Japanese Fire Department Report
Clang clang! Clang clang! Right outside my window right there's a fire truck driving by slowly, ringing a bell and playing a recorded voice: "This is the community volunteer fire-fighting brigade. Please remember to extinguish all flames before going to sleep tonight." Japan lacks American-style central heating in its homes, with the majority of people using kerosene heaters to warm individual rooms, although there are other options such as "fan-heaters" which use kerosene to heat the room but electricity to run a fan and regulate the temperature, and shut off the flame every three hours for safety and ventilation purposes. With so many heaters like this in use, it's not uncommon for fires to occur, and the Japanese are extremely cautious about making sure they don't, which is why when it gets cold out, our small local fire department will make the rounds and remind people of how important it is to make sure heaters are turned off before bed. Fire has long been the bane of Japan, a country with a high population living in homes of wood and paper, and the tradition of fighting fires goes back to the Edo Period. Over the past few years, Japan has -- finally, from my American-centric point of view -- gotten more serious some of the public safety concepts that we take for granted, and now requires that smoke detectors be installed in all new homes.

Surprise -- Japanese fire engines (and similar vehicles) are small and efficient



4 Comments:
Most American fire trucks are so big because they have pumps and carry a lot of water. Looks like these little Japanese ones don't have any.
2:15 AM
I find it amazing that a supposedly "modern" country like Japan can still have people using inefficient and dangerous Kerosene heaters in side homes.
In many localities in America, it is illegal to use a Kerosene heater inside a home. (Although using them in "three season rooms" AKA: enclosed patios, is usually OK. As long as there is good ventilation.)
Honestly, in a country so long familiar with the benefits of Hot Springs, you would think that Boiler heat would have taken off like gangbusters in Japan.
I guess it just goes to show how powerful Tradition really is in Japan. Wow.
4:32 AM
Cool little fire truck!
Considering how traditional Japanese housing is built, kerosene heaters don't surprise me in the least.
I'm in the minority with this opinion, but I think that Americans have "standardized" themselves into a sterile corner. Everything needs to meet Federal standards of some type or other. We're at the point of living in protective bubbles. As long as you are able to continue building wood and paper housing, go for it! I find them adorable!
11:39 AM
Peterd, yes, they have those too of course. I wanted to find something cuter. This is probably a support vehicle of some kind.
Weary Man, yes, when I lived in New Zealand in the 1970s I experienced a similar gap, e.g. electric heaters to heat the room, which can so easily start a fire. Also, the hung their clothes out to dry instead of using an electric dryer, how barbaric! ^_^ Of course this is why it's good to live outside your home country for at least a year. You'll appreciate how good home is.
2:58 PM
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