Japonya’daki YENİ EVİMİ Bulmaya Çalışıyorum! JAPONYA REHBERİM
You can tell that Japan is a cartoon country, even from its villages . They built a train with fish. It’s an interesting country. Japan is one of the most beautiful countries in the world to visit, my friends. Small details , but beautiful. It makes you happy. Oh, there it is. A bus with fish. Fishy. See you. God bless you. Since we’re here, I also want to show you the restrooms in this place where even the indigent doesn’t play ball. There was a guy inside. Look, one of the restrooms, friends. We’re in a village. They’ve put shampoo. I say shampoo. I’m not that used to it. We’re finishing our Guju Hachiman soap. Our destination is Takayama. Now, you have to walk about two kilometers from here to find the direct bus to Takayama . If you search for Guju Hachiman interchange in Google, it will show you Takayama station. It costs 2400 yen, or 4800 yen per person. It’ll take 1.5 hours from here. I’ll share all of this in the description section below the video . It shows us where we got from here and how. A complete guide video. A Turkish guide video, friends. I mean, this is a treasure. God, it’s a treasure. It’s beautiful where it’s rural. But if you ask me if I can live, Cemkun, I won’t live here. I won’t live here, how are we going to get there, man? You, Hawk, attacked me in Shimanamik. Come on, come on, let me show you, he’ll make a killing. I’ll hit him like this. My son, I swear, he’s coming . Come on, come on, son. What the hell is this? He’s getting pretty close . The woman is getting closer , for God’s sake. She’s getting closer. Did she understand my language? What happened? Do they know Turkish too ? I swear, I’m after me. I swear , I’m after me. Look . He’s going to attack. He’s going to attack. How am I going to get past him? He walked away. He walked away, man. I’m leaving. Tabun Igul Can. These guys are dangerous. He treated me like bait on his bike. He attacked. They’re still trying to fish. The brother set up camp here. They’ve been in the water all day. By the way, we haven’t seen a taxi here. I’ll call one, I’ll hit him. They’ll come to you somehow, but there’s no need. We’ll walk this far . I love walking the roads of Japan. Before I go on a bike tour, I was thinking of making a pilgrimage to the 88 temples on Shikoko Island . Let me look at a route for a second. As long as you find someone you get along with, there’s no harm in getting married. There’s no harm in getting married. In a few years, he ‘ll be my lifelong companion for almost half of my life. We’ve been together for a while now. We’ll do something in the future. I’ll include it in the videos. I don’t say much, but this place has a separate big camera, the yodobaşı camera, this Edon. In more rural areas like this, an Indian man came and opened a shop here. The Japanese love curry. They love curry and Indian food. These buildings are beautiful, too. The way those mountains are built, God has meticulously crafted them. It’s unreal. The trees don’t move in the wind when you look at them from a distance. I have something interesting to say. When I first came to Japan, I returned to Turkey. I went to the doctor. It might seem strange. My nearsightedness has shrunk. The doctor said it’s because I’m constantly looking at greenery and staying away from stress. Life ends around this time. Life ends around 6, but these are such beautiful places. Too beautiful to be true. I’m especially emphasizing these places because I don’t know where you guys are watching me from. I have a beautiful audience who follow me from all over the world. Thank you. Thank you. If I could, I’d like to like and comment on everyone, but there’s not a tree left unpruned, my friend. What kind of a country is this? Japan is a country of small details. There are small details everywhere. What are we going to tell you again? Tell me. My heart loves looking at structures like this, living and non-living structures, and deriving meaning from them. When I see these sprouts on the tips of the rice trees, I remember how to stay calm, how to stay calm in my life, in my life . Because heads are bowed like this , keep saying this, your neck will be like this, your neck will be like this. You’ll stay calmer, you’ll keep your life free of stress. I’m assuming you’ll always keep your neck bent like this, he said. While cycling around Japan, after a certain number of kilometers, I said, Japan It’s actually a modern village. To truly understand such a country, you need to travel to its villages, towns, and inland. What did you write again? Let me read it. Ears of wheat bend as they ripen. There’s a proverb that describes how a person becomes more humble as their knowledge and virtue increase, just as an ear of rice bends due to its weight as it ripens. The Japanese have a saying that says the more knowledge and virtue you have, the more humble you become. They look on the bright side of everything like that. Okay, nothing. I get it. Okay. So, you only see things like this from a Japanese. Japan is a modern village, friends. I really like this rice. We’ll return from there. We’ve already walked. Where else will we go, my friend? We’ve come to China. Walking. From there. I hope this isn’t just stairs as I thought. Enough, man. Where are we going? The song announcing the end of the day is playing. How much further will we climb? How many more floors will we climb? Live and drink. What? We’ve come wrong. It’s the other side. It’s the other side. Oh my God, my God. There’s no road either. Where from? Should I run on the highway like Şener Şen? Where should I go? [Music] Last 20 minutes. Don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe to the video. We came a long way from there. We went back where we came. We’re exiting from under here, under the highway. God! We found our place, this place too. Takayama is over, 2400. Yes, this is the 76 km we’ll pay. God, I don’t know if you’ll ever get here? Would you walk like this like us? Would you take a bus, friends, if you go that way, know that the bus doesn’t go from there to Takayama. The route doesn’t show on Google, I’ll record this , you’ll need it, man. The Japanese don’t put bus stops here for nothing anyway. It’s a bit difficult, but we found it somehow. Look where we came from. Not even a car passes. There’s only one going. I turned around and immediately took out his onigiri and ate it. That’s a good question. He said, “Do we have money to get on the bus?” Yes, we do. The rainbow is gone. Rainbow. Rainbow. Rainbow. Rainbow. Rainbow. Rainbow. Rainbow. Well, I was up on the hill in Hakate , at the top of the mountain. I saw it there. Was that a rainbow? Okay. Could it be almost the first rainbow I remember in Japan? Man, we saw the rainbow too. Cemkun channel is such a channel, friends. You can even see the rainbow on Cevkuk channel. I need to spend money right away. Don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe to the video. There it is. Oh look, this place is beautiful. I can’t see it. It’s on the camera. We can’t see it. It’s about to disappear. It’s colorful. Wow. Japanese rainbow. We saw the rainbow too, friends. Cemkun channel is the channel of firsts in Japan. Japanese rainbow. You can’t even find it on a foreigner. Isn’t the bus coming, man? Spider-Man really got to me. If anyone ends up here on the Yas Road, if anyone ends up at this stop , please give me a ringing in the ears. Write your comments below the video , friends. What’s going on here? The police are always on the move. I think the prime minister is passing through here. Don’t try to find it by typing the name of this station. You can’t find it. I ‘ll share the location in the description section, especially since we got lost . We arrived in Takayama this evening. We’re here tonight. Takayama is a beautiful place. It’s a beautiful place where everything is in one place, buses, trains, and buses . If you arrive, you can take buses everywhere directly from here. Kanazawa, Toyomoya, Shirakavagoya, Shincukuyu. Apparently, it goes to Shincukuyu too . Our hotel is right here. We’re going to eat in a very nice location . He found some great places. Meaty, meaty. Country Hotel Takayama. 11,000 for 11,000. Breakfast included. The hotel is like this, and wait a minute, it smells of cigarette smoke. I accidentally made the smoking hotel thing. My fault. Normally, the Japanese smoke. They smoke a lot. They separate smoking and non-smoking rooms, and I just realized. I immediately blamed it on the cheapness, so I left. That’s it, folks. Of course, from where we entered yesterday, that bed is divine. You just put your foot down and you’ve already done a 180. Let’s not get too carried away here and there. We found a nice meat restaurant right next to where we were staying , Matsuki Ui. Oh, it looks nice, man. Good quality meat. Let’s eat. Hida’s meat is good, friends, from what we hear. 100 grams costs $50. Maşallah. It looks like we’ll get another $100 from here. The prices are like that. I mean, of course, it’s half the price compared to Tokyo. We’ll try it. I’ve heard of fida, but I’ve never tried it. Let ‘s try it and see how it is. Kampay, wasabi, galic, soy. Oy oy oy. All the people with us are tourists. There are Germans, French, and British behind us. There aren’t any Japanese. Interestingly, there are so many tourists. I’ll check tomorrow, why are there so many tourists here? I’m a little surprised. The Hida Mountains are popular here. 200 grams. We bought 200 grams. It came with tofu, carrots, and some greens. We’ll test it and see. It comes on a stone. The special thing about this is that it’s on a stone. Let’s eat it plain and taste it. The meat is good. It has a slight Kobe beef vibe. I like it. I dip it in the garlic sauce. So, in Europe, let me put it this way: can you eat quality meat for 30€ for 200 grams, friends? It’s the equivalent of 30 euros, you know. Very good. We hit the nail on the head. It turned out great. Two people here, including our sushi sets, will cost 20,000 yen. Make it a medium well. Don’t buy 100 grams. If you buy 100 grams, you might be a little hungry. Buy 200 grams. This was the 200 grams I showed you. Apparently , we don’t eat meat. In Japan, you generally pay for quality . You can eat something for $1, or you can eat it for $1,000. Generally, that’s the way it is in our country. But since you eat it for $1, the quality isn’t that bad. It’s pretty good. If you have the opportunity, come here and try Kobe beef or Vagyu beef just once. It’s more affordable. I definitely think you should try Kobe beef . Forget the $200-$300 for a one-time meal. Enjoy that meat to your heart’s content. The spearmint. The garlic, the wasabi. We ordered the sushi set. Egg, ginger, crab, fish roe. Bagu shrimp, tuna . Yellowtail, yellowtail. Oh, the salmon tuna is flowing, mashallah, mashallah tonight. But there’s something. They brought the miso soup later, and miso soup comes first. I’ve eaten so much Kobe beef. There was a mistake there. Also , I think they should have brought this sushi first. Let’s eat it first. Then let’s move on to the meat. Because you feel full after eating the meat. What else should I try? I’m having this. Eat plenty of ginger, friends. Pickle it and eat these things before you get sick so you can live longer. My criteria are as follows. As someone who’s traveled almost all of Japan, I’ve eaten in most places, so I can compare the flavors. I can rate it. The meat was good. Well, I can give it a 7 out of 10. All the food you saw cost 21,150 yen. Should we go to the bar and have a cocktail? Takayama is like that. It’s 7:00 in the morning. The hotels are also affordable, folks. Keep this Takayama in mind. You can stay. Other places are expensive because they’re villages and towns. We left our bags at Coin Mocker. It’ll stay here all day for 700 yen. You can even leave quite large bags. You can come here for 7 or 8 dollars, pull this thing out, close it up. You can pay cash here. We loved Takayama station and the surrounding area. This is the train station. This is right next to the bus station. This is where we stayed. It’s a compact place, with everything tucked away. The reason so many tourists come here is because of Mount Hida. We saw a lot of Germans, French, and Russians there. Well, the Spanish are coming. I wasn’t expecting this much, to be honest. People here always go to the tracking mountains. Mount Hida here. Well, it’s a very popular, beautiful mountain. I knew that too, but I didn’t expect so many tourists to find this place. People go to Shirakawa Go, Kamikochi. Here’s Matsumoto. That’s what we’re doing today. To go to Tokyo. They consider this place the main destination. And hotels are cheap here, folks. Keep that in mind. We’re going to the morning market. Takama is on the rise. Hello, what’s it doing? It’s a pharmacy. Spanish or Portuguese? Let’s take a step back. I don’t think I ‘ve come across many Spanish-language advertisements like this. There are Spanish-language advertisements on the streets of Japan . Maybe Portuguese, too. I’m not sure. It’s either Spanish or Portuguese, but one of the two. Video subscribe subscribe subscribe [Music] It’s like a little Kyoto. There needs to be a protector around here. This is Miagava Mornik Market. Miagava’s morning market. We’re here. This place is open until noon, folks. Is Ana Dokuten here? The god of luck. Take me with the god of luck here. He gives you luck like this when you wave your hand. He’s one of the seven Buddhist gods of luck . If you’d like to tour Japan with Cem Kun, I give a lot of information about this history in the guided trucks. Let’s continue. Before you come to the Miagava Morning Market, you do a morning ritual here. You perform your ablutions. That’s how you enter. What do the locals sell? Kastamonu Taşköprü garlic. Tomatoes are generally this red in Japan, but of course, I want to buy natural, organic fish here. Mütem, look how they come. I like the beautiful market. It’s a nice, compact market. Japan is generally compact, made in Japan. They also fill the sake to the brim, overflowing with it. It means abundance. It costs 2200, or about 13 dollars. Japan is also an incredible place for ceramics, folks. They have an incredible ceramic culture. You can buy bowls. Check out my aerial video of Kanazaba. We made pottery there from the man who taught the emperor . I’ve seen families involved in trade and farming . Whoever makes this garlic, by the way , can you see the description on the garlic? Its name is written on it. It shows how they harvest it and who harvested it. It’s a small area. It’s this small area, but they sell it for $4. Four garlic cloves. They do such a good job. We’ve seen so many honeybees and wasps around here. You know, you get on something so small. It’s 100% pure honey. We’ve come this far. We need to buy one. What I just mentioned, whoever makes it, along with the description, is so huge. Why are these foreigners buying squash? What are they going to do? Are they going to take it to Portugal? I wonder if they’re going to bring potatoes, zucchini, and peaches, which are unique to this place . The colors of the tomatoes are so beautiful. To learn about this culture , you have to visit the market first . Look, even a dog showed up. They sell posters. This is all you’re buying. You work in Şipılberg. Kudos to Şipılberg. When you signal for a left or right turn in garbage trucks and trucks , the car talks and shouts. This is little Kyoto. Anyway, if you come to these parts, this is Gujo Haçiman, friends, wander around in these backstreets. Winter is nice here too. When it’s white. My heart said. Let’s take a walk there. You feel like you’re in an old Japanese movie. Walking among these houses, most of the places here have been restored . I take a look. [Music] They call them restaurants, restaurants, restaurants, souvenir shops, restaurant places. They’re made of cedar wood. Saka is called bayashi or sugidama . It means globe. Sugidama is hung in front of sake producers’ shops or workshops. When new sake production begins, a sugidem made of green cedar leaves is hung. It dries and turns brown over time. This color change also indicates that the sake is mature and ready to drink. It’s a symbol of luck and auspiciousness. So, if you see a place like this, know that it’s something to do with sake production, folks. How beautiful. Every house makes that jingling sound. This guy running, the guy collecting the garbage. There’s garbage in the bins. Dude, look at the shape of the garbage truck? It’s like a toy. Dude goes inside the house to pick up the garbage. Look at how clean the truck is. This garbage truck goes up to the mountains. It’s a rice bale. The boxes where the sake is stored. This is probably the place to smoke. There should be a smoking area here. It’s closed now. It looks like Kanazaba, folks. There’s something growing everywhere. Look at our country. There are so many festivals in the summer all over Japan. Tanabata is a festival this July, and people are working together to make this place beautiful. It’s so beautiful. Hokayi says, if it moves, I’ll put it in front of the farm. The farm is where the cows are. A jazz festival. These guys organized a jazz festival in a tiny place. Of course, it’s finished, but even the view is beautiful. The stars Vega and Altayri form the foundation of Tanabata There is a story of two lovers who represent them. Orihima and Hikoboshi fall in love in the sky. However, they neglect their duties when they get caught up in their love. God separates them by the Milky Way. He allows them to meet only once a year, on the 7th night of the 7th month. It is believed that they can meet on that day if the weather is clear. If it rains, the stars cannot see each other. People write their wishes on colorful pieces of paper and hang them on bamboo branches. These bamboos are decorated. They are displayed in various places around the city. They are especially popular in Sendai and Hirat Suka Kanagaba. Huge decorations and ceremonies are held in these cities. Beautiful. Japan is the home of small details. Our tour continues. We randomly walked into a store. Their song is so beautiful. Renşim. She scratches her uz like this . I know how to play it, she plays it too . [Music] atsim [Music] F [Music] Fu fu , but I don’t know the technique. At a place like this, we bought a beautiful fan for my dear mother and my own mother. We had a nice little FFU experience . Beautiful people. [Music] We’ve arrived at the Show Museum. We’ve arrived. We’ve entered. Let’s write our names here right now. Cem Kunvazir with chalk. The period between 1926 and 1989. There are periods like this in Japan. The purpose of these periods, friends, is this: If an emperor comes to power, that period begins like that. The Show era, 1926-1989. Then comes Showa AO H Hey. Hey what? Atu Reyva Reyva, we’re in the Reyva era right now . Ha Tay, forget it, there’s no need to go back that far. We can go back a long way. There’s a system passed down from father to son in the empire. In empires, everyone has an akhito, narhito, a name like this. They don’t have surnames. Because they’re not normal people. We ‘re in the Reyva era right now. Everything we’ll see here belongs to the Showa era. Hello Takashi, we’re deep too. I gave the message, they’ll understand. You feel like you’re in the Showa era. There are also places where you can interact. The drink that makes Japanese people stand upright in the morning . Olympians, Nikons, old-time dayakoguten. There’s even Ana Gandalf. Is this a mirror? I thought it was someone else. 8 yenak, man, I’m hungry today, so here’s some food. Friends, Fuat and I were sitting at the local restaurant the other day. He said to me, “If someone brings goby fish from Japan, I love goby fish.” “I’ll feed them, raise them. I’ll open my own farm,” Fuat said here. Anyway, we went to Vakkanay or something. We buy goby fish there. We went to the aquarium. So, how are we going to keep them? They showed us a place. The place they showed us was Vakkanay, and we went to one of those teams that look at Russia. We jumped on the ferry. We stopped halfway there. Kayabalı, we’re diving, looking for fish there, man. Anyway, I went in, I swam, I swam, I swam. Then I looked up. Putin, Putin appeared in front of me. He said, “What are you doing?” I said, “What are you doing?” He said, “This is the Russian border.” They took us from there and immediately took us to the Sakalin Islands. Brother, we were imprisoned there for a month. After a month, Vakkanay. We returned after Vakkanay. I did Hakadote on the high-speed train. Then I went back to Tokyo. Takaş brother, we got one for each other , see you again, brother. Take care. Electrician, television guy. Small refrigerators, dryers, records, radios. Sano National Panasonic. Oh boy, oh boy. T is a historical artifact, brother. He brought everything he found. [Music] In the old days, you used to put them like this to dry. It looks like my aunt Buan. The Japanese look very much like my aunt. It’s one of the oldest, most detailed museums I’ve seen. [Music] There are also quite a few tanuki around. Darumas, tanukis. Their songs give me an interesting peace. [Music] I found something weird, friends. Look, this is called a soroban. It’s called an abacus in our country. It’s actually a traditional calculator used in Japan . The Japanese version of the Abacus, which originated in China, was used during the Edo period from the 16th century to 1868. It was widely used, especially by accountants, merchants, and students. Each column at the top has a bead. bead represents 5 units. There are 4 beads in each column at the bottom. 3 5 Nope, there are 5 beads. There are five beads. Is this wrong, man? I wonder if they’re stealing that from the money thing? Each column is a column of numbers. Units, tens, hundreds. The horizontal bar in the middle is called the heaven bar. They call the bottom part the earth bar. It’s used for operations like addition, subtraction, multiplication, division. Wow, man. How did they find those cash registers’ calculators after this, man? They seem to have stepped into a different era. Oh, knock, I said 200 yen. Click, I said 300 yen. I did this and that like this, 1000 yen. I guess so. [Music] There are so many things. Look at the lunchbox of the old era. What is this? Power Rangers? I swear, there are even Power Rangers. Wow, well, well, well. It’s a nice tour. I’m glad I came here. I was a little curious about old Japan. A hospital. There’s even a car. A hospital from the show ‘s era. Wow. They’re definitely pulling teeth with this. Doctor, I’m sick. We need to grow Doctor Cemkun’s channel to 100,000 subscribers. Doctor, people forget to like, share, and subscribe to the video. What should they do? Hey Cemkun, for you to reach 100,000 subscribers, first of all, everyone who watches this video needs to subscribe. They need to comment, they need to share. If they don’t subscribe , there’s no growth. So, everyone, please like the video, everyone, subscribe. Work is over for today. We finished shift. My wife showed me something over there. They say they put pills in this and break them. They still have it. She said we do it in the hospital. The Japanese are true to their traditions. Nice. I think they’ve thought of everything. For 1200 yen, it’s pretty good, friends. [Music] V what is this? Barbershop. I’m going, friends. Welcome to the new video, friends. Today is the show’s era. I’m so stoked. To Hokkaydo. Hokkaydo. What? Hokay dork! Let’s play a shiki shiki baba let’s go. Shiki shiki shiki there. Is that so? Shikishiki baba. Come on come on slowly. Eliveli turi come and loot the poor. Come on come on slowly. Eliveli turi come and loot the poor. [Music] Why do I know this song? We’re going to Hokaydo. What are you doing? Get in the car. I was at the hokay. Come on, we’ve had enough. Let the others have fun too. I can’t get out of the car. We’re in Hokido. Come to the barber, master. Give me a Hokaydo shave. Iron teapot. These guys have done everything. And it makes you interact. Very nice. [Music] There’s another upstairs. Let’s go up and see. The V upstairs is big too. I used to play in the arcade. Nice , nice. I like this place. There’s even a Japanese class. [Music] The tool they beat mochi with. If you go to Nara, right at the entrance, they beat mochi with it. Here we are, friends, this is Irori. The house gets warmer from here. Sometimes it takes a month here. The house gets warmer from here too. We’ll go to the Gosho houses from here on. I’ll show you in detail there too. Nice. Let me tell you something? I haven’t seen a museum this interactive in Japan that I’ve visited. Oh, they bathe here. This is the kitchen. I’ve seen Gojçimana. They wash like this inside, like an onsen. [Music] I’ll write my name. [Applause] [Music] [Music] [Music] These were the meals children ate in the old days . Rice, pickles, eggs. The kids are making more noise than the school meals . Let’s go somewhere else. [Music] He says his children’s clothes outside, but I thought someone was collecting money at the cash register here . Maşimaş. Two Adana urgent and two turnips for the show museum on the corner. A young emperor from the HS era. Are their phones Dokomo, digital Dok or NT Do? How did we have flip-key phones like that back in the day? The Japanese used to have them like that throughout the country. During the Showa period. Oh, a 971 Totsu. A mosquito repellent. Oh, there was one like it in our village. There’s this Pachinko shop all over Japan. They lose so much money here that their homes are foreclosed. Japanese who can’t afford gambling come here. Time is precious for the Japanese. If you see Japanese people coming here, know that they might not be fully Japanese. Oh, yes, we finished the Showa museum. It was nice. We had a great time. Even though we were a little rushed, we spent almost two hours in the center of beautiful Takayama. We were at the museum. If you happen to be here, it says 1200 yen per person doesn’t say three times. H, have a nice tea. French Torko. Isn’t it Torko? Oça yume. Torko oça? Yume. Tor kohi? Ankara Ankara tok [Music] is pretty rich. Pretty rich. Slightly sweet. Let’s get one of these. These regions. Shirakawa tea. We bought tea from the 200-year-old tea house behind me. A tea shop run by a brother of mine from the 7th generation. You can’t tell it’s a tea shop by looking at it. I saw the tea from the outside so I said let’s go in. These places are a hidden treasure. We met a very nice brother. Istanbul gives Ankara its own. He’s quite knowledgeable about our tea and coffee culture, too. There’s a free museum behind here too. There are Buddhas and stuff. It’s called Hida Takayama Town Museum, the place behind me. If you come, get some tea from here, my friends. Say hi. Aha family familym art grocery store. If you’re having an upset stomach or a seizure, Pokari, friends. It’s a beautiful place. Beautiful. The Japanese countryside is beautiful, my friends. You can walk for hours. You can walk differently in the evening and during the day. We’ve arrived at the bus station. Let’s buy our tickets in advance. We’ll probably go from here to MATMO. It’s available at 1450. It goes to Kanazawa, Toyomo, Shirakawa, Go, Shinciku, Kyoto, Osaka, Gifu. It goes everywhere. But you can buy tickets here too. Look, how nice. English is our flag. Yellow is ours, friends. We came from Turkey. Look at the Animals, the Chinese. The Spanish have come. The Spanish are quite curious here. The sect has a place up ahead, like this sect building. Midorin Midino, we went up into the mountains again. Houses from the Hidano Soto Hidar. The Gosha Zukkuri houses are here. My brother gave me some interesting information. The taxi driver said these houses were home to families of 500, 600, and even larger ones. We were surprised. Now we’ll all see together, and see if that many people live there . Friends who’ve come all the way from the mountains . There’s an entrance fee of 700 yen. The view is magnificent. My dear. I wouldn’t bring you here for nothing. I’ll share the location in the description. How are the carp so unscathed? See, Sem kembe pde de bes, look, they go all the way up here. They brought them all from the top of Hida Mountain, folks. Gosho zukuri houses. The real famous place is actually Shirakava Go. And the Chinese sword grass that makes these houses homes. They’re all Chinese sword grass. They’re important in both summer and winter . When it rains, no water comes in. Scroll down for the Shirakavago video. It was gone in the snow. I explain Karaman in detail there too. They change these Chinese sword grasses every 2030 years . The houses have stood for 400, 300 years, without deterioration. Maşallah, sir. We showed you the tea, and that’s where the house heats up. They put the teapot, which they call “Ir,” from the one that holds the ayu, the one that makes the ayu. Outside, it’s at least 35-40 degrees Celsius (90-100 degrees Fahrenheit) in humidity, but there’s no air conditioning inside. That’s where the importance of those zinc sword herbs comes from. Now, let me explain the technique here. The most important thing here is this technique. Let me see this interlocking . For example, you see these things here. The characteristic of these houses is that they interlock here. The interlocking kam sutura, what they’re made of, this is very important. Japanese cypress, zelkova. In most temples, they generally use these black pines, zelkovas, Japanese black pines . The master carpenters of the old era who built these temples , or village carpenters, raise silkworms here. This is usually the layout in these Gasha Zukuri houses. The taxi driver said 500 people live in these houses at once. We said, ” You’re not joking,” so we couldn’t ask, but the Japanese wouldn’t joke because this house is a bit small. There’s a silkworm farm upstairs. Where did they find these? For example, what I’m curious about is this. Who figured out how this tree could survive for 400 years? How does it survive in such a humid environment? There’s engineering involved. I learned this because I was curious. I’ll tell you about it. I mean, I’m 1.0. I’m banging my head. Oh, there’s a way through here too. They built a house like a labyrinth . Look at Aunt Sakura. How can these trees survive without a nail? Japanese cypress, zelova tree, Japanese black pine, Japanese Cedar. These are abundant trees in Japan, and they’re sturdy. Now, the people who first discovered these trees actually date back to 1400 BC. They would put them in water. They would test them in the water. Do they rot? What happens? Because there’s extreme humidity here. They find them after a while. There’s a resin in them. The Jom period, one of the oldest settlements . There was woodworking between 141 and 300 BC. But the system wasn’t yet established. The most significant turning point came with the use of the Hinoki tree. Let me see. They noticed that some trees in old village buildings could live for 50 years without cracking or insects. Okay, it comes to their homes, the homes of the wealthy. Then it comes to castles. Yes, that’s where it first appeared. I checked my information to be sure. They observed that the wood of the Japanese cypress doesn’t deteriorate even in humidity, and it survives all these years because the resin suppresses mold growth . But from here, inch by inch, it’s quite tiring. The rural setting and the harmony of these houses are perfect. It’s so pleasing to the eye. I don’t know if there’s anywhere else in the world that has lived so untouched by nature, but it’s the water system of the old era. Did a fire occur where we buy tea? He said it was almost everywhere in the early 1900s, and they rebuilt it later. The tea master says it’s a wedding venue. Because hundreds of people live there, there are a lot of wedding ceremonies. There used to be a four-day, four-night ceremony here. It’s an outfit from that era. Irori in the middle of a classic house , good luck, man. I’m not filming for the sake of filming videos. You’re also sending me messages. I see them. I can’t get back to many of you because I don’t have time, but because I do what I love, I try to both have fun and learn while traveling. Shirakaba Goy can be an alternative for beautiful winter excursions, but Shirakaba Goy is also nearby. It’s a two-hour bus ride. Come visit in winter. Come visit in spring. Spring, fall. Let me play this. I’ve always wanted to play this at a temple. These things happen at temples, folks. It’s an important part of spiritual awakening and purification. These are rung 108 times on New Year’s Eve. Friends, these bronze bells have a function in Buddhist belief. Let me explain, but this is important. Because when I visited Dayonen in Sendai, I saw 108 gods and deities there. People have worldly desires, and according to Buddhist belief, when these 108 are rung on New Year’s Eve, they are cleansed. After being cleansed, you enter the new year with purity. That ‘s why they’re rung 108 times. This is how you purify and purify. First, we bowed and bowed. We said our prayers. If you ever come here, do this ritual. Say your prayers. It’s important. They also showed how they brought these trees from the mountains. They put them on their backs, of course. Sleds. They made sleds out of wood . They display them all here. How did they bring the stone? It’s pulled by horses. They made sleds with horses, oiling them. Something like oil is coming out of the trees. We say we made a notch in them. Mountains. Oh, mighty Japanese mountains, Japanese warships, the Hida Mountains. Are you great or am I? Of course you are. I’ll be creating content in Turkish on so-and-so acres of land in the mountains of Japan . Guests will come with their animals. I have guests from Turkey . I’m even thinking of hosting the emperor. He’ll come, I swear he’ll come. Of course, as always, our bus time is approaching. We have to go. Let’s go. The Japanese paper bushi lets the sun in beautifully from outside to inside. It creates a beautiful view. Now he wanted to come here again. Here’s Shirakavagu in winter. He said it’s even more beautiful. Brother, these guys know their stuff. We came, we saw, and we went. Everything is delicious, in moderation. Don’t I know how to lie on that tatami for two hours in the zukur? But for me, it’s almost time to do it, live it, and let it end. The asphalt in Japan is beautiful, too. It’s so soft. There’s always a staff member every 50 or 100 meters for back problems. It’s one of the most stringent occupational safety measures in the world. Brother, good luck. What is he pulling the line for? There’s something on his screen. There’s something on his screen. He’s going out of line. [Music] My ears popped. I swear my ears popped suddenly. [Music] [Music] The Japanese have taken the backpack. They’re returning from the mountains. Tokyo Tokyo Tokyo 12 Tokyo 12 We returned to our Turkish home, Tokyo, to the daughter of the oppressor. Oh, it took so long, friends. 2.5 hours by bus, 2 hours by train, then 5 hours. We’ve reached the end of another video. We started here, we finish here. We returned to our Kurdish home, to our neighborhood. We had a good time. Oh, and I was going to tell you how much I spent. I forgot that. Exactly 1000 dollars. Travel expenses for 3 days, high-speed train, food, drink, souvenirs. What you see in the video, according to exactly how much this place costs throughout this series, it says around 140,000 yen. We bought what we bought, ate what we ate. As you can see, I didn’t skimp on anything. We took taxis when necessary. We walked when necessary. We took a taxi. We ate our delicious meats. We took the high-speed train. We took the bus. We did everything. Guided by Cemkur. If you’d like to travel to Japan with me , you can reach us below. See you. Subscribe . Hurry up. Work is over for today. We finished our shift.
Bugün Gujo Hachiman’dan başlayarak Takayama ve Matsumoto’ya uzanan inanılmaz bir yolculuk yapıyoruz!
Otobüsle geçtiğimiz yollarda büyüleyici manzaralar, Gujo Hachiman’da rengarenk gökkuşakları ve Japonya’nın geleneksel evleri bizi karşılıyor. 🌈🏯
Takayama’da efsane bir akşam yemeğinde Japon etinin en lezzetlisini tadıyoruz. Sabah pazarında (Takayama Morning Market) Japon kültürünün kalbine giriyor, tarihi sokaklarda dolaşıyoruz. 🥩🍵
Yolda bir flüt ustasının dükkânına uğrayıp Japon flütünü deniyoruz, ardından Takayama Shōwa Müzesi’ne gidiyoruz. 1950’lerden 1970’lere uzanan nostaljik atmosferiyle Japonya’nın Showa dönemini adeta yeniden yaşıyoruz. 📻📼
Ayrıca Hida no Sato’da (Hida Folk Village) yolculuğa çıkarıyor. Burası gördüğüm en güzel müzelerden birtanesi diyebilirim. 🎶🏡
Shirakawa-go’yu andıran evlerin sakin atmosferi ruhumuzu dinlendiriyor. 🏘️🍃
Ve yolculuğun sonunda Matsumoto’ya uğrayıp Tokyo’ya geri dönüyoruz. Bu video hem bir ev arayışı hikâyesi hem de gerçek bir Japonya rehberi! 🇯🇵✨
👉Sizce Japonya’da yaşamak için en güzel şehir hangisi? Yorumlarda yazın!
👉Japonya’dan bu tarzda daha fazla video görmek ister misiniz? Yorumlarda bizimle paylaşın!
Gujo hachiman – Takayama otobüs durağı : https://maps.app.goo.gl/8rE2BrRYrVqRvHNu9?g_st=ipc
📌 Japonya’da Japonca eğitimi almak istiyorsan ve uzun dönem dil okuluna kaydolmayı düşünüyorsan,kayıt olan herkese 20,000 Yen destek verdiğim videoyu izlemeyi unutma!!
🔥 Japonca Okulu Kayıt Linki 🇯🇵
https://hajl.athuman.com/tr/?code=250002
Sosyal Medya:
instagram 👉 https://www.instagram.com/cem_kun44/?…
📮Mail-Japonya Turları
cakircemkun@gmail.com
00:00 Giriş
00:46 Gujo hachimandan Takayama şehrine gidiyoruz
09:43 Takayamaya geldik,otel turu ve akşam yemeğinde hida beef yiyoruz
14:10 Takayama’da 2.güne başladık ilk gezi yerimiz Takayama Morning Market
18:46 Muhteşem japon evleri arasında geziyoruz,japon flüt ustasının evine gidip flüt çalıyoruz
23:43 Takayama Showa müzesini geziyoruz(japonyada gördüğüm en detaylı müze)
35:16 200 senedir çay satan japon dükkanında çay içip çay satın alıyoruz
37:23 Hida no Sato japon evlerinin bulunduğu müzeye gidiyoruz,nedir,tarihi nasıl ve neden bu evler yapılmış (huzur verici bir köy)
46:49 Tokyo’ya evimize geri dönüyoruz
48:01 Kapanış konuşması
#cemkun #tokyo #japonya
37 Comments
Tokyo başta olmak üzere Japonya için düzenlediğim turlar devam ediyor arkadaşlar.
mail veya instagram üzerinden irtibata geçebilirsiniz.
Videoya görüşlerinizi yazmayı unutmayın arkadaşlar EN ÖNEMLİ KISIM BU 🙂
mail: cakircemkun@gmail.com
insta: https://www.instagram.com/cem_kun44/?..
Zalımsın Cem 😂😂
Japonya turuna karar verirsem, zamanim.olur da-) sizin turla tercih ederim..
Cem abi az önce bebek ağlatma festivali videosunu izledik. Çok güzeldi. Zaten onun altına da yorum bıraktım. Bundan sonra bisikletle Japonya turu ile devam edeceğiz kardeşimle birlikte. Seni seviyoruz. Canın içine selamlar!!!!!!!
emeğine sağlık 🙂
Teşekkürler Cem sayende Japonya yı karış karış geziyoruz🎉
Japonya çok güzel ama ah o yazın nemi olması 👍👍👍👏👏👏
abi keşke 23:41 sansür at saydın
100 bin aboneye canımın içi ile video desen kısa sürede olursun bence.😂😂
İçim açıldı izlerken harika bir video emeğine sağlık ♥️ Japonya dan yeni döndük şimdiden çok özledim 🥹
Buralar bizim Trabzon,Rize,Artvin bölgelerine benziyor.
Çok güzel köy 🎉Emeğine sağlık olsun 😊Teşekkürler..Selamlar 🎉🎉
Böyle videoları özledik valla🥹 tarihi bilgilerle kalitesiyle olsun mükemmel olmuş cem kun👏👏
Otobus duragi gecekondulardan daha cok eve benziyor
Abi bu videoyu bence 5 e bölebilirdin hepsini tek videoda atmam harikasın ya 🎉
39:40 NE 😅
Cem bey biz bilet alıp gelsek bize rehberlik edip gezdirebilirmisiniz. Bir program oluşturabilirsiniz acaba. Biz 7 kişi filan olabiliriz
👍
dünyanın en güzel ülkelerinden biri
Thnks..
bisiklet turunun tamamını izlemiştim geçen sene, tekrar görünce duygulandırdı
23:40 o ney gardaş abovvvv 😀
Videolarini izledikce Japonya yi gorme istegimiz artti Cem.. tesekkurler
Valla Cem iyi para harcamışsınız. Sonrası için umarım verdiğin emek sana yine geri döner de daha çok yer gezeriz. Teşekkürler.
Severek isliyorus 1
🎉
BASARILAR DİLİYORUM HAYATINI
Müze çok güzel bayağı emek verilmiş😊eşin Türkçeyi ilerletmiş bravoo🫶💐300-400 senelik evler çok güzel. fabrika gibi evin içi ,herhalde ipek böcekçiliği yapıyorlardı.Teşekkürler.
Eline emeğine sağlık çok güzel japonyayı tanitiyorsun eşine selamlar ❤🎉
Japonya da ev yok kopek klubesi var saka gibi
Heian , Edo , Meiji . Tek bildiğim Japonya dönemleri
👍👍👍
Gerçekten Türkçe olarak bu içerikler çok önemli, keyifle izledim, emeğinize sağlık, teşekkürler..
Videolarini severek izliyorum❤ Senin videolarin sayende Mart ayında 17 günlük tek başıma Tokyo-Kobe-Osaka-Kyto-Chiba gezisi yaptım, gezmelere doyamadım kesinlikle yeniden gelmek görmek istiyorum Japonya'yı❤❤❤
Abi ASMR tadında görüntü kalitesi enfes o yüzden TV ye bağlayıp izliyom 😂
Cem bey çok güzel bir geziydii. Size sorum var cevaplarsanız sevinirim. 20-31 mart tarihlerinde hava çokmu yağmurlu ve soğukmu oluyor? Sakura görmem mümkünmü? Teşekkür ederim.