I try
to always be on my best behavior because I know I can’t be anonymous anywhere here.
There aren’t many foreigners in this town so I am recognizable. I’ve had people say to me things like “Where
were you going the other day? I was on
the bus and saw you walking on Eki Mai Dori.” I never know when someone will
see me somewhere.
I’m not
so careful about what I say. When Ted
and I are out, I tend to say in English whatever I think because there is no
one else around who can understand me.
Not that I would say anything that shouldn’t be overheard, you
understand……
It hasn’t
snowed in a couple of days, so the street workers don’t have to be removing new
snow all day long. Yesterday, I saw them making our street wider. The street we live on was barely wide enough
for one car and over my head on both sides, like a skinny tunnel. To make the
street wider, a machine shaves the snow from the side of the street and shoots
it into a big dump truck, kind of like a big snow cone machine. A truck is
filled in a very short amount of time and is replaced by another truck. (These pictures were taken from my kitchen window with the zoom).
I still
don’t know where they take all the snow that is picked up. Last year someone told me it gets hauled and
dumped near the railroad tracks, but I haven’t confirmed that.
1 comment:
So you are "world famous" in Iwamizawa!
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