My 6th grade son wanted to go to the trampoline at Ladybug Park in Kawachinagano, so we went as a family of 4 for 2 nights and 3 days.I was able to find an inn in Kawachi using my car navigation system, but I had no idea how to drive to Izumiya, which was visible in the background, so I had a hard time driving around the neighborhood.This is not a complaint about the hotel, but rather a comment I had about the roads in Kawachinagano, but the roads are incredibly narrow.Also, there are too many corners where you can't turn without turning the steering wheel at an angle of 90 degrees or more. A local person was taking a curve by first turning the steering wheel a little in the opposite direction than the direction he wanted to turn, and then turning the steering wheel as hard as he could in the direction he wanted to turn.Three days was spent learning how to take curves that would be impossible in the Tokyo metropolitan area. I had a hard time getting used to it.There are no guardrails on the roads, and there is no space for bicycles or pedestrians to pass, making Japan a completely motorized society. I felt that this was a place where people had lived for a long time, but a road for cars was forcibly built later on.The roads are laid out so that no matter where you go, you will go to an intersection called Nanatsutsuji, where seven roads intersect, but the seven roads are waiting for a traffic light in each direction. However, incredibly, there are no staggered signals.So, follow the car in front of you? ? ? Is this order okay? As I rounded a curve, unsure of what to do, and feeling anxious, a local bicycle tried to cross the road and nearly tangled me in, causing me to break into a cold sweat.I strongly feel that (Nanatsutsuji) should have staggered signals.At the intersection in front of Kawachinagano Station, which has a much better visibility, there are staggered signals that don't need to be staggered.The people were kind, the climate was nice, and it was a comfortable place to live.For those of us traveling from outside of Kawachinagano, we found the roads in Kawachinagano to be extremely curved and narrow, making it difficult for pedestrians to walk.The roads in neighboring Mikkaichi City were a little better.That's what I thought when I first drove to Mikkaichi because Izumiya wasn't displayed well on my car navigation system.⚫️Izumiya is 5 minutes by car⚫️2 minutes on footThat's something you know because you live there,I felt that for people just starting out, directions should be shown with photos of each corner.A normal private house...I'm sorry, but the road is so narrow that we think it's a dead end.Usually, people don't walk confidently down such a path.For people walking for the first time, first of all,(Is it really okay to walk down here? Will I be warned not to enter because it's a private road?) I'm worried.The road is so narrow that you can't see through it.There is no signboard that says Izumiya ahead.The owner of the inn in Kawachi,I ask you to be more sensitive to the sensibilities of a first-time visitor.