To the Mountains and Sea (East Coast, Taiwan)
I got on a train and left Taipei, heading for the east
coast. For much of the way the train line runs on a thin strip of land between
the rugged mountains and the ocean, which makes for a very scenic journey. The
whole east coast is steeply mountainous, and it’s quite unlike anything in Australia.
Paragliding: cheap as chips with no insurance |
One afternoon a street dog followed me down to the beach and
all of a sudden went nuts, yapping and growling at me. The thing bit me on the
ankle before I could clap my thongs at it and scare it off. I had a few red
marks but luckily there was no broken skin. The last thing I want is rabies. I went
and washed it off in the ocean just to be sure. Then this dog comes running
back towards me, so I climb up on a rock which is in the surf, but this goddam
dogs follows me, struggling to make it through the water, and then struggling
to climb up the slippery rock, but wild eyed and hungry for more of my ankle.
Pretty soon he realised he didn’t have the home ground advantage anymore, he
tried to get down and really struggled, and when he hit the water the surf was
knocking him around a bit between some rocks. I was just sitting there the
whole time thinking; I am about to watch this dog die(and would it be appropriate
to take a photo? ).There’d be no way I’d help it out and risk rabies the way that
thing was yapping. But he got himself out and bolted off into the
distance.
Night markets are big in the country as well as the city, and
I drove 40 mins to a big town with friends Candy and Garret for a night of
feasting. Also, Candy cooked me a big traditional feast, and they took me to
some of their favourite breakfast and lunch spots in the small town, nearby.
In this town, when I was riding up the coast to check out
some temples, we had an earthquake. After what happened in Japan, it wasn’t the
best feeling having the ground shake beneath you and be looking at the ocean, with
which I was level.
Further down the coast is a town called Hualien, gateway to
Taroko Gorge, which was is an extensive gorge system trailing from the coast up
into the mountains, with lots of hiking trails. I spent a solid two full days
here and I reckon I would have walked about 40kms during my stay. Here I saw
some monkeys, waterfalls and some cool jungle temples and monastaries. It was
odd being in the middle of the jungle, absolutely alone, surrounded my signs of
the dangers: long drops, falling rocks, landslides, venomous snakes, venomous
wasps. If anything happened there’d be no way for anyone to know…
It was great to get out into the bush and see the parts of Taiwan that most poeple dont. Its just great to be outdoors, and not under flourescent lights.
I came back to Taipei and hung out with some friends for a
few more days before I head over to China. Here I went to the museum to see all
the treasure and heritage items that the Taiwanese exodus snatched on the way
out of the mainland, and also learnt that the official names for China and
Taiwan are Peoples Republic of China, and Republic of China, respectively. No, that’s
not a mistake. These countries that hate each other so much have an almost
identical name.
After going days and days without really talking it was
great to come back to Taipei and meet up with Candy and some of her friends who
live in the city. I’ve spent my days riding around on the back of scooters, partying
at expat bars, and, of course, eating.
Today I was stopped in the train station by a guy who said
he was a commercial filmmaker and he wanted me to be in the project he was
working on. If only I wasn’t flying to Beijing in tomorrow…
If I don’t update within the next month or so it’s because
blogspot, along with Hotmail, Skype, Youtube, Facebook, Wikipedia, etc, is
illegal and reportedly blocked in China. It’s going to be a very interesting
country to spend a month, and I’m really looking forward to, but I’ll miss
Taiwan and the cool people I’ve met here.
See ya,
Matt.
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