Me too i remember the Fukushima earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster like it just happened last year. I am wondering what happened with the last 10 years, it is like they just disappeared.
@@midsue not to get deep, but i had a conversation with an eldery gentleman on his *96th birthday* and he pretty much said that's how quick time was and made a point of emphasising the importance of living your life and not letting it pass by. This was in 2014 and your comment just brought back that memory and its too true.
Honestly the radiation doesn't seem abnormal based on the 0.263uSv reading. Don't know how long they let the detector run but here in Australia I typically get a range of 0.1-0.3uSv with no issues. Of course that doesn't mean the soil isn't heavy metal contaminated, but it's nice to see they're improving.
Most of both Chernobyl's and Fukushima's contaminated areas are mostly safe to live in.. Farming and other agriculture is a different matter.. Belarus doesn't care (where most of the contaminated farms are)
@@100M2B Why not? There are no airborne particles being released anymore, so most of what you come in to contact with is not radioactive anymore. Only some parts of the soil might be radioactive, but you are not living in the soil are you? In 10 years the remaining radioactive particles have dropped in the soil, so are not readily on the surface anymore. You should look up places like Ramsar or Talesh Mahalleh in Iran, which can have background radiation of 20 mSv/hr !!! and people live there quite fine. In Chernobyl only a few places have such high radiation. Most places only have 3-5x normal background radiation.
People have been fleeing the fields of Japan to live in big cities, so farmers, especially in districts too far from all central areas, usually sustain their business by making it absurdly high quality and exporting it. That's why Japan has the most expensive melon, peach, strawberry, meat, and so on.
It is insane but you cant knock them, the average person is drastically healthier compared to someone in the united states. We would really benefit from people buying healthy food farmed locally instead of dollar menu fast food The Japanese have always been about quality over quantity. Can you imagine the buds they could grow if they put their minds too it?
@@grod805 lmao, it has nothing to do with valuing local stuff. Japan domestic farm produce is most protected in the world from competition. they put insane tariff and import restrictions to make sure cheap and affordable foregin produce dosen't come in. Those locals have no choice but to buy super expensive local produce.
Hey vice, when will you cover the peasants and workers rebellion in India? Or the general strike in France? Or the students protests in Turkey? You only cover these things extensively when they happen in anti US countries?
Let's be real. The standards for the acceptable "minimum" amounts of radiation were raised after Fukushima. And to be complete, this video should note all the previous farmers that committed suicide after learning they had unknowingly sold their radioactive farm items to other unsuspecting Japanese.
susan ray Or you could just find any unsafe food to eat due to Fukushima radiation. The testing requirements of Japan are 10X more stringent than the EU and 25 times lower than the US. Your nonsense is not impressive.
Japanese farmers are protected by high tariffs which make certain fruits and vegetables extremely expensive. Pretty much all musk melons cost 50 to 150 bucks each, as an extreme example. To justify the cost, people in Japan create a sort of a mythology of how they grow their produce and how superior it is to justify the cost like the guy spouting statistics about the sugar content of his peaches. I lived there for three years and met so many people who’d go on and on about how great the expensive apples they bought in Aomori prefecture are and I’d try one and it was a good apple but whatever.
As a hobbyist grower tryna turn pro I have a sort of reverence for the fruit growing game. EVERYTHING in nature wants sugar, and it's really only humans who take it for granted. And even then, as an American, the lust for sweet is intense! So growing fruit with that much sugar that with skin unmarred by the wild fauna isn't anything to sneeze at. 🤷🏾♀️ I credit a third of my growing sense to Masanobu Fukuoka. He was a REAL ONE and revolutionary in the growing world.
It uplifting to see that even in a nuclear exclusion zone people and life are still able to flourish. Gives me hope that we'll be able to find solutions for other global problems
@@valovalo4177 which nuclear believe it or not is safer than coal plants, or fossil fuel plants...yet people see this and thing guess we gotta keep using fossil fuel plants. Thinking "we gotta prevent this" is true...but when we sensationalize events like fukushima people forget that even with things like this nuclear plants are far far safer than fossil fuels. AND new types of reactors like Thorium reactors are virtually meltdown-proof. But people hear nuclear so they just say no to any plans to expand it and just keep using fossil fuels that end up with more people hurt or killed. It's sad, because by the numbers nuclear energy is incredibly safer compared to how much power it actually provides. Yes it can be better, and newer nuclear tech like thorium reactors are even safer than this one...but nobody will give it a chance.
I mean that’s really not that surprising. We live on a radioactive planet. It has been radioactive since its creation 4 billion years ago. If radiation prevented all living things then humanity would never have existed.
@@mattconcertlife You are the mad one replying of his facts. How funny. Whats next a fake cry laugh emoji pretending you are right when we just owned your race baiting channel?
VICE and Disney pay for ''recommends'' on youtube. It's because they are ''partners'' with youtube premium whitelisted account. It is to push their left wing agenda, but this one is a good one for the planet, at least.
The peach man at the end... who says the media will focus on Fukushima’s recovery and safety. It’s so refreshing seeing someone who actually trusts the media and respects what journalists do.
@@johannaecheverrylopez2386 these comments are unbelievable. It's been dumped for years. They're using kites because the birds are dead. This is just a propaganda piece for the Olympics and the lemmings are lapping it up. Go watch the other Vice piece.
@Chimino Pulverman have you been living under a rock? Have you looked at ocean populations for fish? The Pacific is close to dead. Where are the salmon? What about the whales? All life has been damaged.
@@jamchloe99 Show any marine biologist or oceanographer that implicates Fukushima or radiation as a causation factor in any dead whale, salmon, or any sea life. Your nonsense is not impressive.
I don't mind that they've resumed farming. But I do mind that the Japanese government was occasionally caught exporting Fukushima produce to my country (Korea) without labeling it as such.
Well if you would have research it you would know that the radiation testing standards are ten times more strict in Japan than a EU and 15 times more stringent than that of the US. Seoul is more radioactive than Tokyo. Get over it.
@@OzGeologyOfficial wait he said 20,000 dollars. He would've said yen of he meant otherwise. How more average peaches sell for a couple of hundred dollars per box I think....and each box only has 5 peaches 💀
@@100M2B I believe the quote from this video was "piles of radioactive top soil under tarps", so put the soil in a mushroom growing building and let em do their work. From the sound of it the top soil had already been removed. Not arguing whether they would survive in a field, just saying that they could still help with very little work/money involved🙏💜💙💚🧡💛🙏
@Chimino Pulverman lame excuse, but I hear you, it makes sense from a small time farmers perspective. I'm saying gov't environmental agencies could take advantage of them as well though🙏💜💙💚🧡💛🙏
He’s comparing his white flesh peach sugar content to yellow peach sugar content. All white flesh peaches/nectarines will have a sugar content of 25-45%. All yellow are about 12-18%. That grower trying to pull the wool over our eyes. Justify $50 peaches, Jesus. I could get you 50lbs of export quality peaches for $50.
I had googled your comment here and you are right. I just curious , I saw in the video the peaches are more red than white. From what are understand if red flesh is very rare. Does it taste as sweet as white one ? I do like donut shape peaches the most. I am not sure if this guys peaches is bigger as he claim as it hard to tell from video but knowing Japanese , they willing to pay load of money from beautiful perfect fruit to give as gift . I saw Japanese supermarket in Japan that specialise pack fruit cost ain't cheap. As foreigner I find assuming and crazy
10 years!! I remember watching videos of it on TH-cam when it just happened in my teens. In fact, I still fall in the tsunami videos rabbit hole from time to time.
idk if anyone will see this, but Abroad in Japan has a video of his own about the recovery of Fukushima that goes into greater depth than this one does and I absolutely recommend giving it a watch. It's really cool how much Fukushima's been recovering over the past decade tbh.
2:20 He says that he is "measuring (測って)" the B-wave, but the translation says that the detector is "catching" the B-wave. And the level of radiation is actually pretty normal...
The way and the timing he said I tried the peaches makes me want to try it. First he talked about how expensive it is then he said no problem I tried myself.
The nuclear plant in South of Miami is leaking into the Bay of Atlantic ocean there in Miami, nobody talks about it why? The lobsters there are huge in the channel that leads from the ocean to the plant (you can see a dark channel on google maps) people say glowing massive lobster are in that channel, and you cant take them by law, but its revealed in the major news recently that the Turkey Point plant is leaking into the ocean there in Miami, by underground canals they dug which are not safe theyve found out, its leaking huge all around miami waters. Vice needs to cover this, it would get millions of clicks in 1 week.
using lead as an additive to wine used to make it taste extra sweet. so i'm sure it's fine. totally. there will be no problems. anywhere. ever. from anything.
Perhaps this is the greatest lesson from Fukushima: nuclear has become safe. It's no longer a threat and the green movement should stop treating it like a bomb. Power plants are safe, even the food is safe. If we learn how to store nuclear waste safely, we can easily provide clean energy and avoid fossil fuels until nuclear fusion is achieved.
I’ve had the privilege to teach song and dance in Fukushima, and I can confirm, despite the immense pain that was felt in this country, their is still immense resilience, character, and grace in everyone you meet there. It is unfortunate however, that people in northern Japan, especially women. Still face discrimination because of stigma regarding their ability to have healthy babies. If you ever have the chance to visit, consider yourself lucky, as it really is one of the most beautiful places on planet earth. Visually and spiritually. I miss it.
"Japanese agriculture is about making the highest quality produce in the world" - I'd say this sentiment can be applied to everything the Japanese create. The level of ambition from Japan is truly inspiring.
I am not concerned about what farmers do as it 's essential to their living, therefore drive to improve. What I'm more concerned about, as the video shown, is the government and how they are going to take care of nuclear wastes. It's been just sitting there on the ground after 10 years and what will happen when another earthquake or natural disaster strikes the area? Re-contaminate the farm lands farmers worked so hard to get rid of the stigma? For the sake of the farmers, nuclear waste needs to be better secured and stored ASAP rather than a simple barrel and tarp covers.
Have you all had a good peach? It depends where you get them. For the most part, in America they’re bad. Countries closer to the equator seem to have the good ones
@@elchucapablas idk about that, I tried some peaches from the Niagara Region of Canada and they were really tasty, comparable to Japan's more expensive peaches.
@@joegaskill8742 it's far enough from the reactor that it's not contaminated. Remember Fukushima is the name of the prefecture, which is like a u.s states. Fukushima is not the name of the plant
Lol you do realize that everything has some form of radiation in it? Bananas for example are naturally radioactive. Microwaves are radioactive. And given our globalized economy, it’s very likely we’ve been eating this produce without knowledge.
@@DejaunWright Japanese food. Besides the fact that your claim about Microwave radiation is incorrect, if we are already being exposed to naturally occurring radiation that’s unavoidable, does it not make sense to limit unnecessary exposures where ever we can i.e. eating produce from Japan.
@@Skfkf1393a Well to think that all Japanese food entirely is inherently radioactive just because of a radiation problem in ONE area of Japan is a problem (xenophobic and prejudiced). Considering also that foods like Bananas have decayed potassium and are considered 1% of our daily radioactive exposure, according to the Independent, and that heated Nicotine is far more radioactive than most of the fruits coming from Japan and accounts for much more of our daily exposure to radioactive material daily, it’s problematic to think that Japanese food is the sole problem. Many food production sites, both here in the US and abroad, farm on lands that are naturally radioactive or artificially radioactive due to nuclear fallout from other sources, it wouldn’t matter if you avoided solely Japanese produce. Our bodies are exposed to radioactive material everyday. Low doses of radiation won’t harm us.
Japanese people and the culture is so disciplined. Everything they do os done with precision and the utmost care and respect. How can anyone not lookup to this great country and it’s people. Mostly their people. My bucket list is to visit one day. One day........🙏🏼😔
Looks great on the outside, not so great on the inside which goes for most countries. Japanese culture is plagued by a toxic work culture that is leading people into social isolation and death by overwork. Then there is the beraucracy... Dear god some of the stories I have heard... The country has a lot of good things going for it, but I would never want to live there, only visit as tourist.
The farm is absolutely beautiful, but I am stunned that anyone is allowed to grow food to sell and even more shocked anyone would be willing to buy it. If the air, water and soil is fine then why has no one moved back?
The rice from Fukushima is tested to standards 10X more stringent than the EU and 15X over the US. Your ignorance has you eating the wrong food for reasons you don't understand.
@@JizzMasterTheZeroth Your "point" was you think that food from Fukushima is overly radioactive somehow, and of course that is very ignorant and just plain wrong.
I am pretty sure those peaches are worth the money. Japanese agri is considered to be of the highest quality standard. So much so that restaurants all over the world have them imported.
These people should be commended for being pioneers of living and surviving in a radiated zone. They show that humanity could still exist in a post-nuclear war world.
82yrs old and still using the grass cutter.🙏🙏🙏RESPECT!!!!
Excellent food and good genes.
Thats actually normal here haha
@@DjKimsey its normal in some older people, keeping busy i guess means living longer..
@@hueyfreeman7010 pn
@@DjKimsey respect to all of you and your mind about live.
I can’t believe it’s been 10 years since the Fukushima earthquake and tsunami. I remember watching it vividly on the BBC news.
Me too i remember the Fukushima earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster like it just happened last year. I am wondering what happened with the last 10 years, it is like they just disappeared.
yeah I was in seecondary school when it happend remembe=r it clearly now im doing a degree in college mad how time flies
@@midsue not to get deep, but i had a conversation with an eldery gentleman on his *96th birthday* and he pretty much said that's how quick time was and made a point of emphasising the importance of living your life and not letting it pass by. This was in 2014 and your comment just brought back that memory and its too true.
wow time flies. scary at the same time.
I saw it happen LIVE. It was INSANE
Man the farm side of Japan looks really beautiful than the city
I love your films! Planet Terror is my favourite ☺️
Yeah looks are deceiving
@@King_Punt lol
@@Pixelkip Rob really doesn't know what it means when they stated nuclear power plant collapsed near by and it's still leaking nuclear wast lol
Of most, if not all countries. Cities, especially big ones, kinda all look the same. Nature is what stuns you
Honestly the radiation doesn't seem abnormal based on the 0.263uSv reading. Don't know how long they let the detector run but here in Australia I typically get a range of 0.1-0.3uSv with no issues. Of course that doesn't mean the soil isn't heavy metal contaminated, but it's nice to see they're improving.
Most of both Chernobyl's and Fukushima's contaminated areas are mostly safe to live in.. Farming and other agriculture is a different matter.. Belarus doesn't care (where most of the contaminated farms are)
@@100M2B Why not? There are no airborne particles being released anymore, so most of what you come in to contact with is not radioactive anymore. Only some parts of the soil might be radioactive, but you are not living in the soil are you? In 10 years the remaining radioactive particles have dropped in the soil, so are not readily on the surface anymore. You should look up places like Ramsar or Talesh Mahalleh in Iran, which can have background radiation of 20 mSv/hr !!! and people live there quite fine. In Chernobyl only a few places have such high radiation. Most places only have 3-5x normal background radiation.
@@100M2B obviously next to the power plant it is not safe but it's definitely safe if you go a little farther
@@100M2B Actually, new research shows no one should have been evacuated from Fukushima at all.
@@rkan2 but the radiation is now in the water and soil. Which you will drink and eat plants. You think ALL areas are safe?
82 year old doing more then most 22 year olds
They do all that then go climb mountains on the weekends 😂
I'm really impressed by this granny
@Darwinian Atheist Great job sir by the way where is your village
@@DjKimsey thats why they have big calves
$113 for a peach, ..... WTF!
NO - that's his everyday peasant peaches. His top peaches go for $ 20,000 EACH. AND people buy them.
@@SALESPRODUCTIONS I know and I still can't buy his low grade stuff
@@SALESPRODUCTIONS they go for 20,000 yen, big difference
@@markomclane475 NO - go back and watch it again. "DOLLARS"
@@SALESPRODUCTIONS yeah thats the mistake vice news made, they misinterpreted the cost. The peaches sell for 20,000 yen each.
The pride that they take in their produce is so amazing ✨
thats every farmer ever though, you just dont see it
🎶”Move to Fukushima, gonna eat a lot of peaches” 🎶
Peaches come from a can, they were put there by a man...
In a radiated factory down town!!!
millions of peaches, peaches for me
Millions of peaches, peaches for free
Take a little nap where the roots all twist
Squished a rotten peach in my fist
$20,000 per peach that's 3 times sweeter than normal.
...
I hope that was meant to be 20,000 yen and not dollars.
@@squirrelonmapletree it was.
It's not dollars it's yen so around 200 dollars.
@@markomclane475 Still, I'd rather have three peaches at $1 each.
@@notj5712 same, those fancy peaches are 200 times the price of a normal peach but taste maybe 2 times better if that.
Who pays $470.00 for a peach?
apparently people do 😂
People have been fleeing the fields of Japan to live in big cities, so farmers, especially in districts too far from all central areas, usually sustain their business by making it absurdly high quality and exporting it. That's why Japan has the most expensive melon, peach, strawberry, meat, and so on.
Poor people who can't afford his $20,000 peaches.
that is crazy
This means Japanese are rich
I'm unemployed in hawaii. I wouldnt mind living in Fukushima for work. anything to clean up or fix up
That's hilarious that people would pay that much for locally grown produce.
Hey, if they've got the money, take it from them.
They value food. We don't. We'd rather spend our money on other stuff
Local supports local. Westerners support money.
It is insane but you cant knock them, the average person is drastically healthier compared to someone in the united states. We would really benefit from people buying healthy food farmed locally instead of dollar menu fast food
The Japanese have always been about quality over quantity. Can you imagine the buds they could grow if they put their minds too it?
@@grod805 lmao, it has nothing to do with valuing local stuff. Japan domestic farm produce is most protected in the world from competition. they put insane tariff and import restrictions to make sure cheap and affordable foregin produce dosen't come in. Those locals have no choice but to buy super expensive local produce.
@@johntitor414 If that's true, I wish someone covered this or why the price of normal produce are way pricey.
Hey vice, when will you cover the peasants and workers rebellion in India?
Or the general strike in France?
Or the students protests in Turkey?
You only cover these things extensively when they happen in anti US countries?
Japan is a big us ally... lol.
They only have so many resources, and so many reporters. Not like they can send people out to other countries these days either.
@@fayemarshall2254 But when you report something on YT too heavy...they take it down....
@@fayemarshall2254 But i do agree with you....
Let's be real. The standards for the acceptable "minimum" amounts of radiation were raised after Fukushima. And to be complete, this video should note all the previous farmers that committed suicide after learning they had unknowingly sold their radioactive farm items to other unsuspecting Japanese.
I saw that, majorly epic and life changing results
susan ray Or you could just find any unsafe food to eat due to Fukushima radiation. The testing requirements of Japan are 10X more stringent than the EU and 25 times lower than the US. Your nonsense is not impressive.
That dude grows peaches like people grow cannabis. The Japanese farm game has ALWAYS been on point!
Very high quality, but fruit in Japan is generally expensive, lol. I've seen those $400+ peaches. Nice, but I ain't buying it, lol.
Japanese farmers are protected by high tariffs which make certain fruits and vegetables extremely expensive. Pretty much all musk melons cost 50 to 150 bucks each, as an extreme example. To justify the cost, people in Japan create a sort of a mythology of how they grow their produce and how superior it is to justify the cost like the guy spouting statistics about the sugar content of his peaches. I lived there for three years and met so many people who’d go on and on about how great the expensive apples they bought in Aomori prefecture are and I’d try one and it was a good apple but whatever.
As a hobbyist grower tryna turn pro I have a sort of reverence for the fruit growing game. EVERYTHING in nature wants sugar, and it's really only humans who take it for granted. And even then, as an American, the lust for sweet is intense! So growing fruit with that much sugar that with skin unmarred by the wild fauna isn't anything to sneeze at. 🤷🏾♀️ I credit a third of my growing sense to Masanobu Fukuoka. He was a REAL ONE and revolutionary in the growing world.
imagine if he could legally grow cannabis
@@XerosXIII Nippon Weed.. i'd buy for sure!
It uplifting to see that even in a nuclear exclusion zone people and life are still able to flourish. Gives me hope that we'll be able to find solutions for other global problems
That´s actually absurd. No we can´t find solutions for everything. We gotta prevent this stuff from happening.
They're not in the exclusion zone.
@@valovalo4177 which nuclear believe it or not is safer than coal plants, or fossil fuel plants...yet people see this and thing guess we gotta keep using fossil fuel plants. Thinking "we gotta prevent this" is true...but when we sensationalize events like fukushima people forget that even with things like this nuclear plants are far far safer than fossil fuels. AND new types of reactors like Thorium reactors are virtually meltdown-proof. But people hear nuclear so they just say no to any plans to expand it and just keep using fossil fuels that end up with more people hurt or killed. It's sad, because by the numbers nuclear energy is incredibly safer compared to how much power it actually provides. Yes it can be better, and newer nuclear tech like thorium reactors are even safer than this one...but nobody will give it a chance.
I mean that’s really not that surprising. We live on a radioactive planet. It has been radioactive since its creation 4 billion years ago. If radiation prevented all living things then humanity would never have existed.
There isn’t a single shot from the exclusion zone in this video. The exclusion zone covers less than 10% of Fukushima prefecture.
This is the content I like from VICE. Not that race-baiting crap.
Stay mad
@@mattconcertlife You are the mad one replying of his facts. How funny. Whats next a fake cry laugh emoji pretending you are right when we just owned your race baiting channel?
Race issues are a huge problem in the United States. 1000 African Americans are murdered by the American regime every year. Thats 1 in 5.
My thank to TH-cam recommendation.
Y not subscribe
VICE and Disney pay for ''recommends'' on youtube. It's because they are ''partners'' with youtube premium whitelisted account. It is to push their left wing agenda, but this one is a good one for the planet, at least.
The peach man at the end... who says the media will focus on Fukushima’s recovery and safety. It’s so refreshing seeing someone who actually trusts the media and respects what journalists do.
The media shouldn't be trusted .
@@makaveli4652 Did you watch the video?
@@CouLands Yep that was a nice move to destigmatise the region which is good for the local people . But overall the mass media shouldn't be trusted .
@nismo510 oh. Interesting. Where did you hear that?
Your comment suggests you think that people should trust the media which is exactly what they shouldn't do if they don't want to be slaves .
Put the radioactive water in the ocean?!? WOW... No!
It would actually be fine for global communities but local people would be screwed again. Dilution is the solution
Theyve BEEN dymping that water
@@johannaecheverrylopez2386 these comments are unbelievable. It's been dumped for years. They're using kites because the birds are dead. This is just a propaganda piece for the Olympics and the lemmings are lapping it up. Go watch the other Vice piece.
@Chimino Pulverman have you been living under a rock? Have you looked at ocean populations for fish? The Pacific is close to dead. Where are the salmon? What about the whales? All life has been damaged.
@@jamchloe99 Show any marine biologist or oceanographer that implicates Fukushima or radiation as a causation factor in any dead whale, salmon, or any sea life. Your nonsense is not impressive.
The resilience and work ethic of these people is just awe inspiring.
Irradiated rice +2 rads.
That's ok. Remember to take your Rad-X before bedtime and if you feel sick inject some RadAway and you'll be fine.
@@liberator48 use your +2 speaking skills to make your way past the supermutants to reach market
@@DjKimsey You must be speaking of the Americans xD
I don't mind that they've resumed farming. But I do mind that the Japanese government was occasionally caught exporting Fukushima produce to my country (Korea) without labeling it as such.
Well if you would have research it you would know that the radiation testing standards are ten times more strict in Japan than a EU and 15 times more stringent than that of the US. Seoul is more radioactive than Tokyo. Get over it.
Beautiful place. It’s a shame what happen to it
Its not done happening yet either.
th-cam.com/video/4Yxz0RwqzCs/w-d-xo.html 1
It's been 10 years now
Time flies so fast
$20,000 dollars for a single peach?? EAT THE RICH
paying 20k to a farmer is a lot better for the world then buying a car
I was like wtf, but then I realized it's most likely 20,000 dollars in Japanese Yen, which would be 190 US dollars.
@@OzGeologyOfficial wait he said 20,000 dollars. He would've said yen of he meant otherwise. How more average peaches sell for a couple of hundred dollars per box I think....and each box only has 5 peaches 💀
Mushrooms. Everyone needs to plant the damn mushrooms that turn radioactive waste into clean earth. Why is this not a thing more people know about?...
Because civilization is a biological harvesting machine designed to use organic life as a resource to create an inorganic environments for an Ai
They filter toxins out super well.
@@100M2B I believe the quote from this video was "piles of radioactive top soil under tarps", so put the soil in a mushroom growing building and let em do their work. From the sound of it the top soil had already been removed. Not arguing whether they would survive in a field, just saying that they could still help with very little work/money involved🙏💜💙💚🧡💛🙏
@Chimino Pulverman lame excuse, but I hear you, it makes sense from a small time farmers perspective. I'm saying gov't environmental agencies could take advantage of them as well though🙏💜💙💚🧡💛🙏
They are pretty picky on where they grow.
He’s comparing his white flesh peach sugar content to yellow peach sugar content. All white flesh peaches/nectarines will have a sugar content of 25-45%. All yellow are about 12-18%. That grower trying to pull the wool over our eyes. Justify $50 peaches, Jesus. I could get you 50lbs of export quality peaches for $50.
Exactly!
@Chimino Pulverman. Yep, and it works. Ever see the $5k Japanese square watermelons? Insanity.
I had googled your comment here and you are right. I just curious , I saw in the video the peaches are more red than white. From what are understand if red flesh is very rare. Does it taste as sweet as white one ? I do like donut shape peaches the most. I am not sure if this guys peaches is bigger as he claim as it hard to tell from video but knowing Japanese , they willing to pay load of money from beautiful perfect fruit to give as gift . I saw Japanese supermarket in Japan that specialise pack fruit cost ain't cheap. As foreigner I find assuming and crazy
All you need to do to justify any price is to sell it. Vendors always want the top price obviously.
Sums up Japanese products in 2021, expensive and not very good
6:02 my man looking like a game character next to those big peaches
Those were some damn anime peaches🤤
Anyone going to mention the fact that it’s still leaking into the Pacific no ??!
She 82 god damn I'm 16 and I can't even start the damn thing
Thats sad. . . . Why?
pathetic
Well this comment thread turned lol
10 years!! I remember watching videos of it on TH-cam when it just happened in my teens. In fact, I still fall in the tsunami videos rabbit hole from time to time.
Hemp sucks up nuclear maybe they need lots of hemp
Those are some expensive ass peaches
idk if anyone will see this, but Abroad in Japan has a video of his own about the recovery of Fukushima that goes into greater depth than this one does and I absolutely recommend giving it a watch. It's really cool how much Fukushima's been recovering over the past decade tbh.
2:20 He says that he is "measuring (測って)" the B-wave, but the translation says that the detector is "catching" the B-wave. And the level of radiation is actually pretty normal...
This si the type of work vice should do not lesbian dance theory crap
There's room for both
Paying that extreme amount of money for the Olympics that should use that money to cleanup more radiation!
They'll probably get more back than the cost of hosting the OS.
This dude growing peach emojis you can *eat*.
The way and the timing he said I tried the peaches makes me want to try it. First he talked about how expensive it is then he said no problem I tried myself.
The public relations to convince people to visit Japan for the Olympics...
Exactly.
Hmmm...I wonder if the lizards there have gotten to Godzilla size proportions yet ? 🤔
Lmao, the foresight
The nuclear plant in South of Miami is leaking into the Bay of Atlantic ocean there in Miami, nobody talks about it why? The lobsters there are huge in the channel that leads from the ocean to the plant (you can see a dark channel on google maps) people say glowing massive lobster are in that channel, and you cant take them by law, but its revealed in the major news recently that the Turkey Point plant is leaking into the ocean there in Miami, by underground canals they dug which are not safe theyve found out, its leaking huge all around miami waters. Vice needs to cover this, it would get millions of clicks in 1 week.
@@Derty_the_grower Can you link a video, I want to see it?
using lead as an additive to wine used to make it taste extra sweet. so i'm sure it's fine. totally. there will be no problems. anywhere. ever. from anything.
Fukushima... the gift that will keep on giving for a long time to come
Perhaps this is the greatest lesson from Fukushima: nuclear has become safe. It's no longer a threat and the green movement should stop treating it like a bomb. Power plants are safe, even the food is safe. If we learn how to store nuclear waste safely, we can easily provide clean energy and avoid fossil fuels until nuclear fusion is achieved.
"experts are advising they dump it in the ocean" WHAT!? What about building additional storage facilities...
All nuclear power plants dump the same tritiated water routinely.
Let’s be honest. Samurai mind set and stubbornness isn’t going to change the fact that your in a radiated zone some 40 times the reading of Chernobyl.
0.293 uSv/hr is basically background radiation, the Japanese really did a great job reducing the Radiation in Fukushima.
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It actually never got high enough to keep people from their homes.
*I'd rather eat that than live in DC...* 😒
Omg the countryside sound peaceful, it reminded me of my childhood
I’ve had the privilege to teach song and dance in Fukushima, and I can confirm, despite the immense pain that was felt in this country, their is still immense resilience, character, and grace in everyone you meet there. It is unfortunate however, that people in northern Japan, especially women. Still face discrimination because of stigma regarding their ability to have healthy babies. If you ever have the chance to visit, consider yourself lucky, as it really is one of the most beautiful places on planet earth. Visually and spiritually. I miss it.
A whole different perspective from "Toxic Pigs of Fukushima," it goes into the people or farmers who have returned and are living there.
fantastic short documentary
FBC14 algorithm is my choice, i dont worry about BTC rates at all
Finally real content on vice and not political bullshit
"Japanese agriculture is about making the highest quality produce in the world" - I'd say this sentiment can be applied to everything the Japanese create. The level of ambition from Japan is truly inspiring.
$109 radioactive peaches anybody?
They are expensive, because he fly’s with each peach to your house🤨
I am not concerned about what farmers do as it 's essential to their living, therefore drive to improve. What I'm more concerned about, as the video shown, is the government and how they are going to take care of nuclear wastes. It's been just sitting there on the ground after 10 years and what will happen when another earthquake or natural disaster strikes the area? Re-contaminate the farm lands farmers worked so hard to get rid of the stigma? For the sake of the farmers, nuclear waste needs to be better secured and stored ASAP rather than a simple barrel and tarp covers.
You can never trust the Japanese government.
Wow they have a lot of radiation still.
Next year when the water is released we all have alot of radiation...
@@darkbozo11 no one seems to care tthat they are going to release tons of radiated toxic water. It will be in allllll of the food we eat.
@@charleskim432 No it won't, and all nuclear power plants in the world release the same tritiated water.
I went through the Tokyo airport after the tsunami in March
th-cam.com/video/4Yxz0RwqzCs/w-d-xo.html 1
I don't even like peaches . . .
You'd have to PAY ME to eat one.
Me too
Have you all had a good peach? It depends where you get them. For the most part, in America they’re bad. Countries closer to the equator seem to have the good ones
@@elchucapablas idk about that, I tried some peaches from the Niagara Region of Canada and they were really tasty, comparable to Japan's more expensive peaches.
No way that whole place is not contaminated,, Fukushima is still leaking radiation into the earth. Fact!
@@joegaskill8742 it's far enough from the reactor that it's not contaminated. Remember Fukushima is the name of the prefecture, which is like a u.s states. Fukushima is not the name of the plant
NCR sharecroppers sure are getting creative nowadays.
It's been 10 years!? I was in highschool then.
Even after that I would still be scared of eating that
Yeah, i'm good on that produce
Lol you do realize that everything has some form of radiation in it? Bananas for example are naturally radioactive. Microwaves are radioactive. And given our globalized economy, it’s very likely we’ve been eating this produce without knowledge.
@@DejaunWright your stated facts are the more reason to avoid these as much as possible?
@@Skfkf1393a To avoid the naturally radioactive foods or the Japanese foods?
@@DejaunWright Japanese food. Besides the fact that your claim about Microwave radiation is incorrect, if we are already being exposed to naturally occurring radiation that’s unavoidable, does it not make sense to limit unnecessary exposures where ever we can i.e. eating produce from Japan.
@@Skfkf1393a Well to think that all Japanese food entirely is inherently radioactive just because of a radiation problem in ONE area of Japan is a problem (xenophobic and prejudiced). Considering also that foods like Bananas have decayed potassium and are considered 1% of our daily radioactive exposure, according to the Independent, and that heated Nicotine is far more radioactive than most of the fruits coming from Japan and accounts for much more of our daily exposure to radioactive material daily, it’s problematic to think that Japanese food is the sole problem. Many food production sites, both here in the US and abroad, farm on lands that are naturally radioactive or artificially radioactive due to nuclear fallout from other sources, it wouldn’t matter if you avoided solely Japanese produce.
Our bodies are exposed to radioactive material everyday. Low doses of radiation won’t harm us.
And this is the origin story of the Cannabis strain “ Radioactive “...
No, hemp actually cleans the soil of nuclear waste.. this is done in cherynobl.
@@Derty_the_grower yes I am aware of that but this isn’t that, this is the origin story of the killer strain called Radioactive. 🤷♂️😂
@Chimino Pulverman hemp leaches contaminants from the soil. It is a phyto-remediative plant.
@Jason Tempel you sure you ain't smoking it bro?
@Jason Tempel ight either you hella not right up stairs or you on some hard-core drugs right now im laughin my ass off lol
Japanese people and the culture is so disciplined. Everything they do os done with precision and the utmost care and respect. How can anyone not lookup to this great country and it’s people. Mostly their people. My bucket list is to visit one day. One day........🙏🏼😔
Looks great on the outside, not so great on the inside which goes for most countries. Japanese culture is plagued by a toxic work culture that is leading people into social isolation and death by overwork. Then there is the beraucracy... Dear god some of the stories I have heard... The country has a lot of good things going for it, but I would never want to live there, only visit as tourist.
@@Ozzianman every country isn’t perfect. We just had a child run the United States the past 4 yrs. How bad can it get.
A disgrace to this world Japan in his government And the people don't stand up to it I have no idea what world you live in. Lala land
A farmer but one that is very aware and precarious
He said $471 for a freaking peach?!?😳🤯
Likes for this 82 year old lady rocking her life!
The farm is absolutely beautiful, but I am stunned that anyone is allowed to grow food to sell and even more shocked anyone would be willing to buy it. If the air, water and soil is fine then why has no one moved back?
The government won't let some people back, but research has shown that no one should have been kept from their homes in the first place.
Dang it I came here to see three eyed fish
Okay, never eating rice from Japan again. Hope it's clearly labelled.
The rice from Fukushima is tested to standards 10X more stringent than the EU and 15X over the US. Your ignorance has you eating the wrong food for reasons you don't understand.
@@danadurnfordkevinblanchdebunk Never eaten Japanese rice in my life 🤷♂️ I feel like you've missed the point, Dr. Eisenstein.
@@JizzMasterTheZeroth Your "point" was you think that food from Fukushima is overly radioactive somehow, and of course that is very ignorant and just plain wrong.
Man those cicadas sound is very distinct
$471 per peach 😯😯😯
Peaches, Mellons, strawberries and mangos. I've seen them all for hundreds of dollars in Japan. They really are superior though, lol.
Wow, those are some expensive peaches!
Nice video! What about FBC14 algorithm review?
AWESOME !!!
Can't believe people still live there.
They have a life expectancy longer than you!
I am pretty sure those peaches are worth the money. Japanese agri is considered to be of the highest quality standard. So much so that restaurants all over the world have them imported.
At least this time the writer mentioned that it was the earthquake that killed 15,000 people and not the meltdown
10 years? WHAT? ALREADY???
Wow its been 10 years already
"eat my $20,000 peach" says the man with a radioactive growth on his forehead
"eat my $20,000 peach"
*... is what **_SHE_** said ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)*
Who tf pays 20k$ for a peach?! Not that 113$ is reasonable.
In a Million years everything will be just fine.
Bwahahahahaha!
It's better for the _H.S.S._ to perish BEFORE that.
I would love to visit! It’s so nice to see how well they are thriving after such a terrible event!
I'm not sure. The government has an incentive to downplay the severity.
The idea of eating food grown near the nuclear plant scares me
Then don't eat food anywhere in the world. Coal ash is more radioactive than nuclear waste.
@Pink Harlequin Doesn't look like you can kick your way out of a paper bag. Now show any unsafe food to eat due to Fukushima radiation.
Who in Japan goes to their local department store and buys 5 peaches for $660?
These people should be commended for being pioneers of living and surviving in a radiated zone. They show that humanity could still exist in a post-nuclear war world.
Not really. New studies have shown everyone should have returned to their homes as soon as they realized how low the radiation actually was.
@Pink Harlequin There you go: th-cam.com/video/AoU663wq38Q/w-d-xo.html
Peach growing is an extremely lucrative business.
I hear if you eat those fruits you'll get powers there mutated that's why there are expensive i mean who doesn't want to become a ninja turtle?
Jonk???
try growing cannabis there, and see how it affects the yield :D
You ll get the power of cancer
$471 per peach? its $2 per kg in Pakistan.
Apple brand: we are costliest product here!
These Japanese Peach: Hold my beer!
Saki?
Listening to them is talk is ASMR
Never forget the 20,000 lives taken from us 10 years ago 😔🙏
But none from radiation...
A peach worth £100 pounds due to its sugar content. Might as well have 3 spoonfuls of sugar than buy that. Crazy.
70,000 for a piece of fruit? What is this, the forbidden fruit?