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Japan

782 bytes added, 09:50, 2 October 2023
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|hitch = <rating country='jp' />
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:''Copied from [http://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki/Hitchhiking_in_Japan Wikivoyage] with permission from the author, [http://jpatokal.iki.fi Jani Patokallio].'' <!-- this version: http://wikivoyage.org/wiki/en/index.php?title=Hitchhiking_in_Japan&oldid=111542 --><!-- [[Image:Bihoro_Pass.JPG|thumb|240px|[[Bihoro]] Pass and Highway 243, [[Akan National Park|Akan National Park]], [[Hokkaido]]]] -->
{{IsIn|Eastern Asia}}
Hitchhiking in '''Japan''' is quite easy, and the key to true budget travel in the country and the way to escape the country's ruinously expensive domestic transport costs, where an hour on the Shinkansen can set you back ¥10,000. Coupled with [[camping]], you can effectively cut down your daily budget to food and admission fees alone - although it is wise to allow for the occasional (literal) rainy day.
== Where to hitch ==
*Comment: Just assuming the pose was rarely enough in my experience. You have to be slightly aggressive and bluntly ask people where they are going - while making sure they've seen your pose. People that seem reluctant to take you with them can turn out to be very welcoming when they're simply asked, preferably in Japanese. [[User:Matsumoto Joe|Matsumoto Joe]]
 
*Comment: I wrote the previous comment, and writing again in 2023, I have to take back my words. Being 'aggressive' is not necessary - the best thing I find is just holding up a sign and friendly greet the people who make eye contact with you. I just came back from a week of hitchhiking in Japan and barely raised my thumb.[[User:Matsumoto Joe|Matsumoto Joe]]
* Comment 2018: Not sure how well the ''pose'' works, because when I'm not travelling, I've spoken to some Japanese that think that the pose is used to call a cab. That kind of explains why an actual taxi pulled over once while I did the pose without a sign. I almost always use a sign, and the locals seem to always use signs. One guy said that in a busy city, sticking your thumb out is the best way, but I think I'll stick to either signs only or pose+sign.
*Comment: The biggest thing I found wrong with the hitchhikers guide to Japan. I '''rarely''' got good rides in the morning, in fact, my ride/wait ratio was much worse with 20 minute waits for 20 minute rides in the mornings vs 30-40 minute waits at night for 2 hour rides. I would always use morning to walk around, explore my locale, then start hitching after noon. I got most of my best rides in the early afternoon and right around 17:00-18:00. Hitching after 20:00 takes a lot longer, but often you get '''really''' good rides out of it. I would '''not''' suggest waking up early for rides. [[User:Traceoftoxin|traceoftoxin]]
*Comment: In Japan, I've never hitchhiked in the early morning - always in the afternoon, and occassionally at night. Still I got some incredible rides: from Fukuoka to Kagoshima, or once (at night!) from Tokyo to Kyoto. [[User:MatsumotoJoe|MatsumotoJoe]]
If the weather is bad, it's best to give up hitchhiking for the day and figure out something else to do. A sodden figure standing forlornly in the rain with his thumb out is not a pitiful figure in Japan, he's a dangerous lunatic.
[[User:Anaimlesshitchhiker|Anaimlesshitchhiker]] has written some tips on hitchhiking Japan on [https://anaimlesshitchhiker.com/2017/12/11/hitchhiking-japan-some-tips/ -an aimless hitchhiker ]
[[User:TheNomadFamily|TheNomadFamily]] also shared their experience hitchhiking Japan with their young kid == How to get in and out of cities == See instructions on [https://thenomadfamilywikitravel.org/hitchhiking-in-japanen/ on their websiteHitchhiking_in_Japan wikitravel].
==Cities==
* '''Honshu - Kanto''': [[Tokyo]] (東京), [[Shizuoka]] (静岡), [[Matsumoto]] (松本), [[Nagano]] (長野), [[Nagoya]] (名古屋市),[[Gifu]] (岐阜), [[shirakawa]] (白川), [[Kanazawa]] (金沢), [[Matsumoto]] (松本), [[Gotemba]] (御殿場)
* '''Honshu - Kansai''': [[Kyoto]] (京都), [[Osaka]] (大阪), [[Kobe]] (神戸), [[Hiroshima]] (広島)
* '''Honshu - Tohoku''': [[Akita]] (秋田), [[Aomori]] (青森)
* '''Kyushu''': [[Nagasaki]] (長崎), [[Kagoshima]] (鹿児島), [[Fukuoka]] (福岡市), [[Beppu]] (別府), [[oita]] (大分),
* '''Shikoku''': [[Takamatsu]] (高松), [[Tokushima]] (徳島), [[Kochi]] (高知), [[Matsuyama]] (松山)
* '''Hokkaido''': [[Hakodate]] (函館), [[Sapporo]] (札幌), [[Wakkanai]] (稚内) , [[Asahikawa]] (旭川)  == Links ==
== See also ==
{{nomadwiki}}
=== Links ===
* Nexco take care of the highways and SA/PAs, they have multiple websites depending of the part of Japan you are in. But you can find the same maps which you can get inside the SA/PAs on the corresponding website. [http://www.w-nexco.co.jp/ Nexco West] [http://global.c-nexco.co.jp/en/ Nexco Central]
* [http://randomroads.org/story/will-ferguson-updated-winter-hitching-japan Travelstory] on [[Randomroads]] by [[User:Gutuater|gutuater]] about hitching Japan. Photo gallery [http://www.flickr.com/photos/gutuater/sets/72157623691059894/ here].
* '''Hitchhiker's Guide to Japan''' (ISBN 0-8048-2068-6) — practical guide to hitchhiking with a number of tested itineraries
* '''Hokkaido Highway Blues''' (ISBN 1-56947-234-3) — the story of an epic hitchhiking trip across the entire country
 
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