#266934 - Thu Apr 10 2008 11:03 PM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: tripitaka]
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SJ'er with 1000+ posts
Registered: Sun Jun 18 2006
Posts: 1934
Loc: Australia
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I heard about a real idiot from down-under who decided he would take a snow plough for a joy ride when he was drunk. The Japanese police locked him up for almost a month and then deported him. YEP. We've all heard about that incident, it's the most commonly told story. 'drunk Aussie steals snow plow' It gets back to my point about a few incidents getting more attention than they deserve. Don't forget, the Japanese are just as good at spotting arseholes as us.
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#266941 - Thu Apr 10 2008 11:37 PM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: boardbaka]
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SJ'er with 1000+ posts
Registered: Sun Nov 04 2007
Posts: 1248
Loc: Perth Western Australia
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not saying that kiwis aren`t bad abroad but aussies in niseko are a disgrace to the human race imhao - I was in wild bills bar one sat night end of season and there was a massive dust up in there that involved at least 6people not including the staff - who I must say did very well in breaking it up-there was one guy who would just not stop for love or money - the japanese bar staff looked a bit shocked but I got the feeling they had seen it all before - a friend from work was riding the gondola up there and heard an aussie guy (he did the accent very well ) say `can`nt wait to get back to the hotel and rack up a few lines ! `- its just plain cringworthy I reckon Not all of us are doing lines and fighting at Wild Bills, although my then 10yr old got grabbed and pushed to the ground by a drunk Aussie who was verbally razzing the group of kids (who razzed back), and my guy was the slowest  . I had to grab the bloke by the arm and firmly ask him if he was proud of attacking a 10 yr old child, did it make him feel like a man? He tried to take me on - what kind of a man wants to go a round with a woman. There are always KNOBS - but boardbaka - honest we are not all idiots! (BTW-I dealt with that on my own because my hubby was inside drinking...so I DO hope he was on HIS best behaviour after I left!!!!)
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#266961 - Fri Apr 11 2008 09:59 AM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: Fattwins]
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SJ'er with 300+ posts
Registered: Thu Aug 30 2007
Posts: 392
Loc: Osaka
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The Kiwis in Wanaka and Queenstown behave a lot worse than the visiting Aussies. The streets of Queenie on the weekend can seem like Beirut at times.
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#266998 - Fri Apr 11 2008 01:07 PM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: Go Native]
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SJ'er with 5000+ posts
Registered: Tue Jul 18 2006
Posts: 7225
Loc: 香港
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#267048 - Fri Apr 11 2008 03:41 PM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: SerreChe]
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SJ'er with 750+ posts
Registered: Mon Oct 31 2005
Posts: 792
Loc: Hong Kong - but not for much l...
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more on the positives - across from where we were staying the snow plows had piled a mountain of snow, something like 5-8m high. this pile of snow was adjacent to a largish apartment block. One evening a bunch of kids (probably about 8 or 10 of them) were playing on this snow mountain thingy when they found themselves in a snow ball fight with the occupants of a couple of the apartments. the kids were hurling snowballs up at the balconies as fast as they could and the people on the balconies were sending them back down just as fast. I don't think the groups knew each other. It was great to see people just having some fun and all enjoying being in the snow.
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#267095 - Fri Apr 11 2008 09:02 PM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: Rag-Doll]
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SJ'er with 25+ posts
Registered: Fri Nov 16 2007
Posts: 42
Loc: Hirafu and Australia
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Yeah, I'll go in to bat for the Aussies.
Overall, I think the Australians in Niseko are very respectful of the locals and their culture.
Most of the "incidents" are extremely inconsequential and are just cases of people having a good time. I've seen as many instances of Japanese people being rude as I have Australians ( few in both cases). A lot of this is IMO , the locals labelling the Australians " barbarian gaijin", when they are in fact just pissed off that they are actually there.
The Australians are very sensitive to the local sentiment and from what I've seen , bend over backwards not to offend anyone.
A couple of Japanese guys mooned us when we were standing outside a bar. We thought it was funny and so did they. But I can't help feeling that if it had been a couple of young Aussies doing it and someone else had seen it , everyone would be doing the old "tut-tut, uncouth Aussie " thing.
There's no question that Aussies are more ready to get physically agressive than the Japanese, but I've not heard of an Australian threatening a local. Anyone who thinks that the Japanese don't binge drink to extremes hasn't been to Tokyo on any given weeknight.
The Australian developments have definitely improved the village( i'm not a developer). Most of the potential problems stem from the lax/previously non-existent planning laws. The locals can solve that easily - it would be welcomed by Japanese and Australians alike.
Interestingly, when the Japanese influx occurred in Australia in the 80's and early 90's , some Aussies got annoyed and were very quickly labelled racists. The Japanese companies played the racist card early and played it well. Now, when the reverse happens, the Japanese get annoyed by the influx , but noone labels them racist - we all go along with their criticisms - it's a cultural cringe.
Australians have a fine track record of treating people equally and with respect. The fact that the Australians get on well with the Japanese is a testament to the good nature of both "sides". Aussies have a few rough edges and have a tendency to make "wise-cracks" but they are good people , and they're fun.
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#267113 - Sat Apr 12 2008 06:44 AM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: bellavista]
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SJ'er with 750+ posts
Registered: Wed Jan 04 2006
Posts: 964
Loc: Hawaii and Sapporo
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Never had a bad incident with Aussies in Japan. Everyone I met from Oz was nice, friendly, and respectful (with the exception of a group in the gondy at Sahoro who were polite but emotionless and berift of personality - they probably just didn't like my snowboard). I don't hang out in/near the bars though, and that's probably where the highest potential for "bad interaction" with any nationality is.
(In Hawaii however...)
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#267163 - Sat Apr 12 2008 08:22 PM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: Fattwins]
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SJ'er with 500+ posts
Registered: Sat Nov 24 2007
Posts: 676
Loc: Tamworth NSW Australia
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From 2 and 3 years ago (when I was there) I dodn't notice it any worse than what we are used to in Oz (Or at least no worse than what goes on during Country Music Festival, anyway  ). There are always a few f*wits (of almost any nationality) who cannot be assed being normal - realise thay are away from home (and the civilising influence of familial expectations) and get totally wasted and act the total idiot! On the whole, though, the aussies act civilly, same as most other nationalities. FWIW I believe that for the most part, the problem with the off the wall behaviour in Niseko (and Japan in general) is more to do with a lack of sensitivity for the culture of Japan than anything else. Tose of us who try to understand the people, the language and the society would never behave the same as we do in Oz, it just wouldn't be right! For instance - I live near a major regional town (population about what a small town in Japan would be) - the difference is that I have no neighbours for more than a kilometer in any direction (and about 4km in one direction), whereas few Japanese people live that far from neighbours. This, alone, makes for a significant difference in the way we behave in company of others.
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#267209 - Sun Apr 13 2008 12:25 PM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: thursday]
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SJ'er with 2000+ posts
Registered: Mon Feb 09 2004
Posts: 2938
Loc: Fujisawa
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Maybe just that when he is in Oz he can afford to not worry about the telly blaring or playing loud music or of those family wrestling bouts in the back yard as the closest neighbours are so far away. But when he comes to Japan, as he is undoubtedably nicer and more caring of local customs, he changes his behaviour with the proximity of his neighbours in mind. Some other less sensitive and intelligent people may fail to see the difference about how far your neighbours are and so continue to make a racket like they are 3 cities away, when in fact they are often a paper screen away!
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#267216 - Sun Apr 13 2008 12:44 PM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: JA]
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SJ'er with 500+ posts
Registered: Fri Dec 30 2005
Posts: 703
Loc: Kutchan
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FWIW I believe that for the most part, the problem with the off the wall behaviour in Niseko (and Japan in general) is more to do with a lack of sensitivity for the culture of Japan than anything else. Tose of us who try to understand the people, the language and the society would never behave the same as we do in Oz, it just wouldn't be right! JA I'm interested in how you would, in a broad sense, define Japanese culture. And what parts of Japanese culture do you feel Aussies most disregard?
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#267245 - Sun Apr 13 2008 07:42 PM
Re: How really do the Aussie ski tourists really act in Japan???
[Re: thursday]
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SJ'er with 500+ posts
Registered: Sat Nov 24 2007
Posts: 676
Loc: Tamworth NSW Australia
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thursday, What it means is that we do not have to be so careful not to upset the neighbours, since they are not living next door through a single wall.
The fact is, though, that there is always somewhere anyone in Oz can get to where there is plenty of space around you.
GN, I think that the majority of Aussies have very little concept of the interpersonal relationships that MUST happen in Japan for the place to operate! Population density changes the way people can interact without offending others.
The idea of deference and social level as the basis on which the language is constructed is significantly outside the experience of many, and there is a world of difference between the way aussies behave and the way the Japanese behave (as I know you have seen for yourself.)
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