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The personal log of Peter, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Monday, June 09, 2008

Summer, Mugi Tea and Cool Biz

The Japanese are a very seasonal people, doing different things at different times of year, and as the warmer weather approaches, everyone is getting into "summer mode." First of all, summer is the season for drinking mugi cha, the delicious barley tea which is consumed all around the country, since it's cold and refreshing and can be easily made with cold-water tea bags. In July and August, the summer festivals like Tanabata will arrive, without a doubt my favorite part of Japan (well, after hot springs). Summer is also time for Japan's politicians to show they're doing something about global warming by embracing what's called cool biz, a program promoted by the Japanese Ministry of the Environment every year that promotes using less electrical power by embracing clothing that allows people to be comfortable even with the air conditioning turned down. Prime Minister Fukuda (who comes from our prefecture of Gunma) held a press conference over the weekend wearing a casual shirt from Hawaii, which looked ridiculous on the man. He looked relieved when the press event was over and he could change back into a suit.

3 Comments:

Blogger L.B. said...

Completely off topic but over the weekend I saw this article in the NY Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/07/business/worldbusiness/07whistle.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

In the article, it talks about how more and more Japanese salarymen are breaking from tradition and blowing the whistle on companies that ignore safety regulations or just plain moral decency to gain more profits. I was curious what your view on this as a gaijin... is this just a natural progression of Japanese business or another example of Western influence?

1:40 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Yes, it fits nicely with the "oh, America was doing that ten years ago, I guess the Japanese should start" theme that I talk about a lot ^_^ They also moved against smokers right on target, too.

2:11 AM

 
Blogger L.B. said...

Yes, I saw that a Japanese politician (who's name eludes me at the moment but I do remember that he's a smoker himself ironically enough) has proposed to triple the price of cigarettes up to 10 dollars a pack in order to pay for something or other.

2:15 AM

 

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