Friday, October 12, 2007

Playing Tourist in Taipei, Part 5 (Sun Yat-sen Memorial)

One of our last destinations in Taipei was the Sun Yat-sen Memorial.  We got to watch part of a changing of the guard ceremony, but it was too crowded at that point to get any good pictures.


We enjoyed walking around the grounds, which were spacious and park-like.  Here I found a statue of Dr. Sun Yat-sen to pose with.


We got quite a kick out of this warning sign by the little pond on the grounds!


Well, we had a fun vacation, but alas, it was time for us to head back home.  Taichung, here we come!

See also:

Playing Tourist in Taipei, Part 4 (Taipei 101)


One of the highlights of Floyd's and my vacation in Taipei was our visit to Taipei 101, the tallest building in the world (at the time).


This impressive structure, whose shape is meant to be reminiscent of a stalk of bamboo, towers over everything around it.


It's lit up beautifully at night, with a different color scheme depending on what day of the week you see it, and often features glowing decorations for holidays or special occasions.




To get to the top, we rode the world's fastest elevator (certified by the Guinness Book of World Records).  It travels at over 60 kilometers per hour, but moves so smoothly that you barely feel the motion.

This is the giant internal "damper" that keeps the building steady during earthquakes and typhoons.  Only in Taiwan would they turn such a thing into a cartoon character!


Below: a view of Taipei from the windows at (almost) the top.  Notice how tiny even the other skyscrapers appear in comparison!



This is what it looked like staring straight down the stairwell from the top.  Needless to say, we didn't take the stairs!


We decided to pay the extra fee to go a couple floors higher to the outdoor observatory.  There were some nice views, but it was cold and incredibly windy, as you can see from my poor hair!


Looking up to the very top from the outdoor observatory after dark.  The highest few floors are closed to the public.



Thursday, October 11, 2007

Playing Tourist in Taipei, Part 3 (National Museum of History, Botanical Garden, National Palace Museum)



On our Taipei vacation, Floyd and I enjoyed a visit to the National Museum of History, which is really an art museum.


Behind the museum was the beautiful Taipei Botanical Garden.  Unfortunately, there had been a typhoon not long before we got there, and it had left the garden looking a little less than its best.


All the things you can't do in the garden.  Consider yourself warned!

Next we paid a visit to the National Palace Museum.  This is by far the biggest and best art museum either of us had ever seen anywhere in the world, featuring some truly astounding works of Chinese art.  (Good thing we'd gone to the other museum first, otherwise it would have been quite a let-down after this!)


Since photography isn't allowed indoors, we contented ourselves with taking pictures of the grounds.  Not nearly as impressive as the exhibits inside, but still pretty!


Next up: Taipei 101!

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Playing Tourist in Taipei, Part 2 (Taipei Zoo)


On our recent little vacation in Taipei, we really enjoyed the day we spent at the Taipei Zoo.


They have a nice variety of wildlife, and the cages and other enclosures were decently humane.


Some are set up in such a way that you can look right down on the animals.


This is a display we found outside one of the restrooms (all about different animals' droppings, if you can't tell).  Definitely something you wouldn't see in an American zoo!




We enjoyed this exhibit, featuring lots of beautiful butterflies and other interesting insects.



A view of Taipei 101 behind the monkeys.



Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Playing Tourist in Taipei, Part 1 (Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial, Longshan Temple)


This week Floyd and I took a short vacation in Taipei (belatedly celebrating our fifth wedding anniversary).


It was fun traveling there on the High Speed Rail!

 

Above and below: these were the views from the windows of our room in the Sunworld Dynasty Hotel.


One of the first things we did after we arrived was to visit the famous Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial Hall.


We were told that the scaffolding across the front had nothing to do with construction but was actually a subtle political statement by a party opposed to the memory of Chiang Kai-Shek and his politics.


This was a sign by the entrance to the museum area inside the Memorial Hall.


A scenic spot for an anniversary picture by a turtle-filled pond in the Memorial complex.


 The next touristy site we visited was Taipei's Longshan Temple.


We were impressed by the colorful, intricately-carved figures on the roofs of the various buildings in the temple complex.


The scenic man-made waterfall below adorns the temple's front courtyard.


Our vacation in Taipei has just begun!  Next up: the Taipei Zoo!

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Typhooning with Krosa

Advice for the week: don't bother using an umbrella in a typhoon.

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Yep, it's stormy and windy in Taichung right now. We're in the middle of a typhoon here! This is our third typhoon since we arrived in Taiwan, but the first two both veered off to the north as they approached, so we didn't get the full force of the storms. Actually, the satellite maps online show that this one is veering north too; technically its eye is a little off the northern tip of the island, though much of the storm itself is directly overhead.

For those who don't know, a typhoon is basically the same as a hurricane, just with a different name in a different part of the world. It's categorized the same way, levels 1-5, with 5 being the worst (this one apparently is a level 4). They name them alphabetically each year, too, just like hurricanes (this one has been named Typhoon Krosa).

All last night we kept hearing the wind. It's often windy here, but typhoon wind is like no other kind. Floyd and I have nicknamed it "the Banshee" because of the wailing, shrieking, howling, whistling noises it makes as it tries its best to get into our apartment. We didn't get much sleep last night with the Banshee roaring around us, and today it's even louder.

This morning (Saturday) we had to go to school for a professional development event (which ended several hours early because of the typhoon). Just walking to school was quite an experience. The ground was covered with leaves and sticks and in some places even entire branches that had blown off trees. It wasn't raining much at the time - kind of a heavy drizzle - but the gusts of wind were so strong that we had to literally lean into them to even walk, and once or twice I was physically unable to take a step forward until the gust died down.

The scariest thing I saw on the way was somebody's metal roll-up garage door that had come partially detached and was hanging onto its framework only at the top two corners.  It was flapping like a banner, threatening to go sailing loose at any second.  I hope it never did.  It would have been a flying guillotine.

I discovered that it's no use trying to use an umbrella in a typhoon. First of all, the rain doesn't come straight down; the wind whips it all over so that it can come at you from any given direction at any moment, including horizontally or even straight up. And apart from my umbrella being next to useless anyway, the wind immediately whooshed it inside-out, snapped off a couple of the ribs, and flung them away. I had to point the poor crippled umbrella in the other direction so the wind would blow it right-side-in again, and then quickly furl it up to avoid further damage.

 At school there were branches all over the walkways and driveways, and even two or three entire trees that had blown over! It was the first time I had seen anything like that. 


Fortunately there was no damage to any of the buildings (nor had I seen any in the neighborhood on my way there, apart from the garage door). I did see a trash can, though, overflowing with the mangled remains of shredded umbrellas.  And the playground was a mess of downed branches.



 Well, we rushed through our meetings so people could get home sooner. There were teachers there from all of Morrison's three campuses plus the satellite school, which are all in different cities, and the others all had several hours' drive to get home (they had spent Friday night here in Taichung). We were concerned about those from Bethany campus, in Taipei, since that's very close to the eye of the storm. People kept saying it's not good weather for a big bus to be out on the highways, and not a good direction for said bus to be heading. There was some talk about sending them by train instead, but the high speed rail isn't running, and I don't know if the regular train runs during typhoons either. Hopefully they've made it back okay by now.


Later I found out that the wind broke a window in the door of one of the elementary classrooms.  It wasn't that a stray branch smashed into the glass or anything.  The force of the wind itself just shattered the glass!  Although a teacher was in there at the time, fortunately she was at the other end of the room and no one was hurt.    

Floyd and I were able to catch a ride home afterwards with someone else who lives in our apartment building. We were especially thankful since the rain was pouring down heavily by then, and had been for several hours. When we got home, we were surprised to see that Krosa had invaded our apartment! The living room floor was wet where water had come through the sliding glass door that leads to the covered balcony, but that wasn't the worst of it. The bedroom had a lot of leakage, both from the window and the air conditioning unit. My dresser and everything on it, two rugs, and a large section of floor were totally soaked. Not only that, but the water was dripping down from the window area inside the concrete wall to the floor. Or to be more specific, I should say it was seeping down UNDERNEATH the paint. So in several places the paint was bulging with rivulets of water underneath, pooling on the floor when it got to the bottom. That was weird!

Anyway, we moved the furniture out of the way and got rid of the dripping rug, and used almost every towel we have in the house, plus a bunch of rags, to soak up the water. But of course it keeps coming in, so we have a load of towels in the washing machine right now, hoping they'll dry before the ones currently on the floor get totally saturated. The air conditioning unit is letting water in all around it, and there isn't much we can do about that except stuff paper towels in the cracks and change them every few minutes, and keep towels on the floor under it as well.

And of course this whole time the wind is howling and raging and trying to join the rain inside our apartment. Can you hear it? It's really something! We might have to run to the 7-Eleven on the corner and see if they have earplugs, if we want to get any sleep tonight. At least we don't have to worry about the roof leaking, though. That's one advantage of living on the seventh of twelve stories!

The wind is screaming in through the air conditioning units, and we keep having to go wring out our towels. It's ridiculous! The rain is coming in so hard it's spurting up like little fountains under the windows. We can't keep up with it, and we're out of dry towels. Building a dike around parts of our floor would help us more than trying to sop up the water. I don't know how we're going to sleep tonight, because if we aren't there to keep wringing out the towels, the water will spread out all over the floor and get all over the apartment. Yikes!

Well, I'd better close so I can go help Floyd deal with Krosa's mess.  Wish us luck!