Tag: Taiwan

  • Taiwan & China

    Taiwan and China, along with their neighbours Japan and Korea, have a turbulent history. I did not know what to expect when I arrived here, working for a Taiwanese design house, for a Taiwanese company, with Taiwanese bosses, but work colleagues here from China.

    Certainly, the first day was a little strained, and by day two I was getting the impression that they resented their Taiwanese bosses to some degree. Talk to locals here and more often than not if they work for a large technology company their seniors are from the rogue province. As a result, the feeling on the street is that Taiwanese are arseholes. Even meeting foreigners on Saturday they had heard the same thing.

    I am clearly not Taiwanese, but with the project being imposed by HQ in Taipei I was surely seen as ‘one of them’. I have to say that, over the course of these days my views have changed as I get to know the team here better. Like I believe I said before (I can’t check this post because of the restrictions) the initial impression was a little cold, but now they are offering the odd bad cup of coffee or biscuit. Rather like working in old Newmarket!

    I am used to dealing with Taiwanese now, so the two occasions that I met with Taiwanese directors here were doubly interesting. Their interaction with their Chinese ‘underlings’ was akin to seeing an American barge into an English pub and order a Philly Steak. Suddenly they become assertive and decisive. It left me chuckling after the head of ID warned me that the Chinese do not speak their minds ‘like the Taiwanese’. Hilarious.
  • Bali – Taiwan

    Taiwan has its own little Bali in the form of BaLi – a small boat ride across the river from Danshui. Kind of a ‘Hunstanton’ for belleaguered Taiwanese and their screaming children, it has a feeling of real distance from Taipei as a result of its short but choppy boat ride. Recommended serving suggestion: pour on top of ice cream and serve with clouds.


    My Ice Cream

  • 27

    Blimey!

    I’m 27!

    The detail I will remember will surely be racing around town attempting to arrange a last minute emergency Visa for China, but realising there was less than 6 months on my passport … hence an emergency application to the Hong Kong Embassy – a result of the diplomatic status of Taiwan in the international community. Hopefully, I’ll be on the plane next week!


    A fantastic birthday dinner with a really great array of friends

  • April Showers

    Taiwan – a small rainy island in the north Pacific – has some similarities to the UK – a small rainy island in the north Atlantic.

    In the UK, April brings with it that marvellously mischevious weather where it is impossible to guess the required clothing from ten minutes to the next. Taiwan displays a similar phenomenon, but the time period is rather two days.

    The result is 48 hours of unbroken torrential downpour. I swear the droplets strike with a force that cannot be explained by gravity alone and seem able to bounce upon hitting the ground, rendering any wet weather gear useless fairly quickly.

    The following 48 hours’ sunshine brings with it astonishing levels of humidity, the likes of which can only be repeated by sitting in a swimming pool without any clothes on. To clarify, you are going to sweat.

    Taiwanese taxi drivers and convenience store owners enjoy displaying The Awesome Power of Air Conditioning the moment you enter their icy world. To clarify, you are going to shivering.

    Postscript:

    I just returned home after riding through a particularly vigorous downfall and even though I was wearing the standard-issue kagool I obviously got soaked. I quickly ran out of my apartment and hung up my trousers to drip dry, and heard the ominous sound of a door clicking shut that only sounds like that when you are standing in your underpants.

    A couple of moments of quiet reflection later, and I ran across the mini garden (socks now soaked) and down to the landlord downstairs. Thankfully, the entire family was in so they could all see the crazy wet white guy standing in his underpants, rain water especially gathering around my crotch I later realised.

    A hard week at work, and all I could really do was laugh!

  • Spring Scream

    Kenting’s ‘Spring Scream’ is the highest profile music festival in Taiwan. So, along with Erin and a few friends we winged our way down south to the sunshine – thankfully free of the stifling humidity that plagues Taipei.

    I am doing a little experiment using Google Maps to log the positions of where I am going. Click the link below for a birds-eye view. Sadly, there is not much data for Taiwan yet, but it’s ok. I am hopeing at some point in the future it will be optimised for tasks just like this!

    Kenting From Space


    Wings


    Happy Babe City – and how

    The place that we were staying was a real delight. The unfortunately titled ‘Kenting Youth Activity Centre’ was constructed to resemble an old Chinese village, and the results are very elegant indeed. A rare sight in Taiwan. And a very nice surprise on arrival to realise it matched the pictures on the internet!


    Doorway to Heaven


    A room with a view


    Thoughtful detailing makes exploring the place a pleasure


    WOW – I fell in love with some of the crafted ceiling buttresses

    The festival itself was a pretty small affair. The live music mainly comprised of Taiwanese bands I had not heard of (and I do know some good ones), Japanese imports thrashing their axes, and some token white guys that probably wahsed up from the LA scene. Of more interest was the dance music – mainly because my friend Sean (DJ SL) was spinning on both nights. This of course also guaranteed free admission, which I am rarely to snub.

    The crowd was from all over Taiwan, and much more free wheeling than what I am used to in Taipei, which is often rather sterile with too much emphasis placed on style rather than musical substance. Some very amusing conversations to be sure.


    “You’ll never guess who I had in my cab the other day” – a London taxi lives its days out in the sun


    … while Erin poses in front of the festival’s primary posing machine


    A very nice touch – during the heat of the concert, a dragon arrives to shake its thing in the middle of the show. Fantastic.

    Of course, no party would be complete without an after party. We found a really lovely one on the beach near to Sean’s place frequented with groups of people making fires and enjoying the sea breeze. People were setting off fireworks at the shore and it really was a beautiful scene – the musical backdrop provided by a group of vegetarians with guitars and violin.

    While staring at the stars, I realise that they are singing The Beatles’ ‘Hey Hude’ and of course I start to sing along quietly. When the chorus arrived, I realised that most people on the beach were doing the same thing … a most incredible feeling. Folk Karaoke? Who cares – one of the most touching moments in Taiwan this year.


    Palm Beach


    After Party

    Two days of partying left us a bit sore, but still the flight home on Monday morning brought with it the realisation that we were leaving the perfect summer sea breeze of Kenting and returning to almost certain thunder storm or humidity. We guessed correctly, as the captain announced that we needed to circle Taipei because of poor visibility and hard rain coming in to land.

    The next thing that happened came as rather a surprise, with more than a little delayed shock. The bright flash and dull thump I could instantly recognise. Lightening had struck our plane! The pilot informed we were to land at Chiang Kai Shek. TaoYuan. One hour from Taipei. A nervous landing and there we were, stuck on the tarmac with the pilot admitting that nobody knew what to do. Finally, we disembarked and Sean woke up – disbelieving the whole story!

    There was clearly no space at the civilian terminal, since we wer ushered into the holding pen at the Coast Guard building. 45 party goers walking into a room with an equal number of armed guards with dogs made for some very nervous looking faces!

    The postscript was the discovery that the lightening strike had been featured in the news! So, it’s official! I got struck by lightening. It certainly explains the X-Ray vision.


    Military bags

  • Canned Heat

    The humidity has arrived.

    There is no escape.

    … but a fantastic, brilliant mountin bike ride took me to a peak covered in clouds … and it was so cold we were shivering. The weather systems in Taipei are very strange. Indeed, we spent ten minutes shaking over our coffees and marvelling at the clouds forming over our heads as the cool air of the sea hit the bowl of soup – Taipei.

    And an epic, awesome, brilliant descent – a perfect way to spend a bank holiday afternoon!

  • Masked Ball

    One very strong cultural difference here is the way people wear masks when they are ill, to prevent other people catching the infection. Quite a nice sentiment I think, and practical.

    According to friends that were here during SARS, it was a deeply unpleasant time. Imagine spending a whole day and not see anyone’s facial expression, and dealing with the fact that on the MRT (subway) system you were riding a most efficient germ distribution system, but you still had to get to work. Nasty.

    Some of the masks, though, are pretty damned cool. It has to be said.


    Zip It

  • Pressure Points

    I had a nice walk in the spring sunshine today to Ximen. I saw rather an interesting shop sliding door which caught my eye. Initially, I thought it was for accupuncture, but it turns out it was for a fortune teller. Essentially, palm-reading … but with your face.

    Each point, marked with a Chinese character, indicates where it might, for example, be bad luck to have a mole or blemish.


    His…


    … and hers

  • Stair Ads

    Quite a clever little trick. Opens up the possibility of having quasi-3D adverts. Imagine a dragon flying up those stairs…


    Taipei City Hall MRT Station

  • Taichung – Buses & Trains

    The way home was marked with some fantastic old buses and the typically ridiculous public information signs on the train…


    Was this bus in a cartoon when I was a kid?


    Back side


    The green bus … from the 1960s?

    This is a Lifesaving Button!

    When and how to use this Emergency Button:

    Please press the emergency button, in the case that your car breaks down or other perilous situations.

    Step 1: Press the button
    Step 2: Then remove your car from the track
    Step 3: Run when you see the train approaches!

    I love love love Taiwanese public information boards – especially the logic of the steps required to salvage a potentially life-threatening situation.

    More public information signs here and here.