drains in Kurama. Walking upstream, I found where the water was drawn off the adjacent stream. So I take your point, but the video title is a bit misleading.

  • @BuzzSargent
    @BuzzSargent Před rokem +2

    I was intrigued by the title but did not expect to watch the whole thing. 🥃 However, you made a great video 📸. I want to learn more about rural Nagoya. 🦋 Happy Trails 🤠

  • @1994DLewis
    @1994DLewis Před rokem

    Can't wait for another video!

  • @achanotsukare
    @achanotsukare Před rokem +3

    Greg, somehow you made gutter water fascinating and calming.

  • @footfault1941
    @footfault1941 Před rokem +8

    How beautiful & charming shimabara is! Being a Japanese, mixture of emotion is undeniable. In a part, we could be very proud of scenes created by nature & history, in the other, we're well aware of they're exceptional & very limited, often found way away from big cities. Anyway, personally greatly appreciated to the author for this elaborate video. Quality would be a subtitle. Thank you very much for a precious introduction of a uniqueness of Japan to the world wide web!

  • @DonutMaple
    @DonutMaple Před rokem

    This video is so pleasing and so does your voice wow I'm soooo subscribing lol

  • @mattypurcell
    @mattypurcell Před rokem

    Very cool bro, great vid 👍

  • @mukundbalasubramanian1229

    The street gutters where I'm from have a life of their own. Where in Japan, people like to peek into them, people generally try to stay 5 metres away from them at the very least. And so, they have to make their presence known. Usually through their unbearable stench or by overflowing in the slightest of rainfall. They may not be serene and clear, but they make themselves known in other ways. 😂😂

    • @j134679
      @j134679 Před rokem +7

      In the Philippines you try to memorize where they are so you don't fall & drown in them when the streets flood every rainy season.

    • @gargisonakiya4182
      @gargisonakiya4182 Před rokem +1

      @@j134679 😂😂

    • @dayoki8091
      @dayoki8091 Před rokem

      @@j134679 no cap

  • @anonymoussaitama725
    @anonymoussaitama725 Před rokem +4

    That "not so clean" is 1000000 times cleaner than gutters in my country

  • @condorX2
    @condorX2 Před rokem

    Love the green scenery and the koi just chilling

  • @mariaraymond9490
    @mariaraymond9490 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing, very interesting.

  • @LeprosuGnome
    @LeprosuGnome Před rokem +4

    In my city, Belo Horizonte, there is a HUGE manmade lake, it's kinda like Japan, but with capybaras and alligators. Look it up, it's called "lagoa da Pampulha"

  • @AyimeAnime
    @AyimeAnime Před rokem +3

    I didn't expect that I will ever get to watch a Video about Street Gutters

  • @dorayantz3649
    @dorayantz3649 Před rokem +1

    Wow, the canal is so clean. Beautiful. Well done, 🇯🇵 😍❤

  • @vondahe
    @vondahe Před rokem +1

    The French cities of Thonon-les-Bains and it’s more famous neighbour Evian(-les-Bains) also have spring outlets where locals come with bottles and larger containers to collect the very same spring water we buy at outrageous prices elsewhere.

  • @zzzanon
    @zzzanon Před rokem +4

    Beautiful, and kid friendly. What a grand place to raise a family.

  • @SeventhSwell
    @SeventhSwell Před rokem +3

    That brief bit at the end about the Mizunashi (sp?) river filled in by earth and sand dredging left me with so many questions. Questions like "What?" and "Why?".

    • @LifeWhereImFrom
      @LifeWhereImFrom  Před rokem +3

      This should have more info en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Unzen#1991_eruption

  • @KingdomOfDaylightsDauphin

    Well researched aAND entertaining. Subscribed!

  • @GeographySingapore
    @GeographySingapore Před rokem +1

    Haha great video Greg. But I was very surprised to see huge black koi in Yokohama, right next to the JR west exit! Miss Japan a lot. Stay safe and keep the great videos coming!

  • @mathewpugh9313
    @mathewpugh9313 Před rokem +4

    I’ve traveled to Japan dozens of times, and on my days off, I would take bread to the canals and drop tiny pieces in the water, and in a short time dozens of carp and some koi will show up.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Před rokem +47

    News articles: In the city of Shimabara on Japan's Kyushu Island, the street gutters are so clean they are home to hundreds of koi carp!
    LWIF: *Amazing, every word of what you just said...was wrong*
    The NYC water drainage system isn't like Japan, but at least it's home to a group of turtles turned ninjas trained by a rat who both protect the city and further promote the city by spreading their love of NY-style pizza. Can't say the same about Japan

  • @tankeryy1566
    @tankeryy1566 Před rokem

    interesting documentary as always.

  • @letsfish876
    @letsfish876 Před rokem

    Thanks for a true and honest clarification. I hope one day you can do a video on fishing in Japan 🤞

  • @alfredeinstein1742
    @alfredeinstein1742 Před rokem +3

    Next video
    Fish swimming in Japanese toilet seats

  • @mendebone
    @mendebone Před rokem +5

    You are providing a unique service here, which is convincing a certain demographic of people to dip their iphones in water. Thank you!

  • @Izzy-bq1rc
    @Izzy-bq1rc Před 21 dnem

    Moving to this town at the end of the summer. Very excited to see it for real! Natural beauty

  • @Plastic_Existence
    @Plastic_Existence Před rokem +2

    I lived in yokohama in kanagawa ken but moved to ibaraki-ken and lived there for 10yrs theres so many rice fields there that its awesome to look at on harvest season I always find wild ferrets near those fields and yeah some gutters do have some kois but dont have that clear of a water in them.. now I live in tochigi-ken and we have a flood control/ river or something I dont know in english and fishes lives there too

  • @Wiggie_Wiggie
    @Wiggie_Wiggie Před rokem +4

    Yes, they're street gutters but the source of water is clean. It's not the waste water coming out of houses.

  • @CelticConservative
    @CelticConservative Před rokem +4

    That's so beautiful. I pray one day I can visit these beautiful places in Japan. And Manitou springs we have carbonated fresh water springs you can drink from different fountains in town. So strange drinking carbonated water from the ground

  • @defunctchannel942
    @defunctchannel942 Před rokem

    This was a great video!!!

  • @lindacondray7918
    @lindacondray7918 Před rokem +2

    It’s good to hear the gutters in Japan have changed. When I was in Okinawa and mainland Japan in the 1970s the Binjo ditches (drains along the street sides) were literally sewage drains and STANK. Raw sewage flowed in those ditches constantly and there were definitely NO Koi in them!

    • @yo2trader539
      @yo2trader539 Před 9 měsíci +1

      That's because US occupation of Okinawa continued till the 1970s.

  • @skeesh330
    @skeesh330 Před rokem +3

    Greg can make the most mundane things interesting

  • @kevinslater4126
    @kevinslater4126 Před rokem +40

    Fun fact, Koi are one of the most recently domesticated animals. The domestication of koi only goes back about 150 years when China first domesticated goldfish for sale as pets about 1000 years ago by breeding small Chinese carp for their gold and silver colors. Japan decided that China doesn't get to be the only one with cool colorful fish and decided to breed the Japanese carp into Koi.

    • @higon99
      @higon99 Před rokem +2

      Nah, Koi exists in Japan since pre-historic ages. Nobody knows when it came to that islands. Records from every time period are telling they had Koi but mainly as a protein source. Even fossils are present. I don't know what you are talking about but you are probably referring "Nishikigoi" which happened 200 years ago.
      You need to double check your information sources. You got this so wrong it's not funny when you have strong China-centric propaganda in your head.

  • @MochiFan
    @MochiFan Před rokem

    I love this video!!

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Před rokem +2

    Those koi fishes are so stunning to look at. Maybe someday I'd get to have my own koi fish pond. Japan is pretty spotless, based on what I remember from my last trip there in 2019. You can't find even pieces of candy wrappers being littered all over the ground. Japan's waterway system seems very efficient. However I do get the fact that not all regions in Japan have crystal clear waters flowing down those gutters. Maybe we tend to generalize, so that's why it kinda ended up like that.

  • @Iron_Heinrich
    @Iron_Heinrich Před rokem +4

    You should do a video on Yanagawa's Canals, down in Kyushu. There is a very fascinating documentary by Isao Takahata of Studio Ghibli fame covering the subject. It would be cool to see how the town looks nowadays.

  • @trt7979
    @trt7979 Před rokem +4

    Very interesting. Most of the open water I see in Japan I think is polluted. However, I mostly visit large cities, so I think that is to be expected. My kids and I have played in a hydrophilic park. It was very fun and very clean.

    • @equal5505
      @equal5505 Před rokem +1

      Nah man there is nothing like most open water in Japan is polluted bcs Japan is the most clean country in Asia.If you want to see polluted open waters or canals or gutters or whatever just go to another Asian countries and you will find it immediately.Even the most polluted waters in Japan can be the most clean waters in other Asian countries by the standard.

  • @swanubal508
    @swanubal508 Před rokem +2

    I have seen someone commenting on quora that if the japanese gutters are clean then how does Nobita gets dirty after falling in the gutter?
    prettymuch right

  • @oatlord
    @oatlord Před rokem +1

    All of those canals are way better than anything I've ever seen, even if they're not crystal clear.

  • @OllamhDrab
    @OllamhDrab Před rokem +7

    Well, it's still cool to have koi swimming around some streets. And I dunno about all breeds, but some carp can be invasive and darn near unkillable, so they can probably put up with more than some think, I presume, but given the expense why not treat em nice. :)

    • @vonkeo3556
      @vonkeo3556 Před rokem

      Is only intreseso why can't JD create a quality vid like this? he is only interest in milking super chat and kickstarter scam.

    • @gaeboi8182
      @gaeboi8182 Před rokem

      carp are native to Japan so being invasive isn't that big of a problem

    • @OllamhDrab
      @OllamhDrab Před rokem

      @@gaeboi8182 Oh, but some are invasive *here,* the point is they're hard to get rid of that way.

  • @chakpuia
    @chakpuia Před rokem +3

    In Gokarna, Karnataka, India, Street gutters are as clean as those streams. I've visited that place last year and I was very surprised to see fishes in roadside drains.

  • @dayla8634
    @dayla8634 Před rokem

    I live in the inaka next to a mountain. Around the mountain there is a house that has a natural spring with super clean water. In the gutters that go around the mountain, there has been a tengu sitting in it for over a year.

  • @user-tu2dh5ro7i
    @user-tu2dh5ro7i Před rokem +2

    Funnily though it used to be like this for my mom's old town. The street gutters would have fish in them. Apparently this was because the town was built around a natural freshwater spring, and the people thought it was a good idea to dump fish in there. She remembers how the water used to be free and clean and teaming with all kinds of fish.
    Then industrialization happened. A water company came, bought the land around the spring. The clean gutters stagnated because the water source was blocked off. The surrounding farm lands were bought up for apartment blocks and high rises. Instead of fish, you'd see ascaris worms from the brand new livestock factories swimming in the gutters instead. Mostly though, she says everyone complained because what used to be a free source of fresh water you now had to pay to get access to.

  • @-zv5ql
    @-zv5ql Před rokem +3

    In India people throws their trash into the gutter