An ETC card speeds you through tolls and can slightly simplify accounting. If you skip ETC, cash or card works at the tollbooth, just stay out of the dedicated lanes. For fuel, you will see self-service and full-service stations. If an attendant approaches, saying "mantan" usually gets you a full tank. Pump colors often follow a pattern: red for regular, yellow for high-octane, and green for diesel. Confirm the fuel type on the gas cap and receipt to avoid mix-ups.
Okinawa is one of those places where the best bits hide between bus stops. Public transport works fine in Naha, but once you head toward beach towns, coral coves, and jungle-lined roads in the north, a car opens up your itinerary in a big way. Think sunrise pulls at a quiet beach, last-minute detours to a taco rice stand, or pulling over for a photo when the water flips from turquoise to electric blue. A car gives you that freedom, and with good roads and clear signage, driving is refreshingly straightforward.
The fastest path to a real, open bay is to use “open now” filters in your maps app and read a handful of recent reviews. Hours can be wrong online, so sanity check the latest comments for phrases like “open late,” “closed early,” or “24 hours.” If there’s a phone number, tap call; a 20-second check beats a pointless drive. Business photos can be surprisingly helpful too: a snapshot of the storefront often includes a posted hours sign, and you’ll spot hints like “credit cards accepted” or “self-serve 24/7.”
Two Tanks, two moods. The Tank Must is the minimalist’s friend: clean, contemporary, and approachable. In steel and on leather, it feels like the modern uniform—understated with just enough edge. It often comes in sizes that favor slim wrists and easy wearing, with quartz or automatic options depending on what kind of maintenance rhythm you prefer. On the other hand, the Tank Louis Cartier is the connoisseur’s rectangle. The proportions are softer, the case slightly more voluptuous, and in precious metals it delivers that warm, subtle glow only gold can pull off. It typically leans dressy, but pair it with a well-loved leather strap and it becomes a poet’s daily watch. Deciding between the two? Try them back-to-back. The Must says sleek and unfussy; the Louis says heritage and nuance. Check the lug-to-lug length more than the width—the Tank wears longer than it measures. If you want a timeless first Cartier, the Must is a no-brainer. If you’re chasing emotional resonance, the Louis gets under your skin.
Photos sell, but details protect you. Ask for timestamped photos with a handwritten note showing the seller’s username and today’s date, especially on higher-value items. For electronics, request clear shots of serial numbers and settings screens; if possible, verify the serial on the manufacturer site. At meet-up, test the basics—power on, charging, Wi-Fi, cameras, audio, ports. Bring a cable, small SD card, or headphones if needed. For laptops and phones, check battery health and any activation lock status.