“Typhoon Gaemi” has hit Taiwan. The government have announced closures so work’s cancelled and we all have to stay inside for the next couple of days. From my window, as I type, I can hear hail smashing against the metal roofs opposite and the odd massive gust of wind that rumbles down the street; threatening to tear the fronts from all of the buildings. It’s crazy. Luckily, I’m a cheap bastard and have pre-made meals in my freezer and a load of instant noodles squirrelled away. Time to settle in and ride it out.
So, what better a time than to get all of my pictures and stuff sorted.
Last year I wrote about the process of getting here, the journey, the quarantine, a bit of the COVID-19 situation, global politics, we even had a nice little tour of Taichung and some of the further afield places that I’d visited. It had been a big year of uproot and change but ultimately it was really exciting (the year was exciting, not the post). This year, despite typing this with hurricane force winds outside, I don’t have anything that’s as new and exciting. So, for this one, I’m just going to give a bit of an update about life and then load up a load of pictures of some outings and some stuff that I’ve been up to.
The yearly medical check
Updating my details at the bank took over an hour
The photo-booth that took me 2 days to find
This year, it’s all been a bit more calm, settled, this was the year that I’ve got into DIY. I’m in the same flat, but, I’ve made a few improvements; I bought some new furniture and stuff. I’m seriously considering getting a hand dryer for my bathroom and one of the sci-fi Japanese toilets. I bought a soap dish! Who have I become? It’s like the Two-Face quote in Batman, “You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become a house-proud cunt”. The first year was the crash landing on Mars, the second was the year I got a system going. Not quite Matt Damon growing potatoes in his shit, but there’s certainly a bit less turmoil in my life.
Works been going pretty well as well. I’ve got more than 2,500 teaching hours under my belt now and, because of the short-term nature of the contracts here, having renewed my contract for what will be my third year, I’m one of the old guard.
Being an old guard has meant that, almost by default, I’ve gone from an NST (Native Speaking Teacher) to an HNST (Head Native Speaking Teacher), which I really appreciate, but, it’s as Gareth Keenan as it sounds, my days haven’t changed much.
I got an award as well. This was great fun, I got to go up to a massive conference centre in Taipei to pick it up. Then I did a quick speech about it at the end of year meal back in Taichung.
I got to be a judge at the annual ECC (English Competence Competition). This was a whirlwind. 36 students, 36 prepared stories, 36 improvised stories. All to be ranked within the space of 45 minutes in a number of different categories. A lot of pressure but only a fraction of the pressure that some of the competitors had put on them.
Someone would have stolen that if we were in England
Throughout the year I’ve kept a note of the times that I’ve said, “Look at that, someone would have robbed that if we were in England”. It still blows my mind that people just leave their scooter keys in the ignition, with their helmet and gloves and stuff. Students leave their school bags and all of their equipment on shelves outside the school, ready for their return later. Claw machines leave the prizes on the top of the machines, ready to replenish if someone wins (these claw machine shops are usually unstaffed). If you’re working in a shop and need a piss, sure, just leave your laptop and stuff on the table, of course they’ll be there when you return. It’s incredible to see.
Sports
I’ve managed to get to a few sports games this year. Baseball itself is still shit but it’s all the stuff around it that’s fun. I love how the Taichung Brothers fans do a silent kind of Macarena dance to motivate their team. En masse it looks great, like a Poznan.
I tried to watch a football match, look at how good the league info’ looks on Google. There’s even a Wikipedia page. When I showed up however, the pitch was about the size of the astro-turf at my old school. No seats or anything and nowhere to buy tickets. Chances are, knowing myself, I went to the wrong place. If any of you reading have been to a Taiwan Premier League game, please get in touch.
And, last thing about football, check out the 10 New Taiwan Dollar coin… these remind me of the promotional coins that Sainsbury’s made for the 1998 World Cup, specifically the Andy Cole coin.
Workers
Jobs around town have two extremes. There are either way too may people for the job…
…or no people at all.
Taichung’s hardest worker
Mid-Autumn Festival
I was lucky enough to be invited to a barbecue for Mid-Autumn Festival by a mate from work. Although I still don’t speak Chinese, everyone was really friendly. No frozen burgers here or rubbish little sausages, the amount of effort with the food was incredible. He’s off doing his compulsory army service now but hopefully he’ll be finished by festival time later in the year.
Dogs
Meet the dogs from around my area. Big Boy, Marty, Chunk, Natty, The Haunted Dog, and Dave are the celebrities, the others are just bonus.
Chunk
Big Boy
Natty
The Haunted Dog
Dave (She’s an honorary dog)
Marty (aka Family Marty)
Christmas
For Christmas we went out to the Shalu district to get the nighttime view of town. Turns out there were some massive beautiful dogs there so we had a bit of a photoshoot.
Dakeng trails
This year I managed to get out to the tougher trails (1-5). The trekking is hard going at the start but once you’ve reached the top it’s really nice.
Rainbow village
No need to break into The Rainbow Village anymore (see last year’s post). The renovation is now finished and I even had the privilege of meeting Rainbow Grandpa before he passed.
Taichung Jazz festival
Every October, around the Calligraphy Greenway, Taichung has a big jazz festival and artists from all over the world come to play. Everyone sets out lovely little picnic blankets which end up covering the whole area. It’s a really nice peaceful thing. I tried to get a photo from above (there’s a perfectly positioned carpark at the top end) but they’d blocked out all of the views from the car park.
Chiayi and Alishan
For the first few days of Chinese New Year we headed out to Alishan. It was so beautiful but so cold. We decided to take the Alishan Forest Railway out to Zhushan to watch the sunrise, and even though it was really busy it was still freezing. From Zhushan station (the highest altitude train station in the country) you can walk around and take in views of all of Taiwan’s tallest mountains, it’s amazing. If you go, when you arrive at Zhushan I recommend making the effort to trek up the hill for about 20 minutes or so. You get the best views and you get away from the crowd. We made the mistake of hanging around too long at the top, but, luckily there was a park ranger type guy that gave us a lift back into Alishan. If he didn’t show up we would have had to walk. The trails around Alishan were really beautiful as well, I loved this trip. The last pictures are of our bus breaking down on the way back to Chiayi, and then us being picked up by a “replacement” bus that was about a quarter of the size.
Tainan CNY Lantern Festival
For the second half of Chinese New Year we went to Tainan to watch the lanterns, see the fireworks and have an explore. The yellow papers at the end are bundles of fake money that people burn as offerings; sending fortune to passed loved ones.
Tainan Art Museum
This gets its own title and block of pictures. Swipe to the end for an expert bit of vandalism.
Sun Moon Lake
Sanyi
We wanted to do the pedal ride things on the old railway but it turns out you need to book way in advance. We ended up having a nice day regardless but we’ll be back here soon for sure.
Xitou and The Monster Village
This was a bit of a trek from Taichung but well worth it. Lovely clean air and plenty of peace and quiet. The Monster Village is a bit of a tourist trap, but the history is actually pretty cool.
“There is actually a cute story behind the Xitou Monster Village (Mandarin: 溪頭怪物村 or 松林町). During the Japanese colonial era in Taiwan (1895-1945), a Japanese man named Kubota (久保田) was the head a Taipei university forestry institute in Xitou. He became close friends with a Taiwanese man Matsubayashi (松林勝一).
After WWII, Kubota returned to Japan and opened a bakery. Years later, his wife died in a bakery fire. Matsubayashi sent some money to Kubota when he heard. Kubota made a wooden sculpture for Matsubayashi in return, but was never able to give it to him. Kubota’s descendants finally brought the sculpture to Taiwan in 2009.
Ming Shan Resort built the Japanese-style village to memorialize the friendship of these two men.
So why the monster theme? There’s another story that says long ago a bear saved the local villagers from monsters, and you can see images and signs for Kuma (bear in Japanese) in the village. Or maybe it was just a clever marketing scheme?
And why the long red nose on the monsters? They are modeled on Japanese Tengu (天狗 or “heavenly dog”), a folk deity or kami in the Shinto religion. Tengu are portrayed in many ways, often as a bird, but usually anthropomorphized as a angry looking dude with a red face, with the unnaturally long nose representing the beak.”
Taipei for Dragonboat festival
A hot couple of days up in Taipei for the Dragon Boat Festival. On the first day we went to Dajia Riverside Park to watch some races. The next day we went up Taipei 101 and trekked up Elephant Mountain. Picture 29 is a lad that went up the whole Elephant Mountain track, backwards, on his hands and knees. Absolute mentalist.
Wuqi Harbour
Just a few pictures of Wuqi this year but it’s still one of my favourite places around Taichung.
Sunsets from around the place
A “Tourist attraction“
Have you ever scrolled around Google maps and seen the blue scenic point camera pins? This was one of those pins. A last resort pin. I was pretty close by to this one and thought, “That looks alright, a little model village thing? Could be fun, and it’s walkable. Why not?”. The start of the walk was actually really cool, but, soon it led out to a massive motorway. I decided to keep going. Then, there were stray dogs circling, I kept going. Then, when I finally got there I looked around and snapped to my senses…”Oh, it’s a little model village thing…under a motorway… this is shit!” The models were like someone had rearranged the rubbish at the back of an industrial estate garden centre, then left them there for a while.
After looking around for a bit, to top it all, my phone ran out of battery so I had to walk all the way back into town. Disaster.
Taiping Viewpoint
This, on the other hand, was a successful blue camera pin Google point adventure. Houbi First Lookout. To get up to this viewpoint you have to walk up an insanely steep road (at points I was nearly crawling) but once you’re there it’s one of Taichung’s nicest places. There are a few other viewpoints nearby but I haven’t explored those yet.
Buses
Although I’m convinced the drivers are incentivised to ignore/ hospitalise, buses are the best way to get around town. Buses are really cheap, free for short journeys, about 15NTD for longer journeys around town (~£0.36), or more if you go further afield (~200NTD to Sun Moon Lake (~£4.74) – a two hour trip).
I love how the drivers personalise their buses; with everything from bright lights to TVs, flowers to 6ft Teddy bears. I also think it’s great how people bring their own chairs to sit on while they wait for the bus. And of course, theres no crime so they can just leave them at the bus stop ready for when they take the trip again in the future.
Also, I don’t know why, but a lot of the backs of the chairs are covered in chalk. This means you will ordinarily have chalky knees at the end of a bus journey. (Picture 8).
Temples
The BGB has had a make-over! So now, instead of The BGB (The Big Gold Bastard), he’s now The BGB (The Big Grey Bastard).
Scooters
A tribute to Taiwan’s scooter culture. Scooter’s are absolutely everywhere, all over the pavements, in doorways, shop fronts and even people’s front rooms (when you look in some buildings it’s not clear if it’s a business, a front room, a garage or a temple). Also, because they don’t need big vehicle access, around Taichung there are loads of interesting little passageways and alleyways and stuff. If they needed big roads everywhere we would miss out on loads of interesting little places to explore.
The End
And, with that, I’ve reached the limit for the number of pictures I can load into this website. For next year, maybe I’ll upgrade to the plan that lets me upload videos and stuff. Anyway, it’s hours later from when I started writing this and the rain is still pissing down. The wind has let up though so I think we’re passed the worst of it. Time for a meal I think, a succulent Chinese meal.
Thank you for reading, I can’t believe it’s been two years here already. Here’s to more good times ahead.
Today’s weather is like Donald Trump at a charity golf tournament in July 2006 (fuckin’ stormy) so I’ve decided to finally sort out all of my pictures and stuff. It’s also exactly one year after I landed into Taiwan, so it feels like the right time to let you in on what the bloody hell I’ve been up to.
In the short amount of time that I’ve been here I have seen quite a bit of change. When I flew out of the UK, June 2022, everything was pretty much ‘back to normal’ with regards to COVID-19 stuff. Taiwan, however, was still very much in the full swing of things. It was closed to tourists (the only people allowed into the country were residents returning home and “aliens” that were entering on a working VISA) and it still had strict rules and regulations in place. This meant that for a while, for myself and the few other touristy types that had made the decision to move here or stay here during a pandemic, the country felt like our own to explore. We got our own sneak peak behind the COVID-curtain.
This post isn’t going to be about COVID-19, but, not mentioning it would be a massive oversight, like Samuel Pepys not mentioning the Great Fire in his diaries. Or Dean Gaffney’s extended memoirs having no mention of his time as Robbie in Eastenders.
Another thing I should mention early on is the political tensions. Tensions that by even attempting to write in depth about them, I’d probably make worse. From my perspective, and for the purpose of whatever this writing will be by the time it’s finished, here’s how I’m dealing with stuff. I’m just riding it out here for as long as I can, I’m not going to bury my head in the sand, but at the same time, it makes no sense to go hunting for horrible possible outcomes in your head. You just scare yourself for no reason. Like typing “commute in ‘my city‘, terrorist attack likelihood” into a search engine. Of course it’s going to give you mad results.
I’m just following the advice and really enjoying things for the time being, but, if anything does get really bad, then, frankly, I’ll just bounce. I reckon there’d more than likely be a “things are heating up here lads, if you don’t want to get involved then now’s the time to jog on” message before anything truly abhorrent happened. Maybe I’m just naive.
For peace of mind, the political tensions here go way back, people are very accustomed to the odd flare up now and again. Last year, when Russia invaded Ukraine, certain types back home started putting together their doom and gloom narratives, “well, this is World War 3 init?! First it’s this, then that Chinese fella is gonna get handsy with Taiwan, then the septics’ll pile in…then blah, then blah, we’re all fucked”. You know what, they might be right, but, as things stand, everything is completely fine. And it’s been fine for my entire time here. Who knows what’ll happen in the future? But, if you live your life afraid of the “what if”s then you’re going to end up doing fuck all and never leaving your house. At least, that’s what I think, get out and see the world while you can.
Anyway, for the politics, I’m not your guy, or for the ins and outs of COVID-19 policy for that matter. This is just going to be me chatting some shit and catching you up on some of the stuff that I’ve seen and done since moving here last year. I’ll share some pictures as well.
For those ducking out here, here’s a summary, I’m safe, I’m happy and although giving a pretty shit first impression, Taiwan has really grown on me.
For those in for the long haul, let’s start at the beginning, the arrival airport madness and the compulsory quarantine…
Arrival: TPE Airport
Sci-fi cab driversSaliva collection is a 10 step process‘Specimen’ containerThe sterile, plastic-wrapped cab journey to the quarantine hotel.I thought I’d imagined seeing this setup in a scary room in the airport. It wasn’t until I saw this (outside a hospital a couple of weeks back) that it cemented the memory.
It was a good but long flight (I’ll tell the story about my lost bag another time). I’d had a little stopover in the new Istanbul airport on the way which was nice, just enough time there to get a bit of food and to be bent over by the rates at the Bureau de Change. I got out about £30 worth of New Taiwan Dollars for about £50. Anyway, all pretty normal, as normal as flights during COVID times could be.
The plane landed in Taipei airport, TPE. All still normal. Getting out of the plane and into the airport though, it felt very strange, mad actually. I came up the ramp thing and out into the corridor to the terminal, the lights seamed much brighter than a usual airport. Walking straight into clinical bright lights, like being in a dentist chair. It was like walking out into a mad old sci-fi hospital, everyone there was in the full beekeeper, storm trooper, morph suit hazmats… I’ll tell you what it was like, it was like a mixture of an old asylum but filled with…the people in the Truman show when he’s trying to drive out, testing the limits of his bubble, and he goes too far and they pretend he’s gone into a radiation area. Pretty intimidating.
Then you go through what smells like a wall of sanitiser spray gas (probably because that’s what it was).
There was a multi-step compulsory entry process procedure, first, you had to buy a new SIM card, solely for tracking and messages from the government and the Taiwanese health check police patrol. You get that, get it registered, it’s all very quick and confusing and in Chinese (more about that later). The next thing was the COVID-19 station where you get the normal nose and mouth swab test thing. Then, you’re given a specimen container…”specimen, what the fucks this?”.
Then, you’re ushered around into the ‘specimen collection area’, (I’ve spoken with other people that went through the process/airport around this time and they didn’t see this but I swear one of the doors to a room was open and it had a plastic chair in there, like a school chair, a wooden desk with some of the varnish worn away on it, a gammy looking bar of soap, and a completely mirrored wall from which there were two massive gloves hanging down, gloves that looked like big unrolled five chambered condoms, like those gloves they put on before sticking their hand into a cow… did I imagine it? Probably? Was I shitting myself, definitely) into the booth and the specimen they wanted was just a saliva specimen – one of the easier specimens to collect but still pretty disgusting, who’d have thought that collecting saliva would be a ten stage process!
Anyway, things did run pretty smooth, the last thing to do was go through the document checks; passport, visa, work permits etc. I’d come prepared with all of the paperwork and stuff that they needed. It was a big relief when it was all accepted. I love the feeling when the customs official gives you the nod and they do the clunky passport stamp thing, dab-dab-DOOSH! “Yes! I’m in!”.
No freedom yet though, the cabs, after all of the checks and stuff were done, the admin’ forms and that, the spit specimen, I went outside and was hit by that unpleasant, boiling hot, tropical, 100% humidity-hot curtain of outside air. Horrible, I started sweating immediately and didn’t stop until around the end of September.
Outside, were loads of cab drivers, all pretty normal looking, but, masked up and wearing the full length thin yellow plastic suits, like you’d where at a theme park to stop getting splashed, like an improvised outfit of a minion, made with carrier bags and tape… imagine how sweaty they must be.
I chose the friendliest looking driver, got into his murder-prepped cab with plastic on everything and tried to mime where to go. After a bit of confusion, I did a flash of the paperwork and all became clear. Off we went. It was a long journey as well, but you’ve just got to trust the procedure…luckily as well I’d gotten the expensive cash in Istanbul because it turned out to be just enough to cover the journey!
Next stop, the quarantine hotel.
Quarantine
The quarantine hotel was next level (by my standards anyway). I usually stay in hostels so this was a weird but pleasant treat. Look up the Tango hotel in XinYi, Taipei, the slogan should be “you don’t need two to Tango”. My days were spent either training for work (zoom calls, making little videos and stuff), sitting in the hot tub watching wildlife programmes (the only programmes I could enjoy on the TV without knowing Chinese), sitting by the window watching the storms/ traffic/ people going about their business or eating the food (left outside of the room three times a day).
The room
For getting all of your business done at the same time.
Views from the window
This was a great scene in the heist film that I’d imagined while sitting at the window that day.
Quarantine food
The food was actually very nice in quarantine, most of the time it was meat/fish with a side of veg’/salad/rice/noodles/a combination. Accompanied by a gruel consistency yellow/brown/grey liquid and a non-water drink. See if you can clock the garlic bread (sweet, cake-like bread, with garlic butter on it).
Bad meals
The bad meals were when they’d resemble something you’d recognise, but you’d look closer and there would be a disappointing twist. They never tasted bad, the disappointment came because you’d convinced yourself it was something else.
Okay! This looks alright. Let’s have a look…is it a sausage muffin?…… nope, it’s filled with cold veg’ and chewy fish flavoured stuff.
Fancier meals
Fancy fish filletsShellfish soup with chickenMini chicken and pork burritosSome kind of lemony herby octopus/ squid salad situation (10:10)
Paranoia
So, the room, top notch, the food, nice, the hot tub, no working jets but still excellent. What were the downsides of quarantining? For me, it was all of the stuff in the room that looked like it could be surveillance equipment. I went a bit mad (between hot tub visits) looking for cameras/ doing little dances for the cameras/ singing for the people watching… Have a look at this stuff and see if you agree that there might have been cameras. Actually, go and watch Enemy of the State, then look at this stuff and see if you agree that this stuff might have had cameras inside.
Sketchy bit of semi-see-through fabric above the TV (loads of wires below as well)‘Sprinkler’ above the toiletPointed at the bed. Night vision? Thermal imaging? Probably just a normal speaker mate.
Maybe the broken hot tub jets were cameras as well? Who knows. I could easily have convinced myself in the madness.
Another factor was all of the rules and stuff. One of the first things that was required on arrival in the airport was to register a Taiwanese SIM card. This card, is used to keep track of your movements during quarantine. The first part of quarantine was in the hotel room, then, for the second part, you are free but you have limited movement allowances (no pubic transport, going to restaurants/ bars etc.). On top of the tracking, it was also mandatory to keep the CECC (the Taiwanese government public health people) up to date of your condition. Every day the CECC send a text to check on your health. Fair enough, but the creepy part was the automatic reply – “Thank you for your cooperation. The CECC cares about you”. Even creepier was the one time I didn’t reply fast enough, I received a telephone call from a far away sounding nationless voice. The chat of symptoms and health condition in that accent was pretty unsettling.
The rules
A message from the CECC
“The CECC cares about you.”
The texts from the hotel itself started out very formal and intimidating. By the end though, they were sending love hearts and GIFs and stuff.
HOPE YOU CAN ENJOY IT!
Someone on the front desk flogging Kinder Buenos (normally about NT$30 each in the shops)
One of the twice-daily body temperature checks
The last day when I’d passed the Covid-19 test
Meal drop-offs
The picture below is a snapshot of the little moment before each meal that you could possibly see another person. You opened up the room to collect your bag of food and were immediately hit with the chloriney/ bleachy/ swimming pooly smell of cleaning chemicals and also the loud sound of the big air-conditioning units (to create a through draft). Stood outside of the door you then linger for a few seconds, “will someone else pop their head out of their door?”. They never did but it was always a nice moment.
Teaching
I’m working as a “Native Speaking English Teacher”. It’s tough, and was awful at the start, but I’m getting better. I’m at the stage now where I can get away with most lessons, and some lessons are actually pretty good! I dreamt about getting to this stage in my first few months.
What’s the best part about working as a teacher? After the money, it’s the students. What’s the worst part? The students. Whether it’s a good day or a bad day is completely dependent on how the students act in the lessons. There are no ordinary lessons, you either come out of them feeling fucking incredible or you come out questioning every single little decision you’ve made in your life that’s lead up to that moment. Nothing in between. No lesson is the same as well, it can look the same on paper but with so many moving parts there are no two lessons that are the same, even with the same people and pretty much the same material. The way I get my head around the challenging lessons is by telling myself, “these are the ones I get paid for, the others I do for free”. Below are a few pictures of the training and then some on the job pictures (I’ve blurred out all the faces to avoid any issues).
Teacher training: Started on video chat then ended in person
Training from our quarantine hotel rooms
Parts of the mouth used to make different sounds.
Having a knees-up
The writing was on the wall pretty early on
I can’t remember why we did this
Chatting shit
Playing with Mr and Mrs game with our teammates
“Guess the letter I’m drawing”
About an hour of “flashcard technique”
Learning about a fictional society of birds – The trainer liked it when I called it a “Poultry-archy”
Hand jive bitches!
This shit revs my engine
Perfect “claw technique”
Receiving my award: Top of the class 🎓📚
Regional training ft. the other Taichungers
Flashcards I made for the online teaching demo’s (whilst quarantined)
After a couple of weeks training, I started to actually teach, like I said, it was hell at the start. But, now, I think I’m pretty good! (Only a few pictures of me in the swing).
Some more teaching stuff (I’m not in these)
Potential energy go-karts
Habitats
Will the sun melt the crayons? Nope, but a hairdryer will.
Sad robots
This was a ballache
Pencil electrolysis
Couldn’t fucking believe that this worked – potato batteries
‘Terry’ before he changed into a butterfly
You ain’t got the minerals son
Marking
Would have been a good lesson if I had time to planet.
This was a huge let down
The Mento-cano aftermath
Con. Den. Sation.
Watching bread rot for a whole unit
Cotton wool is a bastard
Loads of stuff about seasons
“Creative” writing
Pringles tube camera obscura. (I had to eat a shit load of Pringles that week)
The screen inside
Testing them out in the gammy outdoor area
London Calling
Abbey Road (The Fab ESL4)
Making presentations
Vocab’ Wordle
James and the Giant Peach
Weird/Cool stuff in homeworks, books and on the backs of test papers.
If students finish early in tests/ quizzes, we let them draw on the back of their papers. There’s been a lot of weird shit drawn and some really good artworks. Unfortunately I didn’t start collecting pictures of them until quite recently. The pictures from the books/ resources speak for themselves.
“I always feel angry”
The book we call “Teddy’s interrupted wank”
Black Mirror/ David Cameron
Sorry, what!?
Nothing about murdering in the text
Taichung – The living situation
I’m renting a one person flat, pretty close to Taichung Park. It’s right in the middle of town, very close to the main train station, the bus station and all of the stuff that Central Taichung has got to say for itself. In the middle of town, but only about a half an hour bus away from the mountains (one way) and about an hour away from the coast (the other way). A nice balance and all for $10,500 NTD a month (£250-£290). The pictures below are the pictures I took at the first viewing (the fella in the pictures is my landlord) – saved in notes, alongside the pictures, was a caption that just said “no neighbours, quiet road, lift, landlord is a geezer, no need to chase the bin lorry”.
Before I give you a little tour of the town – this is what I meant when I said the “bin lorry”.
These lads come around the neighbourhood in their snazzy yellow truck. They stop at each corner so everyone can throw in their rubbish. How do people know that they are coming? They play music! Like a bleak ice cream van. The tune is The Maiden’s Prayer, by Tekla Bądarzewska-Baranowska – absolute banger.
Taichung – The tour
At time of writing, Wikipedia says this about Taichung – “Taichung is called Taichung (/ˌtaɪˈtʃʊŋ/,[6] Wade–Giles: Tʻai²-chung¹, pinyin: Táizhōng), officially Taichung City,[I] is a special municipality located in central Taiwan. Taichung has approximately 2.8 million residents and is the second most populous city of Taiwan,[7][8] as well as the most populous city in Central Taiwan. It serves as the core of the Taichung–Changhua metropolitan area, the second largest metropolitan area in Taiwan.” – You know what? I don’t doubt it. And, I don’t fancy knocking on doors and doing a headcount so I guess we’ll have to trust the numbers. 2.8 million, that’s about the same number of people as Birmingham (UK), Lithuania, or Puerto Rico. Or, Luxembourg and Gabon combined (if that’s easier to picture in your head). It’s a big city.
Summertime, June-ish to September-ish, it gets sweaty as fuck. Proper sweaty. We’re talking 40°C and 100% humidity sweaty, grim. It’s alright though because most places have got air-conditioning or some kind of plan in place to make the place cooler (all the classrooms at work apart from the front of 301, that place gets spicy in summer). This delicious sweatbox is created because of the mad storms, pretty much every day in that time period you’ll get a full-on thunder-storm, biblical, with film-set style thick rain, but, it’ll only last for about 30 minutes. After the rain, for the rest of the day, all of the water evaporates in the sun and creates the perfect human cooking environment, broiling from the top, steaming from the bottom. I’m not a fan of sun anyway because of the admin’ it brings with it (sun cream, glasses, hats and stuff) but adding the sweat element to it makes it particularly unpleasant.
The rest of the year, beautiful, you’ll get hot days, you’ll get overcast days, but for the most part it’s just at the sweet spot (direct opposite of the sweat spot). So yeah, in summary (summer-y?), don’t visit in the summer, unless of course you live like a tropical fish and enjoy being constantly hot and wet (feel free to replace “tropical fish” if you prefer a more bawdy read).
Let’s continue the tour, I’ll break it up into the parts that I’ve ventured out to so far. (From here on out this is just a shit load of slideshows, be sure to scroll left and right where you can).
Taichung Park
This park is right next to where I live. It’s fun to go here and look at the trees with pubes, the people feeding massive squirrels and the big lads rowing tiny little blue boats. It’s also home of the G(gs)OAT, the Greatest goat statue Of All Taichung – installed in the year of the goat and I presume it’s still there for a place for the local goths/ knights templar/ capra enthusiasts to frolic, maybe it’s just been forgotten about. If you like fish, and turtles, as I do, there’s shit loads of them in the ponds. The last pictures are of a running track that I’ve used twice (athlete) and a TV talent show event that was in the park one day.
Dakeng Hiking trails
I’m yet to make it to trails 1-4 (the proper ones) because they’re hard to get to. All the pictures below are of trails 5-9 and the surrounding area (easily reached on bus route 21 or 1). They start off as a street market area, then get nicer the further you walk.
Sun Moon Lake
A bit of a trek from Taichung but I’m still claiming it for the tour. It was a nice peaceful place and a very welcome break from the busyness of the city.
Taichung Harbour:
“The dogs can’t be that bad…” – They were actually fucking scary.
Wuqi Fish Market
Around the corner a bit from the harbour proper there is a little beaut’ of a fish market. We got here quite late in the day so the market was the busiest part. I’d like to go back early in the morning and see all the fish being sorted and taken out of the boats. Full disclosure, I got snap-happy and took about 300 pictures of the fish and the boats and stuff. Here are a choice few.
Healthy Umbungos.
Look at that concentration. Cheers lad
The Gaomei Wetlands
Another place not far from the harbour that deserves its own strand is the Gaomei Wetlands. A nice area for sunset hunters and wildlife photographers alike. The big wind turbines are fucking cool as well.
Basianshan Bamboo forest
Beautiful trekking area. We didn’t do the hardcore mountain trail, just the nice one’s around the bamboo forest and the river. I want to go back when it’s cooler and conquer the mountain.
A pond with those fish that “eat all the shit away from your feet”. I didn’t realise that the pictured fish was dead until shortly after this picture was taken. Grim. RIP little guy.
Baseball
I went to the local baseball stadium to try and find out when the games are played, how much tickets cost, etc. When I got there I saw that there was a game already in progress, maybe I could catch the end? Turns out you can just walk straight in! So, I went in and watched the rest of the game (no home runs hit but still pretty cool). Then I decided to hang about and take some pictures. I got more and more brave and ended up down on the field with the players.
921 Earthquake Museum
Wikipedia:
“The 921 Earthquake Museum of Taiwan (Chinese: 國立自然科學博物館九二一地震教育園區; pinyin: Guólì Zìrán Kēxué Bówùguǎn Jiǔ’èryī Dìzhèn Jiàoyù Yuánqū) is a national museum in Wufeng District, Taichung, Taiwan. The museum is dedicated to the 7.3 earthquake that struck the center of Taiwan at 01:47:12.6 TST on Tuesday, 21 September 1999.
The museum is located on the site of the former Guangfu Junior High School [zh]; the shell of the building forms the exterior walls of the museum and the Museum’s Chelungpu Fault Gallery crosses the fault on which the earthquake occurred.”
GuangFu New Village
Close to the 921 Earthquake museum, this is a nice place to walk around.
Wanggaoliao Night View Park – Dadu Plateau
Taichung’s ‘make-out point’ – I went on my own, missed the bus and then walked all the way back listening to Bjork.
Rainbow Village
The story of this place is pretty cool… it goes something like this “It was an old military housing block, owned by the government, that was going to get knocked down, but an artist (now called “Rainbow Grandpa”) started painting all the walls and stuff. Now, it is one of Taichung’s most popular places.” My reality however was a little bit different. I trekked all the way out to it, but, it was closed and surrounded by construction hoardings. I decided to play the dozy tourist card and just walked in anyway. Of course, I was quickly shouted at in Chinese to fuck off but I still managed to take a few pictures (the last of which has the hands of the guy ushering me out). I’m going to give it another visit when it’s properly opened again, at time of writing “Rainbow Grandpa” is 100years old, it’d be nice to meet him.
The Taichung Sign
On the walk out to the Rainbow Village I spent quite a bit of time making stop motion videos of me pricking about in front of this sign. The videos won’t upload so here’s some pictures of the walk down the river, and a few stills from the videos.
Temples and Parades
Temples: Peace in a noisy area. Parades: Noise in a peaceful area.
Luce Memorial Chapel
Lovely looking church, why not get a bit closer?
Why take the picture from so low down?
Ahh, I see.
Artist.
Alright from further away though.
National Taichung Theater
Beautiful and weird, inside and out.
Markets and shops
Sometimes it’s hard to tell what is a shop, what is a food stall/ restaurant or what is someone’s private residence. All over town businesses spill out onto the pavement forcing you to walk on the road or through what feels like peoples front rooms/ kitchens.
Museum of Illusions
The museum of illusions! Good fun, but expensive. Fair play to the chancer who stuck a load of optical illusions on the walls and is charging premium coin for the entry (NT $380 ≈ £10 pp), absolutely raking it in. I bought a little wooden puzzle in their gift shop as well (another tenner), putting the guy’s kids through college!
TheWufeng Family Home and Gardens
The actual home wasn’t very impressive until we got to the theatre in the back, that was cool. Don’t forget to go to the gardens (about 10 mins walk away) they’re nice. Also, don’t forget your bug spray! I got bitten to shit.
Rivers and canals
Every river and canal in town is relatively small compared to the massive walls built up around them. Maybe every once in a while it used to flood here. In my time though, I’m yet to see a canal or river that’s come close to filling even half the space that’s been allotted to it.
Scooters, buildings and hidden gems
A few more pictures from around town.
Me taking a picture of some snazzy bread
The snazzy bread
Satellite townships
Yuanlin
Beautiful scenery and a load of treetop swings to mess around on.
“No problem, six weeks and we’ll ‘ave the whole place tarmacked for ya”
Get back in your nest you mug
Absolute pianist
Houli and Tai’an
The original plan fell through because of the public holiday opening times. But, we managed to salvage the day by walking through little villages and pricking about on an abandoned train.
Awful
Taiping
Typing Taiping… I was on the bus and saw a sign pointing to an intriguing path. I got off, followed the trail and it led to this owl sanctuary/ military history place. Pretty tasty place for a sunset. I’ve got a recording of the sounds around this place as well that I listen to to get to sleep.
And now, some further afield places…
Taipei
I’ve only been up to Taipei a few times but it’s a treat every time. Some of these pictures repeat because my friend came over and I took him to some of the places I like.
Took a risk, regretted it.
Doing a heist in front of everyone in broad daylight, fair play.
Loads of lads waiting for a multicoloured bird to poke its head out of a hole in a tree
Hualien
Out on the east side of the country. This was a slog to get to but certainly worth the journey. Taroko Gorge is fuckin nice.
Spot the waterfall
I stood for 20 minutes making a timelapse of this. I’ll share it elsewhere at some point.
8am. After a shower, I went outside onto the balcony to grease my tits. Just in time for a trainload of people to stop and watch.
The start of the Taroko Gorge pictures
Spot the monkey!
Halfway through a massive tunnel
Majestic bus stop
Hualien Boxpark. What?!
Tainan
We went down to visit friends. Stayed in a hostel with capsule hotel style pod-beds built into bookshelves and had an all-round wholesome time. Even with a disruption of the plan by a road incident (I’m not going to go into that). The highlight of the trip was the night where the bar we were in got taken over by the local rap troupe. When they were finished, one of the lads came over, introduced himself and bought us drinks, absolute gentleman.
Chimei Museum
Still in Tainan but deserves its own section. Incredible place.
Icons: Ed Sheeran and some other geezer (Bill something…)
Yilan
We went to Yilan on a really wet weekend. It was great though. We stayed in a hotel that was pretty much a museum, full of old artefacts and swords and stuff. Went waterfall hunting during landslide warnings, and then all got drunk on gin and cried.
Jiufen
An old mining town, North East of Taipei, this area is sold as “the place where they got the idea for Spirited Away”. Although that’s not true, it’s still a beautiful little village to explore. And there are mountains to climb for nice views as well.
Yuanminshan National Park
Another one north of Taipei. Volcanic hot springs, woodland, bamboo and mountains. By the time we had reached the top of the second peak it was fuckin freezing and a total whiteout, but, still a nice walk nonetheless. Worth a mention as well, the power of the wind was insane, the kind of wind you can lean on.
And now, an assortment of funny shit I’ve seen whilst out and about…
Yuck… pineapple 🤢
Ordered two toasted sandwiches. This note was either to tell them apart, or, a critique of my eating habits.
Wow, cool lane.
“Just give me the brows. Let me get out of here. Give me the brows, Lord, and let me get away!”
For old time’s sake?
Awful.
“Hello, I need the biggest seed bell you have. No…That’s too big.”
Those cats are real.
Sainsbury’s
I want to be in this gang
Very nice*
“We’ve fucking lost it, Dad, these people aren’t scared of us at all”
About to shit yourself?
You can rely on Virus sportswear to get you to the toilet on time.
If you look close enough you can see My Helmet in this picture.
The betting shop downstairs playing the Crystal Palace game
Every sign has a story. (See next picture)
Imagine having to win the bog-roll before you could go and have a shit
Almost trod in it
The sobering reality of foie gras production
99% of this taxi company’s budget was used on the car
Leaving the Truman Show
Waiting to leave the Truman Show
Blind guy leaving the Truman Show
Never heard in Taiwan:
“And that part of the chicken we throw away”
At the local market
“You okay?”
“Nah man, I’m pretty fuckin’ far from okay”
Budget Hairlines
“It’s my d*ck in a box!”
Hi.
People have brought their own chairs to the bus stop
First to 1000 wins
Bad translations
Businesses with names that sound like genitals (Or genital adjacent stuff).
Big Juicy Goose.
Rose Pie: The Unforgettable Sweetness
WaWa Catcher
Pink Dream
Johnson
Chunky Boss
Pash Burger
Longchamp
Bell Chief
FunBox Toys
Snatch
Nice Box
Crap stuff on clothes
I wish it was socially acceptable to take pictures of T-shirts whilst people are wearing them. “Excuse me, your shirt’s shit, can I take a picture?!”. The best one I’ve seen so far was on a grumpy old bastard, probably about 90 years old. He had a T-shirt that read “Part-time Mermaid”, I hope it was a gift from a knowing grandchild.
STREETDIRECTION
DON’TSOMEONE
OH,YES.
JAEK DANICL’S
HOWEVER
RIM
BITCH, SHIT UP!
Classic Bike
YOU DON’T BRAVE, NO ONE STRONG FOR YOU
Official merch’?
SELVZE: YOU ARE MY IHKKE RDGF
Pets and Scooters
This is my neighbour’s dog. I call him “The big lad” – He’s a real piece of shit
Hello mate!
Local Icons, Celebrities and Politicians that don’t know what to do with their hands.
Pat Butcher
Nice nose mate
“This is looking really good.”
“You can say that again!”
“Vote for me or I’ll smash your fucking teeth out.”
The Year of the Nonce
Stuff in shops
“Convenience stores” have absolutely everything. Where else could you sit in a shop with a hot dog in one hand and be having your blood pressure measured in the other?
Hot dogs – They’ve only made me ill once, so far
Blood pressure measurer
Hot food to take away
Printing, photocopying and whatnot
Potatoes
Dumplings
Boiling water for noodles, tea and stuff
More potatoes
Corny photo
Phone charge/ hand sanitiser station
1980’s sci-fi cash point
The seaweed triangle pouch things are fuckin brilliant.
Matcha ice cream
Potato prep’
Arcade machines
These can fuck off.
Glasses that people can borrow to help them fill out forms and stuff
Paintbrush and glue so you don’t have to lick gammy envelopes
People can be trusted with nice things here. Here’s a place where you can leave your umbrella while you go shopping
The Family Mart go-to. Spaghetti bolognaise, pork and celery dumplings, and a lumpy strawberry drink.
A bar with draft beers
The tax lottery
On every receipt in Taiwan there is a code. Each code is an entry for the “tax lottery”. You get an entry on all receipts, regardless of how much you’ve spent (I haven’t done it but I assume you could separate out your shopping into loads of different single transactions so you’d get more tickets). The latest top prize was one million NT (£26,000 ish) and then there were loads of smaller prizes. Unlike the National Lottery in the UK (a tax on hope), the tickets do not cost extra money and also, you actually have a good chance of winning! So far, since I have been here, I have won a total of NT$1200 (£30 ish). Hopefully one day I’ll get the jackpot. Sorting and scanning the receipts is a ballache but worth it when you win.
Arty stuff
I’ve called this section “Arty Stuff”. Just because I can’t find a place for a lot of these pictures and the majority seam to be…arty stuff.
I like how it lines up with the tree behind
“The Bladerunner Effect” – Normal stuff looking cool because the writing is different
I’d like one of these for Christmas, please
Matey boy looking majestic in front of a huge water leak
Under the station: Where Tiktokers and the homeless collide
Under the station: Where Tiktokers and the homeless collide
“Yep, cat food…got that…uh huh… fish fillets, lovely choice…anything to drink?”
The End
That’s about it for now. I hope this has given a little flavour of the year I’ve had. I’ve just signed the contract to stay for another year because I feel like I’ve barely scratched the surface. There’s still plenty more to explore. Also, now that the quarantine on arrival procedures have been pretty much lifted, I’m going to try and fly out to some interesting places nearby.
Now, it’s starting to brighten up a bit outside. So, more than 1,000 pictures later, I’m going to fuck off to the foodcourt at the bottom of the Taroko Mall for some tomatoey beef noodles. This has actually been really nice to do (picture me, sat with my computer, doors open, listening to the sounds of the storm and the city outside). I hope you’ve had a nice time looking through.
Below is a picture of my view while writing this, why not send me a picture of your view while reading it? Details of how to contact me (and some other bits) are in the link below: