Narrow Roads and Japan
You've been in Japan to long when, while driving on a two-lane road, you know the lane nearest the curb is going to be used as a parking lot. Since Japan has a lot less land area than the U.S., cramming four times the population of California into a space that's slightly smaller, allowances for the lack of space have to be made, and on most streets you can expect to see cars pulling over along the side of the road so people can run into the conbini (convenience store) and buy milk. There are always two or three cars in front of my parents' liquor shop on Sundays, too, since that the day Shonen Jump comes out. In all my years of driving in the U.S. I've never been on a road that was so narrow that two cars couldn't pass side-by-side, but it's not difficult to find roads like that in the more rural parts of Japan, and one of the skills you need when driving on such roads is the ability to back up until you can find a wider spot for the oncoming car to pass. Since there are many blind corners on narrower Japanese streets, there are curved mirrors posted to help you see oncoming cars or pedestrians, although learning to drive while being aware of these mirrors is quite a challenge -- they just don't enter my vision at all.





6 Comments:
Man it must be really hard driving in Japan. I mean how do they do it? the streets are so god damn narrow. I really hate those Japanese Stereotypes where they say Japanese people suck at driving? Hell from what I see they are good drivers. I would like to see those people who make those stupid stereotype jokes and see how well they can drive in Japan. although....I did notice that some cars and even trucks are a lot smaller then the U.S...I thought it looked cute.
1:51 AM
Here they are good drivers. Not sure about in California. ^_^ Roads are narrower but aren't always bad. Sometimes they can be downright nice to drive on. Of course having almost no damaged roads or potholes is nice.
1:59 AM
The Narrow Road to... O my god, look out! a little read classic by Basho about traffic laws in ancient Japan.
Along with the traffic on Sunday you also have Gintoki fighting with ninja over the last Shonen Jump.
4:08 AM
wow....I thought driving is hard enough already in the western world.
BTW...one of your pictures isn't showing up....there's white box with a red x in it.
12:51 PM
The UK is rather similar to Japan in this aspect, I feel. Many streets in most villages and towns here were built long before people had cars, so only the newer areas have driveways and parking spaces.
It's not uncommon to find streets with cars parked on both sides of the road all the way up, essentially creating one-way roads all around.
Basically, if you're driving anywhere around the UK and you're not using a motorway, you'll probably have to stop and let someone else drive around a car or five before you can move on down the road.
The highway code states that you give way to traffic coming the other direction if the parked vehicles are on your side of the road. If they're on both, whoever has a gap they can pop into and let the other driver pass is expected to do that.
But yeah. From what I hear, driving in the USA is ridiculously simple. I guess that's why US driving tests (at least from what I see on TV) are always just large parking lots full of cones, whereas over here your lessons and tests are all done on real roads with real drivers honking at you :-p
2:01 PM
Yes, my wife laughs at how easy and cheap it was for me to get my license in the U.S., I think it took 2 days for drivers' training costing $120 at the time. Japanese have to take 1-2 months and pay $3000 or more.
2:12 PM
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