Never Cry WWOOF
The word appeared no less than 3 times in the emails I received from the host prior to my arrival:
Inconvenient
Inconvenient, you say? That sounds perfect! After almost three months of a volunteer placement in
Niseko that
was so cushy at times that it had me feeling like I'd won an all expenses-paid snowboard vacation I was more than
up for something a little more rustic. Something a little more in line with the reasons I became interested in the
WWOOF program in the first place. Ecology. Organic agriculture. Acceptable lapses in personal hygiene.
Hell, there were days when I headed in from the powder-laden slopes to a deliciously prepared supper after a mere hour or
two of cleaning in the morning and I actually felt guilty. Guilty! Inconvenience was not only something I could
overlook, it seemed to feel like penance owed. Besides, this was Japan. Matters dealing with bureaucracy aside,
inconvenient meant having to cope with a room-temperature toilet seat. Right?
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Well as it turns out, my host had been accurate in his word choice. Having the closest telephone a five-minute
walk away from your living quarters might be considered inconvenient. Being completely alone on the property at
night and having nowhere to go because it is pitch black is a little inconvenient. Only one FM radio station as
entertainment borders on inconvenient.
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Having the closest store of any kind a 20-minute drive away definitely
qualifies as inconvenient. Having no running water is inconvenient in most peoples' books to be sure; I don't
care how much of a nature-lover you are.
Of course, I've exaggerated all this. Or at least, I've left details out. The water lines in my trailer
house were repaired several days after my arrival. Another WWOOFer showed up later in the week. The one FM
station turned out to be pretty good (thumbs up on the leadoff single from the new Ben Folds album). The time
alone afforded me ample opportunity to read and write. And despite my formerly near symbiotic relationship with
my cellular phone it didn't feel wrong to have to cross a river to make a call.
I WWOOFed for a month at my host in Shizunai, Hokkaido. Shizunai, on the southern coast isn't known for much other
than raising horses and a 7km riverside stretch of cherry trees that draw the hanami crowds. Though not yet
officially open for the season, my host was kind of an organic ranch that had a hotel, organic food restaurant,
small organic vegetable field, and offered hiking, camping, and horse trekking. It called it itself a "cultural
educational promotion foundation."
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I more or less saw it as a kind of organic ranch catering to rich urbanites
looking for an earthy, country vacation; whom I suppose are the people who would need that sort of holiday most.
My idealistic leanings had me hoping that the place did manag to work in some of the educational aspect into their
guests' stay.
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A lot of my work wasn't especially noteworthy in and of itself. Chopping firewood, transporting hay bales, clearing
land and building fences for a new horse paddock. The one exception was that I had the opportunity to help take
care of and assist in training the horses.
The place had nine horses altogether, including two miniature ones. Being a suburban kid and never having
grown up around horses it was very rewarding to have the chance to work with them. Along with brushing and
feeding them, cleaning out their stalls, and helping the trainer.
The host had recently purchased three horses and
they still had to get used to people and being ridden so I had the chance to ride for the first time in my life.
In a few short weeks I became quite comfortable in the saddle and quite attached to a chestnut mare and a painted
pony named Yoshinori. Yoshinori gained the privilege of being the first horse I have ever ridden. He also gained
the less savory distinction of being the first horse to step on my baby toe causing it to swell into a ripe,
Beaujolais grape.
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In the end, this WWOOF experience became exactly what I didn't know I needed. It was a piece of the perspective
that I've been searching for. It wasn't about the place, or people who astounded me with their radical thinking,
but a perspective brought about through absence rather than presence. A slight sharpening of just what exactly it
is that those blurry notions of "the good life" and "enough" might mean. My own temporary holiday from material
superfluousness.
I'm back in civilization now. Back in Niseko actually, at another pension for the spring. I'm happy to have access
to satellite radio and TV, the internet, and a toasty toilet seat again. But some of that perspective that I
breathed in along with the fresh air in Shizunai still lingers with me.
Matt Uchimaru is a former Hiroshima resident turned WWOOFer. He can be reached by email
here.
For more information on the WWOOF program in Japan:
WWOOF Japan
Honcho 2-jo, 3-chome 6-7
Higashi-ku, Sapporo
065-0042 JAPAN
www.wwoofjapan.com
Matt Uchimaru
May 2005
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