in ,

Japan robot dog owners pray for their pets’ health

Japan’s Shichi-Go-San – Japanese for “Seven-Five-Three” – ceremony is usually a way for parents to celebrate their children growing up and wish them health and good fortune in the future.

8784LO-JAPAN-CEREMONY_ROBOTIC_DOGS_ROUGH_CUT_O_

It sees families dress up in kimono before heading to their local shrine for a ceremony.

But as Japanese families change and the number of children continues to shrink, one Tokyo shrine is hosting a celebration for an unusual kind of pet – the Sony Aibo robotic dog.

For many Aibo owners attending the Sony-organised ceremony in Tokyo’s Kanda neighbourhood, the robots, roughly the size of a domestic cat, have become part of the family. For others, the robots are a practical response to the tight restrictions many Japanese landlords place on pet ownership.

“I like dogs and I wanted to get one but our apartment doesn’t allow pets, so I thought this might be good,” 59-year-old public sector worker Yukari Makita told Reuters, after attending the Shichi-Go-San ceremony with her husband and their robotic pets.

“Also with work, taking a dog for walks and so on is kind of tough, right? This little one doesn’t require any effort, so it’s great,” she said.

What do you think?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings

First private firm flies to the Moon to mine dust

Global CO2 Emissions Have Not Declined During Covid-19, Still Slowly Killing Our Planet