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Search resuls for: "Julian Ryall"


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Tom Fay moved from a small village in North Wales to Osaka in 2007 having never visited Japan. Looking back, I've found a few surprising things living in Japan for nearly two decades. Living in Japan has broadened my palette for seafood and local seasonal vegetables, which are readily available. AdvertisementCity living and countryside living are very differentI wish I'd moved to the countryside even sooner. I could see myself living in Japan forever, but part of me would like to move back to the UK.
Persons: Tom Fay, , It's, I've, I'd, Summers, you've, I'm Organizations: Service, University of Manchester Locations: North Wales, Osaka, Japan, British, Kyoto
Simon Celestine arrived at Odawara castle as a tourist from France but he is now lord of one of the most impressive feudal-era fortresses in Japan – if only for a day. Odawara Tourism AssociationOdawara has been selected as one of the first recipients of government assistance to tell its story and local tourism authorities have been busy devising initiatives that play on its strengths. Five generations of the Hojo clan made Odawara castle one of the most formidable in the country and it was never successfully stormed in battle. Odawara Tourism AssociationThe innermost courtyard is across another bridge over a moat, up a flight of steep steps and through a gate set into a two-meter-thick wall. The “Lord of the Castle” experience can be booked through the official Odawara Tourism Association website.
Persons: Simon Celestine, Hojo, Naoya Asao, ” Celestine, , Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Hideyoshi, Meiji, Celestine, Tomomi Iwayama, Iwayama, sashimi Organizations: CNN, Japan CNN, Odawara Tourism, Odawara, Odawara Tourism Association, CNN Travel Locations: Odawara, Japan, France, Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka, Hakone, Izu, Sagami Bay, Mount Fuji, Edo, Kanto
Evan and Dani BretonEvan, now 40, worked as a massage therapist while Dani, now 39, was a self-employed photographer. Dani and Evan BentonThe couple drove over the border into Mexico on December 5, 2021. Guanajuato, MexicoHouse-sitting was a way to live rent-free in MexicoThe couple became house-sitters in Mexico so they could live rent-free and travel around the country. Japan was their final stop because of cheaper house pricesAfter 14 months in Mexico, the couple concluded that Japan "would be a better fit for us." The house cost $7,500 and the realtor's fees were an additional $1,500.
Persons: Dani, Evan Benton, , Dani Benton, Evan, Dani Breton Evan, New Orleans Evan, Dani Breton, Bentons, could've, Evan Benton Dani, Dani Benton Evan, they've, grandpas, We've Organizations: Service, Ninth Ward, Mexico House, Facebook Locations: New Orleans, Mexico, Japan, Dallas , Oregon, Cholula Puebla, Guanajuato, www.housesitmexico.com, Tokyo, South Korea, Omishima, Ehime Prefecture, Louisiana
Anton Wormann, a 30-year-old Swedish model, moved to Tokyo in 2019 after visiting for work. Advertisement Advertisement Watch: Inside a $12,000-a-night Airbnb in HollywoodMoving to Japan was the 'best decision'Wormann, a Swedish model, working on renovations in his Japanese house. After settling in the hip Shibuya and Sangenjaya districts of west Tokyo, Wormann told Insider he began buying cheap, neglected properties in the area and flipping them to rent for extra income. Wormann told Insider he was passing by the house and saw the owners at the site. The Sangenjaya house was completed in March, and Wormann told Insider he had his first Airbnb guests within a month.
Persons: Anton Wormann, Wormann, hadn't, Anton Wormann Wormann, shoji, Anton, Japan Wormann Organizations: Service, YouTube Locations: Tokyo, Wall, Silicon, Stockholm, Japan, New York, Milan, London, Paris, Hollywood, Swedish, Sweden
Japan's defence minister says it would have the legal right to destroy any balloon that enters its domestic airspace. Defence Minister Yasukazu Hamada said on Tuesday under existing laws, Japan would have the legal right to destroy any balloon that intrudes into its domestic airspace. "Intrusions into Japan's territorial airspace constitute a violation, even if it is a balloon," the Yomiuri newspaper quoted Isozaki as saying. In the future, it may be possible to use lasers or other technology to bring a balloon to earth, he suggested. Japan uses balloons for weather observations, but the prevailing winds mean that they typically travel east, over the Pacific, rather than over mainland Asia.
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