![Fuji Arts Japanese Prints - Farting at Kappa at the Lumberyard in Fukagawa by Yoshitoshi (1839 - 1892) Fuji Arts Japanese Prints - Farting at Kappa at the Lumberyard in Fukagawa by Yoshitoshi (1839 - 1892)](https://www.fujiarts.com/japanese-prints/k488/231k488r.jpg)
Fuji Arts Japanese Prints - Farting at Kappa at the Lumberyard in Fukagawa by Yoshitoshi (1839 - 1892)
![Fuji Arts Japanese Prints - Farting at Kappa at the Lumberyard in Fukagawa by Yoshitoshi (1839 - 1892) Fuji Arts Japanese Prints - Farting at Kappa at the Lumberyard in Fukagawa by Yoshitoshi (1839 - 1892)](https://www.fujiarts.com/japanese-prints/k488/231k488f.jpg)
Fuji Arts Japanese Prints - Farting at Kappa at the Lumberyard in Fukagawa by Yoshitoshi (1839 - 1892)
![Ewan Wilson on X: "My favourite thing was finding there's a Japanese idiom based on the folklore creature: 'he no kappa', meaning "a kappa's fart". It's used to refer to something really Ewan Wilson on X: "My favourite thing was finding there's a Japanese idiom based on the folklore creature: 'he no kappa', meaning "a kappa's fart". It's used to refer to something really](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/D6RgzhDXoAAjjU0.jpg)
Ewan Wilson on X: "My favourite thing was finding there's a Japanese idiom based on the folklore creature: 'he no kappa', meaning "a kappa's fart". It's used to refer to something really
![Yokai Parade Twitterren: "Because of the kappa's unusual talent for passing gas, in Japanese "he no kappa" meaning "a kappa fart" is used like "piece of cake!" to mean something is easy. Yokai Parade Twitterren: "Because of the kappa's unusual talent for passing gas, in Japanese "he no kappa" meaning "a kappa fart" is used like "piece of cake!" to mean something is easy.](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E9KGUTmVgAcOTAh.jpg)