Fruit picking is a popular family activity in Japan, and farms across the country offer the opportunity to pick fruit directly from the tree from their orchards. Typically farms will charge visitors a set amount for a set period of time; fees range from 800 to 3000 yen or more, and the set times generally run from 30-60 minutes. In some case they may also charge by the weight of the fruit picked, or will allow you to pick as much as you want and will exchange your basket for a pre-packaged and weighed bag. It all depends on the farm.
You can pick a variety of seasonally available fruits, including;
- Cherries
- Peaches
- Strawberries
- Grapes
- Apples
- Pears
- Mikan Oranges
- Melons
- Blueberries
Togokusan Fruit Park is a very convenient place to try this great outdoor, family friendly activity. Located about an hour from Nagoya Station in Moriyama Ku, just beneath the highest mountain within Nagoya; Togokusan at 198.3 m /650 ft.
The park features 15 orchards of various local fruits, a”World Orchard” of tropical fruits, and a fruit house for educational activities ( there are alas only available in Japanese). In addition to the straight fruit related, you can find a lovely Japanese garden, massive fields of full of seasonal flowers of the season, and of course the standard assortment of restaurants and gift shops.
In spring, the weeping cherry trees are wonderful place for hanami as well, and are apparently quite famous in their own right.
2110 Togoku, Kamishidami, Moriyama-ku,
Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture 463-0001, Japan
052-736-3344 (map link)
www.fruitpark.org (Japanese)
Nagoya Convention & Visitors Bureau Page (EN)
We are still getting reports that drivers presenting International Driving Permits (IDPs) at the licensing center are being told to come back once their existing permit expires. Drivers need to understand that although there is one law, there are different interpretations of it by police in each prefecture.
We recommend that you do not show your IDP when applying for a license. It is generally not required. We do not recommend, however, that you lie to the police if you possess one and if asked directly about it. Although there is no way for them to check if you have one or not, lying to the police is never a good idea.
When applying for a license while driving on an IDP you should not mention that permit unless asked specifically for the document. It will simplify the process for you.
Lease Japan puts a lot of people behind the wheel of a new or used car, but recently we have noticed an increase in the number of people who are inadvertently driving illegally in Japan with International Driving Permits. Many people, especially those who came to Japan before 2002, are unaware that they are driving on an invalid IDP, and are in danger of suffering fines, jail time, or even deportation if they are discovered, usually during a routine traffic stop.
[Please note that this article may or may not be fully updated, but it should be generally correct. If you want the most up-to-date information on this topic, you should jump right now to japandriverslicense.com – that site will be fully updated all the time.]
It is possible to drive legally in Japan for up to one year with one of the following:
Before 2002, an International Driver’s Permit (IDP) could be renewed repeatedly and used, with a valid overseas license, instead of formally applying for a Japanese driver’s license. But, after the law changed, the use of an IDP was limited to (Japan Traffic Act Article Number 107.2)
After your IDP expires, you must convert your foreign license to a Japanese license. You may not renew it unless you leave the country again for at least 3 months.
Though this law changed more than 10 years ago, the information has still not completely filtered out to the foreign communities of Japan, and many people are risking penalties of up to 1 year imprisonment, and in extreme cases may also result in loss of employment or deportation every time they get behind the wheel.
2011 saw two high profile drivers arrested for driving without a license in Japan in situations involving invalid International Driving Permits (IDP).
Japanese golf star Ryo Ishikawa was the first. Ryo Ishikawa was named Sports Illustrated’ s Sportsman of the Year for promising to donate all of his golf earnings for 2011 to support relief projects related to Japan’s recent devastating tsunami.
The award and the golf pro’s notoriety did not help when he was caught driving on an invalid IDP; he was arrested and charged. Ishikawa got a United States Driver’s License, and IDP while playing in the US, but failed to notice that an IDP is only valid if the license holder has been outside of Japan for more than three months, which he was not.
The second arrest of 2011 was…“That foreign guy from the Softbank commercials with the cute dog” which is how most of us in Japan know American actor Dante Carver.
Carver, who has been in Japan since 2005, was stopped in Shibuya after making an illegal U-turn. When asked by police for his license, he produced an invalid IDP, and was arrested. Having lived in Japan since 2005, he was well beyond the legal limit for driving with an IDP. To have used an IDP legally for that amount of time, he would have had to leave the country for 3 months out of every year. It appears instead that he simply renewed his IDP and continued to use it, unintentionally breaking the law.
The law seems cut and dry on paper, but the advice provided can often be confusing.
The United Kingdom and New Zealand Embassies in Tokyo both recommend that their citizens living in Japan abide by the rules as written and utilize an IDP in for no more than their first 365 days in Japan.
The US and Australian Embassies advise their citizens to us an IDP in Japan for no longer than 90 days if on a tourist visa, and not at all if you are residing in Japan.
The differing advice is related to comments by Police officials in Japan that they “prefer” an IDP be used only by visitors to Japan, rather than residents. While the rule is written clearly, it is interpreted differently throughout Japan, and drivers using an IDP run a risk that they will be swept up in the confusion.
The U.S. Embassy Advises their Citizens that;
“Residents” are expected to convert or obtain a Japanese driver’s license. Persons using an international driver’s license who are resident in Japan can be subject to fines or arrest. The exact boundary between “resident” and “not resident” is unclear. In practice it seems to involve more than simply visa status or length of stay in Japan and is determined by the police.
We have heard from several Americans who were told by the police that using an International Driver’s License for more than a year, or using one after exiting and then returning to Japan, or using one when you are residing in Japan, or after you have obtained an Alien Registration Card, or after 90 days in Japan, or using a license obtained by mail while you are in Japan, is illegal. In two instances, following accidents, Americans were charged with driving without a license, a serious offense.
Driving without a license may also void your insurance coverage.
The Australian Embassy Advises their Citizens that;
Australians can drive in Japan on an International Driver’s Permit (in conjunction with your Australian driver’s license) up to 365 days following their initial entry into Japan. However, local authorities expect anyone who is residing in Japan (i.e. those not on a 90 day temporary visitor entry visa) to drive on a Japanese license, not an International Driver’s Permit.
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At Lease Japan, we are concerned about the confusion surrounding the use of an IDP by residents of Japan, and recommend the safest option; convert your foreign driver’s license to a Japanese license immediately.
While the law gives you a grace period of one year, in practice you could be cited anyway. When you consider that a conviction for driving without a license will void your insurance coverage as well, driving on an IDP as a resident is simply too much risk for a reasonable person to take.
Residents should ensure that they are in full and obvious compliance with Japanese Law on the subject to protect themselves from civil and criminal liability.
For information about converting your foreign driver’s license to a Japanese driver’s license please see www.JapanDriversLicense.com an informative website that will make the process simpler for you.