Beautiful scenery,and relaxing ride! This comes out as,a Japanese equivalent of the Pacific Electric(Red Cars),of Southern California,before the freeways,and had much the same ambience! Thank you 😇 😊!
I'm so glad I caught your next video of this line. I enjoyed the ride, especially noting the weeds winning the battle with the track gang! Passing through vibrantly green countryside with woods, orchards, farm fields (a greenhouse or two?), an occasional packing house, and neat residential areas. All under a beautiful blue sky and mountains in the distance. I'm always saying this, and I truly mean it! Thank you for the time and effort that you put into these videos. ❤😂
Thank you for your comment. It doesn't appear in the cab view, but it's a beautiful line with mountains and greenery. A Japanese writer was tired of life in Tokyo and moved along this line. He moved to Karuizawa first, and then to an even more sparsely populated, ordinary village. He seems to be busier at farming than writing. That's also an enviable way of life.
I apologize for the cab view having pillars as usual. Next I'm going to upload a cab view of the Nagano Electric Railway, a private railway that also runs in Nagano Prefecture.
A trip through an area that corresponds to that in my home country: views of green hills with lots of green trees, a few villages and the railway in between... 🤗 A city behemoth like Tokyo would scare me: I'd work there, but I'd never live there!!! I'd miss the rural life there a lot 🤔🙄
Tokyo is... The security situation is good. If we leave our belongings in front of a bench and go to the toilet, they are unlikely to disappear. This is a rare situation in the world. Of course, there are gray areas. Still, it is true that life in the city is stressful, and there are many people who dream of living in the countryside. I am probably one of them. If only my PC could connect to the Internet, I would be able to live a carefree life. However, my plan has not yet come true.
If you have bad internet in the country and are partly dependent on it for your hobby or job, I can understand if you would rather live in a city... However, I am surprised that a highly technological country like Japan, according to your description, cannot manage to get decent internet in rural areas!? 🤔 I live in the countryside but am not completely cut off, the next larger city with around 22,000 inhabitants (including the surrounding incorporations) is three kilometers away. Deutsche Telekom already offers really fast internet via the old copper cable, preparations are currently being made to supply households with fiber optics and it is only a matter of time before the old copper cable for telephone and internet is no longer needed... like with old locomotives and multiple units, which will also be replaced by more modern technology at some point... ☺️
@@wandajackson3410 I was not good at explaining. Nowadays, we can connect to the Internet anywhere in Japan. Except deep in the mountains. When I climbed a mountain called Yatsugatake, which is about 2500m above sea level, I talked to a female owner of a mountain hut. After talking about various things, I said to her, "The other day, some people wrote bad things about this hut on the Internet," and she laughed cheerfully and said, "I don't read that kind of stuff at all, so it's fine." I think that kind of lifestyle is good. Although, the hut also advertises its event schedule and so on almost in real time on the Internet. Copper wires are becoming a thing of the past in Japan too. Is the era in which we were born amazing, happy, or awful?
@@14ikesan12 I probably just didn't understand it properly - that's why there was a misunderstanding, I'm sorry ☺️ Maybe I should learn Japanese again in my old age 😄 Then everything is clear, I would have been very surprised if the internet in Japan wasn't so good... You will simply have your reasons for NOT moving to the country - in any case, I'm keeping my fingers crossed that it will work out 👍 - and now we're chatting again and about a topic that has nothing at all to do with trains and your lovely video! I just have to get out of the habit of writing or asking too much, otherwise people will think I'm a chatterbox... 🙄 I'm not that at all!
@@wandajackson3410 I wish Japanese was a little easier! Even if we use English, which is a foreign language, as long as we understand that we share the same intellectual curiosity, we can definitely find fun even in topics other than trains. That's what SNS is for. Taking a step forward is more difficult than ignoring, but it's worth it. I welcome any talk about fish macs.
Beautiful scenery,and relaxing ride! This comes out as,a Japanese equivalent of the Pacific Electric(Red Cars),of Southern California,before the freeways,and had much the same ambience! Thank you 😇 😊!
I'm so glad I caught your next video of this line. I enjoyed the ride, especially noting the weeds winning the battle with the track gang! Passing through vibrantly green countryside with woods, orchards, farm fields (a greenhouse or two?), an occasional packing house, and neat residential areas. All under a beautiful blue sky and mountains in the distance. I'm always saying this, and I truly mean it! Thank you for the time and effort that you put into these videos. ❤😂
Thank you for your comment. It doesn't appear in the cab view, but it's a beautiful line with mountains and greenery. A Japanese writer was tired of life in Tokyo and moved along this line. He moved to Karuizawa first, and then to an even more sparsely populated, ordinary village. He seems to be busier at farming than writing. That's also an enviable way of life.
Thank you for another lovely train ride. I enjoyed this video very much.
I apologize for the cab view having pillars as usual. Next I'm going to upload a cab view of the Nagano Electric Railway, a private railway that also runs in Nagano Prefecture.
前展望Go,謝謝分享👍😃👍
A trip through an area that corresponds to that in my home country: views of green hills with lots of green trees, a few villages and the railway in between... 🤗
A city behemoth like Tokyo would scare me: I'd work there, but I'd never live there!!! I'd miss the rural life there a lot 🤔🙄
Tokyo is...
The security situation is good. If we leave our belongings in front of a bench and go to the toilet, they are unlikely to disappear. This is a rare situation in the world. Of course, there are gray areas.
Still, it is true that life in the city is stressful, and there are many people who dream of living in the countryside. I am probably one of them. If only my PC could connect to the Internet, I would be able to live a carefree life. However, my plan has not yet come true.
If you have bad internet in the country and are partly dependent on it for your hobby or job, I can understand if you would rather live in a city...
However, I am surprised that a highly technological country like Japan, according to your description, cannot manage to get decent internet in rural areas!? 🤔
I live in the countryside but am not completely cut off, the next larger city with around 22,000 inhabitants (including the surrounding incorporations) is three kilometers away.
Deutsche Telekom already offers really fast internet via the old copper cable, preparations are currently being made to supply households with fiber optics and it is only a matter of time before the old copper cable for telephone and internet is no longer needed... like with old locomotives and multiple units, which will also be replaced by more modern technology at some point... ☺️
@@wandajackson3410 I was not good at explaining. Nowadays, we can connect to the Internet anywhere in Japan. Except deep in the mountains. When I climbed a mountain called Yatsugatake, which is about 2500m above sea level, I talked to a female owner of a mountain hut. After talking about various things, I said to her, "The other day, some people wrote bad things about this hut on the Internet," and she laughed cheerfully and said, "I don't read that kind of stuff at all, so it's fine." I think that kind of lifestyle is good. Although, the hut also advertises its event schedule and so on almost in real time on the Internet. Copper wires are becoming a thing of the past in Japan too. Is the era in which we were born amazing, happy, or awful?
@@14ikesan12 I probably just didn't understand it properly - that's why there was a misunderstanding, I'm sorry ☺️
Maybe I should learn Japanese again in my old age 😄
Then everything is clear, I would have been very surprised if the internet in Japan wasn't so good... You will simply have your reasons for NOT moving to the country - in any case, I'm keeping my fingers crossed that it will work out 👍 - and now we're chatting again and about a topic that has nothing at all to do with trains and your lovely video! I just have to get out of the habit of writing or asking too much, otherwise people will think I'm a chatterbox... 🙄 I'm not that at all!
@@wandajackson3410 I wish Japanese was a little easier! Even if we use English, which is a foreign language, as long as we understand that we share the same intellectual curiosity, we can definitely find fun even in topics other than trains. That's what SNS is for. Taking a step forward is more difficult than ignoring, but it's worth it. I welcome any talk about fish macs.
... UEDA
This is the brand well known company.