[Column] Field research day 2 – Most of the Romanian property is already bought by Italian

I visited another village in Romania.

Like most of the other villages, almost half of the properties have already been bought by Italian for some reason.

I don’t know why it’s always Italian. I feel like I’m always the second one after them.

 

The guest house we stopped at was also owned by some Italian people.

However, it’s nicely renovated and modernized. They did really a great job.

 

If we ever have a chance to purchase such property, we should definitely consider their idea.

 

A family with 3 kids were renting it for the weekend activity.

The husband is Swedish, mother is Ecuadorian. Kids were born in Moscow, Abu Dhabi and Egypt.

They chose to live in Romania and actually they are living around the corner from my apartment in Bucharest.

 

They were amazed at the self-sustaining life style of the village.

but the property has the entirely modernized shower, kitchen, and everything. The water comes from well.

The sewage goes deep underground, which is the same system as a part of Tokyo.

 

The guest house makes employment as well.

They serve dinner for the guests in the summer kitchen. Cleaners, managers are all employed locally too.

 

If we ever have a chance to have such property for Japanese people, they can be the local Romanian and also Japanese.

 

The village consists of three parts, Romanian residents, Hungarian residents, and also Gypsy residents (Not dangerous in this area).

It’s about 9 hours from Bucharest by car. Distance can be advantage and also disadvantage depending on the purpose.

 

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You can ignore the truth but the truth won’t ignore you.

_____

Français :

[Édito] Recherche sur site, jour 2 – La plupart des propriétés roumaines sont déjà achetées par des italiens

 

J’ai visité un autre village roumain.

Comme dans la plupart des autres villages, pratiquement la moitié des propriétés ont été achetées par des italiens.
Je ne sais pas pourquoi c’est toujours des italiens. J’ai l’impression de toujours arriver après eux.

La pension de famille où nous nous sommes arrêtés était aussi à des italiens.
Elle a cependant été joliment rénovée et modernisée. Ils ont vraiment fait du bon travail.

Si on arrive à avoir une chance d’acheter une propriété pareille, on devra vraiment se pencher sur leurs idées.

Une famille de 3 enfants la louait pour le week-end.
Le mari est suédois, la mère est équatorienne. Les enfants sont nés à Moscou, Abu Dhabi et en Égypte.
Ils ont décidé de vivre en Roumanie et de fait ils vivent au coin de ma rue à Bucarest.

Ils étaient stupéfait du style de vie autarcique du village.
mais la propriété a été entièrement modernisée, douche, cuisine, et tout le reste. L’eau vient du puits.
Le forage descend profondément, c’est le même système que dans une partie de Tokyo.

La pension de famille crée aussi des emplois.
Ils servent le diner aux invités dans la cuisine d’été. Les gens de ménage et les patrons sont aussi tous des locaux.

Si on arrive à avoir une telle propriété, on pourra employer des roumains et des japonais aussi.

Le village se divise en trois, des roumains, des hongrois et quelques gitans (Non problématiques dans cette région).
C’est à environ 9 heures de voiture de Bucarest. La distance peut être un avantage et un désavantage aussi selon les cas.

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Vous pouvez ignorer la vérité mais la vérité ne vous ignorera pas.

  1. Depends how long they’ve owned it. If for many years, then they probably bought it pre-2008 crises with the easy credit. Post 2008, they have taken there Eros and put it into hard assets to ride out the crises. They do have some debt trouble in Italy, but not on Greek scale. My guess only.

  2. every body wants to rule the world – Tears 4 Fears

    自分勝手な世の中自分で支配

    this is why they call it a Tsunami globally.. eat my wake!

    =

    Norway’s weird waves traced to Japan quake

    Becky Oskin LiveScience

    On a calm winter’s day in Norway two years ago, the sea suddenly started to boil and rise, sending freak waves rolling onto nearby shores and mystifying residents. Turns out, the massive magnitude-9.0 earthquake that shook Japan in 2011 also triggered these surprise seiche waves, a new study shows.

    Seiche (pronounced saysh) waves are standing waves that form in closed or semi-enclosed water basins, such as Norway’s narrow, steep-walled fjords. Smaller examples of standing waves include water sloshing in a bathtub from a wriggly child, or in a swimming pool after an earthquake.

    The roiling seas surprised and shocked Norwegians when the waves rolled in after 7 a.m. local time on March 11, said lead study author Stein Bondevik, a geologist at Sogn og Fjordane University College in Sogndal, Norway. The waves measured nearly 5 feet (1.5 meters) from trough to crest (their lowest to highest point). No damage was reported, however. “Luckily, they happened at low tide,” Bondevik said.

    A tsunami expert, Bondevik was called on by local media to explain the source of the surge. Bondevik said he first thought an underwater landslide generated the waves. “They looked like tsunamis,” he said. But as the day wore on, more reports of coastal flooding came in from faraway fjords, blowing a hole in his landslide theory.

    “Later in the evening I realized there must be a connection with the big earthquake in Japan,” Bondevik told LiveScience. “I was so excited I couldn’t sleep that night thinking about it.”

    [7 Craziest Ways Japan’s Earthquake Affected Earth]

    A rare event

    Seiches from earthquakes are a common phenomenon — California’s swimming pools go berserk after the state’s big quakes — but they are rare in Norway. The last earthquake to set off seiches in Norway’s fjords was the magnitude-8.6 Assam earthquake in Tibet. The great 1755 Lisbon earthquake in Portugal also unleashed seiches in the fjords.

    And not every fjord in Norway started oscillating after the Japan earthquake. Only fjords pointing northeast, toward Japan, were properly aligned, and even then only some of the fjords had the right conditions to launch a seiche, the study found.

    Five towns reported seiches the morning of the Japan earthquake. The water in the fjords oscillated for almost three hours, starting about 30 minutes after the Japan earthquake, the study found. People noticed the waves only where the shores had shallow beaches, such as at river deltas, the researchers said.

    The researchers built a computer model of the seiches based on surveillance and camera phone videos, which timed the ebb and flow of the oscillations.

    Shimmying the Sognefjorden

    The model revealed that S-waves, a type of seismic wave, caused the rare event. S-waves shake back and forth perpendicular to their direction of travel (like waving a rope on the ground) and can pass inside the Earth. In fjords pointed northeast, the S-waves from the Japan earthquake moved the ground back and forth by 0.4 inches (1 centimeter), Bondevik said.

    “You can move a lot of water just by pushing one centimeter of ground,” Bondevik said.

    Earlier studies have suggested seiche waves are triggered by seismic surface waves, which travel more slowly than S-waves and can only pass through Earth’s crust. These earthquake waves also contributed to Norway’s seiches, but the initial sloshing was sparked by the S-waves, the researchers concluded.

    “We have now, because of the film clips, been able to pick out what part of the earthquake shaking triggered the waves in the fjords,” Bondevik said. “And to our surprise, it was not the largest or strongest shaking, but the S-waves. They have the correct period that matches up with the fjord’s [natural frequency],” he said.

    The findings were published July 3 in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

    Email Becky Oskin or follow her @beckyoskin. Follow us @OAPlanet, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience’s OurAmazingPlanet.

    Images: One-of-a-Kind Places on Earth
    Waves of Destruction: History’s Biggest Tsunamis
    7 Ways the Earth Changes in the Blink of an Eye

    Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    nbcnews.com/science/norways-weird-waves-traced-japan-quake-6C10946754

  3. How beautiful, Iori!! Enjoy your fortunate life & health!!! You worked HARD to preserve it, bless your heart! I bet the vino there is fantastico!- 🙂

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This website updates the latest news about the Fukushima nuclear plant and also archives the past news from 2011. Because it's always updated and added live, articles, categories and the tags are not necessarily fitted in the latest format.
I am the writer of this website. About page remains in 2014. This is because my memory about 311 was clearer than now, 2023, and I think it can have a historical value. Now I'm living in Romania with 3 cats as an independent data scientist.
Actually, nothing has progressed in the plant since 2011. We still don't even know what is going on inside. They must keep cooling the crippled reactors by water, but additionally groundwater keeps flowing into the reactor buildings from the broken parts. This is why highly contaminated water is always produced more than it can circulate. Tepco is planning to officially discharge this water to the Pacific but Tritium is still remaining in it. They dilute this with seawater so that it is legally safe, but scientifically the same amount of radioactive tritium is contained. They say it is safe to discharge, but none of them have drunk it.

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