Saturday, July 21, 2007

Humidity and cleaning the bathroom

Japan is a very humid country, especially in the summer. If you're in central Japan, for example Tokyo, in July-August, don't expect to be able to walk more than 10 meters without being soaked in sweat. Japanese people call this 蒸し暑い (mushi-atsui), pretty much meaning humid and hot.
That was a big reason for me to go to Sapporo, on Hokkaido in the north of Japan. The climate is quite a bit cooler and a lot less humid here, also it's always windy which is nice in the summer, but not so nice in the winter.
However compared to Sweden, even Sapporo is a lot more humid, which has some consequences.

  • Everything here in Japan is packed in lots of plastics. If you buy a pack of cookies, of course it comes in a plastic bag like anywhere in the world, but here, each cookie is in a small plastic bag of it's own also, or there's one of those small bags included that absorbs moisture, that only comes in shoe boxes in Sweden. Partly because of the humidity but also because Japanese people are obsessed with having all food very fresh.
    It becomes a lot of plastics, I am telling you. Just too bad that you can only throw away plastics once per week here in Japan. All refuse is sorted into burnables, non-burnable and plastics and has specific days when you're allowed to throw it. So you need to keep your garbage in your apartment until the day when it's supposed to be thrown.
  • Here in Sapporo, the laundry might be dry after about 24 hours if you're lucky. Sometimes 24 hours is not enough. I wonder if it's possible at all to get your laundry dry in southern Japan in the summer?
  • There's always some funny pink stuff growing on the floor in our bathroom. The Japanese bathrooms are entirely made of plastic and has a bath tub and a shower next to it. Japanese people love taking a bath, but showering in the bath tub is not okay. Anyway, the floor's surface in our bath room is not even, which is good since a perfectly flat plastic surface would be a lot more slippery. However, the cute little pink colored stuff loves the small bumps in the floor, combined with the humidity and no window in the bathroom, it's obviously very good conditions to grow quickly, and it's an absolute pain in the ass to get rid of. We have some kind of bathroom cleaner, on the bottle it says you're supposed to just spray it on, wait a few minutes and wash with water and you're bathroom is clean (not that I can read it at all, but my girlfriend says so). Hah! More than one hour of rubbing the floor like a maniac with a sponge is what it takes to get rid of the pink bastards. And within a week they'll be back again...

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Intressant blogg, tack för att du tar dig tid att skriva :)Ska själv till Tokyo i Januari, ska bli intressant(urgh) att se hur mycket fukt ett par byxor kan suga åt sig!

Anonymous said...

Hi there, nice blog you have here, especially the various tips on surviving in japan, found them to be quite informative heh.
I am considering a move to Japan to study the language as well, and Sapporo seems like a nice place.
If you don't mind can you tell me more about the school you are currently enrolled in and how are the
school fees like?
Any info will be gladly appreciated thanks!

Anonymous said...

i like to read your nice blog.i sometimes come here,its really interesting to me how feel forigner in Sapporo life.(←how can i say? ..i have to study english)
bytheway did you try to eat ROYCE chocolate? swedens sweets fair やってますよ。今月末までです
have a nice summer vacation!
Naoko

Anonymous said...

Hi Naoko, maybe a good way to say it would be:
"its really interesting to me, how a foreigner feels about living in Sapporo?"
Hope it helps heh. Are you from Sapporo?
I think your english is pretty good, just continue to work hard and enjoy the summer 'matsuri' too heh.

Brandt (ブラント) said...

Christoffer: Tack för att du läser! Och lycka till med ditt äventyr. Tror snart det kommer vara fler svenskar i Japan än i Sverige.

laze: alright I'll make a post about my school one of these days. Now I actually have free time for once, which made me remember how nice it is to not really do much at all during the days for a while. :P

ありがとう のあこさん!royce sweden sweets fair を見たことがありますけど、まだ何か買いませんでした。じつはスナックスでカキピーが一番すきだ!でも多分royceのコッコスボルを買いたいです。
英語の勉強でがんばってね。

oh, I'm writing in 3 languages all of a sudden 8-).

Anonymous said...

Hi Brandt thanks alot, will be looking forward to it!

Anonymous said...

lazeさん/thank you for teaching english.i live in Sapporo,i know Mr Brandts school because my mother went to there.

Brandtさん/お返事ありがとうございます!カキピーが好きなんて! かっぱえびせんはいかがですか?うめ味とか。ちなみに私は「なおこ」でした!

Anonymous said...

Thanks very much for the blog! I am having a good time reading it. You mentioned that part of the reason you chose Sapporo was the lower humidity level. I have been there once for vacation during the fall and I may move there to study in the future for the same reason (better summer weather). My question: exactly how humid does it get there in the summer? Is it better than Tokyo but still pretty bad, or is it the nirvana I hope it will be? Thanks very much in advance.

Brandt (ブラント) said...

I don't know where in the world you're from, so it's hard to say.. Sweden has a very very dry climate, so for a Swede, Sapporo is humid in the summer. However, Japanese people I met who were from Honshu and students from other Asian countries loved Sapporo because it wasn't humid at all compared to what they were used to.

Anyway, Sapporo is 100 times better than Honshu, I can't stand the humid climate in the summer on Honshu.

Anonymous said...

Good point - I am from New York City (not that I expect you to know what the weather is like here). Thanks very much for the response, it was helpful. Best of luck...