The next morning we woke up to prepare for our river climbing adventure! Everyday brought new activities with details not being very clear until the actual moment for the activity to begin. As I'm unable to speak Chinese, I was pretty much forced to just go with the flow the entire vacation which is a challenge for me as I like to be prepared! Fortunately, I was able to find this groove early on...might be a new side of me.
Friday, July 31, 2009
River Climbing
The next morning we woke up to prepare for our river climbing adventure! Everyday brought new activities with details not being very clear until the actual moment for the activity to begin. As I'm unable to speak Chinese, I was pretty much forced to just go with the flow the entire vacation which is a challenge for me as I like to be prepared! Fortunately, I was able to find this groove early on...might be a new side of me.
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Science Park and Lake Placid
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Live in the Moment
I find myself thinking of home more often during down times here. I think it's getting close to time for us to be going home which fills me with mixed emotions. Once we leave here, I'm not sure when I will see Jess again, but I am missing my boys at home. On the other hand, going home means one step closer to Anna leaving.
This is the point in the vacation where it's a bit challenging to just live in the moment without projecting to the future. I am to live in the moment.
Technical difficulties
While trying to upload/download (what's the correct terminology here?) from my new memory card something happened. I don't think that my camera understands chinese. I may have lost all of my photos - not real sure. I'm not going to mess with it anymore until I get home.
Of course if I did lose all of my photos I still have Anna's as back up. I also have all of my memories, which can't be downloaded (or uploaded) but they are still there. And what amazing memories they are.
Transformers
The girls and I saw The Transformers instead. Much better choice.
Anna the Cookie Goddess
Back at Jess' the girls wasted no time in getting food prepared - some of them setting up the bbq outside while others began chopping and shredding vegetables and meat. They made an amazing meal for all of us to enjoy and were excited to finish because Jess had promised them that Anna would show them how to make chocolate chip cookies!
The ooooh's and ahhhhh's were as prevalent as at a fireworks display as the girls watched Anna measure and add the different ingredients - they were in awe! One friend was given the task of running the electric mixer. Standing as far back from the bowl as she could with her face covered, she tentatively started the small appliance only to be met with shreeks from the rest of the girls. Anna was a cookie goddess as she showed them how to place the raw dough onto the cookie sheet before placing it in the oven. Hesitant fingers dipped into the raw dough to taste with eyes brightening widely once their taste buds became engaged.
Jess has a great bunch of girlfriends who were very excited to meet her American family and celebrate Independence Day with us!
Friday, July 10, 2009
On our way to Hualien
We stopped in Suao on the east coast for lunch. Suao is a commercial fishing town with many seafood restaurants located on the wharf. We had an amazing lunch that Connie ordered for us right out of the fish tanks and I was quite surprised at how inexpensive our meal was. The restaurant was your basic mom/pop operation with many of them one after another on the wharf. Employees would stand in the small street directing cars to parking spots right outside their restaurants - often the cars would be parked two or three deep!
Seafood in Taiwan is real seafood...with arms, legs, and eyeballs left intact. After biting into a shrimp, some dark liquid could potentially dribble down your chin. This dark liquid is internal stuff that I really didn't care to hear the description of - the shrimp was very tasty without thinking too much about the brown stuff!
This purple squid was pretty tasty with a texture of al dente pasta. The soup - which always follows the main meal - was a clear broth with shredded vegetable greens and white pieces that looked like rice. After closer inspection, we realized that the white pieces were actually tiny, almost microscopic fish!
Hsinchu City and Stinky Tofu
Lake Placid is a man-made lake in the middle of Science Park surrounded by beautiful footpaths and outdoor buildings used for community yoga and tai chi. I woke early one morning and headed down to Lake Placid for some early morning exercise. There were surprisingly many people out with the same idea as me.
As I beat a path around the lake which takes about ten minutes to complete, I passed a yoga class with many participants and a tai chi class set to music with a fat bassett hound in attendance.
Hsinchu is a tidily packed city with residential and commercial fitting together like pieces of a puzzle. Streets seem to have no rhyme or reason to me as they twist and turn with seemingly no real direction.
There does seem to be a lot of pollution - it can be seen on the buildings and felt in the throat.
Because of limited space, it seems the Taiwanese have developed quite a knack for expanding vertically. Cars are stacked three high by mechanical means in parking garages. Homes are apartment buildings four to 30 stories high.
Dinner one night was at a restaurant found down dark and twisting alleys - Anna felt it reminded her of Diagon Alley from Harry Potter - filled with a variety of smells ranging from sweet almond that is ground into a powder to rotting pig poop which Jess has informed me is the smell of stinky tofu. Stinky tofu is considered quite a delicassy...I have yet to try it, but I did promise Jess that I would before the end of our trip. I promised her this BEFORE I actually smelled it. Maybe she will forget about it.
BBQ
Wonderful accommodations!
Connie did an incredible job arranging our accommodations. We stayed in Taiwan's version of bed and breakfasts called 'home stays'. Each night found us in a different home stay in a different city all of them with uniquely breathtaking views.
One night our room was the 4th floor VIP room with a large canopied bed, a patio overlooking the city, and a clawfoot slipper tub. I felt very decadent taking a bath before dinner for no other reason than that I could.
We stayed one night in the city of Nantou otherwise known as Little Swiss. Before even knowing the nickname of the city, my thought was it felt very much like one would imagine Switzerland. This is the only place we stayed that had fireplaces in the rooms as this area is high enough in the mountains to actually get snow. Our room had floor to ceiling windows overlooking the valley below.
After Kenting, we spent a night in Tainan at Gary's brother's house before taking the high-speed train back to Hsinchu.
Saturday, July 4, 2009
Vacation from vacation
Friday, July 3, 2009
Dogs and Porcupines
There are a lot of dogs in Taiwan both strays and pets and as there seems to be no leash law in effect here, it's hard to tell who's who sometimes. I've seen many people with their dogs in stores and restaurants and also riding on scooters!
Tourist traps are the same everywhere!
The kids and I walked around the town visiting the different shops. It is your typical tourist town with shops filled with cheap trinkets and t-shirts that say 'grandma and grandpa visited Neiwan and all I got was this lousy t-shirt'. Okay, I didn't see any t-shirts but the cheap trinkets were in abundance.
For lunch we ate at a quiet little restaurant with great food and quick service. Jess and Amingo ordered spicy beef, mapo tofu, and bird's nest fern. The spicy beef is pretty self explanatory. The mapo tofu was a spicy yet sweet dish of tofu and peppers which was my favorite dish to date. The bird's nest fern is a vegetable like spinach that is steamed. Our lunch was served family style with each of us receiving a bowl of rice.
The land of Taiwan is lush and surprisingly mountainous. It reminds me a lot of Jamaica with the flora and fauna and temperature. Every morning I have woken to the sound of birds chattering.
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Do you pray?
One interesting conversation that happened last night over dinner was when Gary asked me if I pray...I stumbled my way through this as I am better at listening when it comes to religious conversations than I am at discussing. I told him that our family's tradition was to go around the dinner table and each say what we are thankful for that day. Through my stuttering and stammering I noticed that Jess was trying her hardest to keep from laughing. I wondered what she found to be so funny - maybe my struggle with trying to explain in a way that her father would understand, or maybe the struggle her dad had with following what I was saying. Actually, what she found funny was the fact that her dad had asked if I PLAY. As in play badminton.
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
What day is it?
Today is Thursday and the only reason I know this is because I asked Amingo. Anna and I left at 4:00am Tuesday morning and arrived in Taipei 10:30pm Wednesday night. You do the math, but I think we travelled for over 30 hours real time.
We flew from Minneapolis to Dallas and had a one hour layover before boarding the plane to Tokyo. The plane was nine seats wide with five seats together in the middle, and our seats were right in the middle of the middle. I was relieved to see two things when getting on the plane. Firstly, each seat had it's own tv monitor for viewing movies, tv shows, flight path and information, etc. Secondly, Anna was sitting next two two nuns. I took this as a good sign!
Thirteen hours later, we landed in Tokyo for a layover before boarding Japan Airlines to Taipei. The plane was a double decker and our seats were on the second level. (A note to Neal...I did not find the pool, but I am positive it was somewhere!)
The only time I was really concerned about our travels was when we landed in Taipei. I wondered if we would be able to find Jess and her family amongst the masses of people waiting for friends and loved ones to arrive. Fortunately, they saw us first! Jess, Amingo, and Gary were there to greet us!
When Jess came to the U.S. she had commented that everyone looked alike to her when she got off the plane in Minneapolis. I laughed as that is what most Americans think of Asian people. Jess tried to explain the differences between the nationalities, and as I scanned the passengers on our flights and in the airports, I tried to notice the slight differences between the dark haired, lightly golden individuals.
Driving about an hour south from Taipei, we finally arrived at our final destination of Hsinchu City. Pandora - now calling herself Connie - greeted us with a large, bright smile. It felt good.
It is hot and humid, but not overly stuffy - comparable to August in Two Harbors. We have walked to the Science Park (more later about this beautiful place) and Connie is out getting breakfast. She asked if we wanted Starbucks or traditional Taiwanese breakfast...hello?!
Anna and Jess are playing the piano and singing from Rent right now. There's so many differences, yet so much the same.
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Five days and counting!
A year ago my family had a foreign exchange student from Taiwan live with us for almost a year. Jess became an integral part of our family and thanks to the Rotary exchange student program, our family grew in size and became international. Looking back the only thing that I would change about that entire experience is to have journaled regularly.
Anna and I will be enjoying the hospitality of Jess and her family for two weeks. I'm not much of a writer, but am hoping to be diligent enough to record highlights, which I'm sure there will be plenty of! Jess' dad, Gary, commented in a recent e-mail that he is hoping that our footprints touch every part of his beautiful country.
Jess' immediate family is comprised of Gary, Pandora (mom), and Amingo (brother). There are plenty of extended family and friends that I can only assume we will be meeting. I don't know who is more excited - me and Anna, or Jess and her dad!