Taipei has a wonderful zoo, but it's an all day walk... our feet were dead by the time we finished, but the animals were worth it.
Taipei has a wonderful zoo, but it's an all day walk... our feet were dead by the time we finished, but the animals were worth it.
With my feet restored, we traveled on, to an overlook of the harbor area and then to lunch at the docks.
We had lunch across from the docks. Best scallops ever!
After lunch we drove to a small park and hiked to a secluded beach. Fun seeing the Pacific by looking East rather than West.
With a van and driver, the whole crew took off to the Wilan area and some port towns. The first stop was the Lanyang Museum.
Inside this beautiful building were displays of the oldest peoples of Taiwan. Sort of a natural history museum. Great displays, great artifacts, and... some curious modernist twists. Here's Miriam CGI'd or something into a traditionalist scene.
From the traditional to the modern, yet still traditional... this bark dress...
More computer fun, me jumping around in some sort of virtual reality, AI, multi-camera projection...
Outside the museum were a couple sculptures made from cables left over from the construction of Taipei 101...
Then it was off to lunch at a wonderful little cafe... and another 100 or so courses! Eventually we checked into a local hotel and then went off to a spa where fish ate my feet!
Leaving the ballgame, we went off to the Taichung night market (actually opened at 4 PM). This was in an older part of town, using several narrow streets lined with kiosks featuring all sorts of foods, clothing, gizmos, and just about anything you can think of. I grabbed some delicious dumplings, Nisa had her nails done, Willis found some vegetarian goodies. We also tried some sort of smoothie with granola, only to find that the night market idea of granola was corn flakes!
A few shots from the market area:
Quite fun experiencing a more traditional part of Asian culture. Then it was the long drive back to Taipei. Many thanks to Nisa's brother, Andrew, who handled the driving duties in excellent fashion.
Watching the World Baseball Championship over the years, I noted that the fans at the Asian venues (Tokyo Dome + Korea) were extra exuberant, cheer leaders, horns, percussion, etc. So I wanted to check out a game in Taiwan to see what the fan experience is like. Well...
First, the stadium. The Taipei Dome was just finished (sort of) but the home team was on the road. So Nisa got us all tickets and we drove down to Taitung for the game. I thought the stadiums would be on the level of US AAA teams, but they are bigger than that... and nicely designed.
The first thing one notices when arriving in the large cities, Taipei and Taichung for example, is the sheer number of scooters zipping around cars and pedestrians, using up all the parking, in terraces as well as streets. Take all the bicycles in Amsterdam and convert them to scooters and you have some idea of the numbers. I guess scooter madness is typical of Asian and Southeast Asian countries, but this was the first we experienced it.
First is a video I made from the car one evening. In the background are comments about relaxing the next day at the ballgame. How wrong I was as I'll post later.
Below is a YouTube link to a Taipei television report. Apparently this madness occurs every morning at rush hour.
https://youtu.be/TESofgEefHY?feature=shared
At intersections there are pedestrian lanes and scooter rectangles in front of the auto traffic. On one freeway, I noted three car lanes and two protected scooter lanes. The whole scooter thing is well integrated into Taiwanese traffic culture. Quite mindblowing if you've never experienced it before.
More sightseeing. We visited the historic site Fort Sant Domingo. The fort itself is but a shell; however the site has seen many transformations.
The Spanish, the Dutch, the Chinese, the Brits and others, and finally the Taiwanese have occupied the grounds. Here is the lineage:
The British consul house is preserved as a museum.
Next door is the University where Nisa studied. This church, buildings and grounds are the best part of the school, the more modern part "sucks" so we went no further.
We were in Tamsui, a small city along the wide river where it flows into the China Sea. We spent some time on the boardwalk and peeking up side streets. Vendors were out in force since it was a Saturday.
The Turkish ice cream vendor was a real treat. A magician serving the cones. Enjoy the video.