20 October 2008

Su-ao the fisher village

As my father had some rest, next day we took a trip to the East cost. After a long drive (mostly in tubes under the mountains) we reached a very nice fisher village called Su-ao. The main attractions are the Buddhist temple – where some local ceremony was held – and the fisher harbour. When the small groups of local fishers arrived by their boats, they unloaded the catch right away for sale on the fish market. Each group has a place on the market where the family members conduct the selling. The fish offer is always fresh and so various, I have never seen these kind of fishes before. The atmosphere of the busy market called forth a lunch on the port side. The food was very delicious of course except the small purple polyps what was impossible to chew and I just had some feeling that it may not be the best to eat these animals with their very dark purple liquid what I associate with poison… My father thought that the only thing why it is not so delicious that we eat it in a wrong way… I guess he will say this for many Taiwanese foods. :)
Later we left the village to find a nice beach on the southern way. We reached a small bay where a river joins to the sea. The beach side was shingly but the waves were nice for a bath. The landscape around the bay and also the life of the fisher village gave a typical picture of Taiwan for my father who is getting to like this place…

Here are some pictures about this trip:
http://picasaweb.google.com/tamasintaiwan

My father is visiting me!


My father (Paul) has come to visit me on the 18th of October for 2 weeks. He has been always interested about Taiwan and my stay here gave a good opportunity to combine a business trip with my visitation.

16 October 2008

An extraordinary weekend in Kenting...

The 10th of October was a day what we had been waiting for such a long time not just because this is the national holiday of Taiwan, but because finally we got the chance to go to Kenting and spend an awesome weekend at the tropical southern part of Taiwan. We felt that we deserved this trip after so many typhoons hit the island during the last few weekends.

Pictures about the tirp are in the Kenting folder:
http://picasaweb.google.com/tamasintaiwan

Day 1: getting used to the southern lifestyle…

Me, Andreas and Maciej (A Polish “bratnaki” who studies finance for one semester in NTU, came from Warsaw btw.) left Taipei at 6:00 am on Friday by the good old Golf. It was a very nice sunny day without any cloud on the sky. It was around 26-27C in the capital but 31-32C in our destination. I really don’t understand why people has problem with autumn :P…coz I love it! :) We drove on the highways all way long, but it still took more than 6 hours to get to Kenting. Again, Taiwanese drivers are so unbelievable…even if there are 3 or 4 lines on the highway they occupy all of them by driving with the same speed. The other thing is that Kenting is one of the most popular destinations on the national holiaday…so that’s why a 300 km’s way took this much of time…
This fact became even more obvious when we couldn’t find any room in the city… But it was so hot and sunny that we couldn’t stand to go to the beach right away instead of looking for more places. The beach here is absolutely fantastic. I can not compare it to any other…it’s just simply exotic! After we admired the beautiful sunset we started to look for some accommodation…but nowhere was any free room in the city…there was no way back…we moved down on the coastline a few km’s till we luckily found 3 free rooms in a local family’s “motel” like house. They were really kind persons. The son of the grandma took us into the city by his small pick-up track. We were standing on the flat of the car attracting heavy attention among the crowd as we “marched” into the centre of Kenting. Randomly some guys felt free to join us so than the truck become a bit overloaded…:)
They were really funny guys who also liked that suddenly they became the centre of the attention too. As we arrived to the centre, our first way was to have some dinner with them. It was nice to get to know other Taiwanese students outside from Taipei. Some of them do military service through 1 year. This is very strict in Taiwan and the guys have to take it very seriously. After the delicious local food all of us went to the beach where most of the people come to enjoy the sound of the sea and the moonlight with some beers and good company around the fire… Just like we did! It was an awesome time we spent there with these Taiwanese guys. When they left the three of us still felt enough power to rock the night in a local club…I think we managed it… :)

Day 2: at the Pacific Ocean

On Saurday to gain our energy back to 100% after the short sleep we had the breakfast in the accommodation what the grandma prepared from fresh seafood in just a few minutes…it was really delicious! We decided to go to the south-eastern side to check out the beaches there. Eluanbi, the island’s southern village has a nice Lighthouse where we had to get off to have a close-up view for the coral reef and the rocky beach from the cliff. The wind is so extremely strong on at the edge of the cliff that it could throw us off balance! But it was worth to have that amazing view for the Pacific coastline. We drove forward to find a sandy beach. We arrived to a little village where we saw a vendor selling hermit crabs (look at the pictures). These cute animals caught my and Andreas’ fancy to buy some as house pet…:) Andreas has 2 (Gordon and Jerry) and I bought 3 (I still haven’t named them..) After we played enough with them :) we went out to the beach which was full of surfers. Here the waves are really good for surfing…we rent a body board which was still cool to ride a bit on the waves. But the real ride just came after with quads! …and it was not just around a circle, but through hills and bushes…cool staff.
Our main aim was to try the scuba diving during this weekend. In the afternoon it was too late to do that so we scheduled it for Sunday. Instead we went to the Sihjhongsi hot spring…we were relaxing for a few hours before we came back to Kenting to have a Saturday nigh’s party…in the club we met so many foreigners who “tried” to go for local girls… we had to show them how Europeans hit the floor…:)

Day 3: Scuba diving!


As we got up on Sunday morning we drove to Nanwan beach which is one of the best places to do scuba diving in Taiwan – from the guidebook. We arranged a meeting with a Canadian scuba diver, John who guide both beginner and advanced scuba divers into the life of corals trough all the year. It was a long process to dress up in the proper clothes and prepare the equipments… we were so excited how it will be…this was the first time for me and Maciej. I’ve always wanted to try out scuba diving, but up to now I never got the chance to do it…and now it became reality…I couldn’t wait to get to the beach! :) In the full wearing it is really hard to move, but in the water the extra weights are advantage. Although, in vertical direction you move by inflating or deflating your waistcoat you wear with the backpack. The most difficult part – I think – is to get used to the pressure in 4-10 m deep. My ears hearted a lot at the beginning but as we moved slowly into more depth it was ok. The maximum was 10 meters we dived down and overall we spent around 50 minutes underwater. It was enough time I think to learn how to move with all the stuff on your back and than to admire the life of the corals…I absolutely loved it! When we came out and changed, I took some underwater pictures and a short movie with my new camera (Pentax W60)…it’s really cool.
So after this great experience – what we will never forget – we went to eat to a scuba divers’ favourite restaurant and than we left this beautiful place to drive back to Taipei. I believe that for each of us this was one of the greatest weekends ever and the best one for sure since we are here in Taiwan.

29 September 2008

Wulai hot spring village


Saturday (the 27th) was a rainy and a bit cool day but seemed to be perfect to try out one of the nearest hot springs. So me and Jesus took the bus towards the Wulai hot spring village which lies in a valley 25 km south of Taipei. The bus was full of people from the rural areas who like to have a closer view on foreigners by guessing where are they from…? …we got used to it…but once an indigenous look like men full of tattoo remarked that my Spanish neighbour is similar to Jesus…ok… but when Jesus showed up his name, all the bus – including us – was burst into laughter…:)

When we arrived, the Indian man who made fun of Jesus invited us into his mother’s restaurant. What a nice gesture to foreigners…ha? The food was very delicious. The rice prepared in bamboo had an excellent taste with the pork and other salads…
After lunch we went to look for the free hot spring what the guide book suggested. This is actually consists of a few little pools on the river side and it was built by local villagers to utilise the rich hot water for their own health. Different pools have different temperature what they regulate with cold water. But most of them are still very hot around 38-45 C. Anyway, sitting in the hot water during the rainy hours was a pretty cool feeling…
Later we went up to the mountain by taxi to see a water fall which is the biggest in Northern Taiwan. It was almost 5 but the Yun-Hsien Resort at the top of the water fall was too attractive to miss out. We got up there by a cable car which looks likes a ski lift. This park is basically an excellent place to spend a nice weekend enjoying the green Taiwanese nature all around. But at that time the rain was so heavy that we didn’t have too much time to enjoy the beautiful sights of the park. We were just running up on the stairs to reach the hotel’s swimming pool which looked great in a picture at the cable car station… Finally we found it with also some Jacuzzi…so than the “day of complete relax” was absolute plenary!

Pictures about the tirp are in my google web album as usual:
http://picasaweb.google.com/tamasintaiwan

22 September 2008

Chilling out in the uni's tropical swimming pool...


On Sunday I was just walking around the campus when I explored a huge open air swimming pool inside a park! wow...! it was just hidden by the trees. On Monday after I bought my bike, me and Jesus – Spanish guy living next door to me and he really looks like Jesus! :) – checked out this fantastic pool. This one is far more better than the one inside the sport complex. It is 50 m long, girded with palm trees…it’s just amazing. I can use my gym pass to get in once a day…so I suppose I will spend most of my sunny spare time here to swim, relax and have a nice sun bath…! :)

Just check out in the album what I'm talking about!:
http://picasaweb.google.com/tamasintaiwan

21 September 2008

A trip to the Pacific Ocean!

After the registration process for the Chinese courses (on the 20th of September) I had some lunch in a Greek restaurant with a few other exchange students. Afterwards me and Andreas left Taipei to check out the beachside on the east cost while others … have to study or work hard…haha:)
First we fed the little Golf with petrol for half the price than in Europe! Through the way to the coast we also saw a new part of Taipei; the business one....with the empire of Acer and so on…
After one hour of driving to the Northeast direction we reached the cost at Juifang. The coastline is amazingly wide with all the rocky hills falling into the Pacific Ocean. We had a stop just to enjoy the sun before we moved towards the Fulung Beach area…to the south on the east cost side.
When we got there the sun had already gone down and it was a bit cloudy but what we found there was gorgeous. The long sandy beach with some small grassy hills seemed to be perfect. The cool Pacific Ocean with the huge, sometimes 2-3 meter’s high waves allured us for a bath! The waves were really cool... I loved them a lot!
Before we left, I luckily met with a Hungarian men who teaches English for 8 years and has a Taiwanese wife here. He invited me for a Hungarian party in October organised by the Hungarian council in Taipei. Well... you can find Hungarians all around the world!
On the way back we had a delicious seafood dinner with a huge lobster which had been swimming in the aquarium 15 min before we ate it). I drove back to Taipei and realised that Taiwanese drivers are very bad…comparing to anyone! By driving through the city you can see ‘almost accidents’ all the time, as they know nothing about keeping to the right but they really like to change lines often or just ignoring them at all. But my favourites are the scooter drivers…somehow they think that there are no traffic rules applying for them. Fortunately I am in the car so I don’t need to be scared…but they should! :)

pictures are in the Pacific Ocean album:
http://picasaweb.google.com/tamasintaiwan

Visiting the National Palace Museum

The 19th of September was a nice
sunny day without any class… I was thinking about a trip to explore something from the ‘30 things not to miss’ list from my guide book…I chose the National palace Museum which has an extraordinary collection of Chinese
art and historical artefacts. It is located a bit outside from Taipei to the north. Andreas - the Swiss guy who I know from the welcome reception also study business courses – was up to go there as well so we took a good old WV Golf what he just got from his volunteer student to use it during his stay in Taiwan …nice, isn’t it?…so I hope this will be ‘Das Auto’ which will help us to explore the island!

The museum is a 4 floors large building among some hills in the Shilin district. The Japanese influence in its architecture is - I think - quite surprising to visitors, although many foreigners realise that the Taiwanese culture is actually a mixture of Japanese, Chinese, Western and aboriginal cultures creating a completely different atmosphere from what visitor can experience in Mainland China. However, the museum’s collection doesn’t really has too much to do with Taiwan as the entire collection was shipped from China (Forbidden City, Beijing) during the retreat of Chiang Kai-shek to Taiwan in 1949 and it represents a comprehensive overview about the original and traditional Chinese cultural art back to 5000 years.
We were quite lucky by arriving at 3 as an English guide tour just started than. To be honest, the museum tour would have been quite boring without the piloting of our Chinese-history expert who presented the most famous and impressive pieces form all the dynasties of the Chinese history. Most of them are price less, but there are some Chinese (the material/porcelán) which is measured up to $11.6 million by some experts!


After the long trip in the museum, we were starting to look for some place to have dinner. We were just driving up to the northern part of Taipei fallowing the map towards a nice restaurant (from the guide book), but actually we realised that the map is a piece of s..t and travelling through Taipei is more complicated than we expected. (Roads disappear or just make a curve suddenly when it should be strait according to the map…etc) Finally we found a ‘restaurant’ sign…”ok check it out!” We were so hungry, so it wasn’t really matter what kind of food they have. To reach the building actually we had to hike up on a slope. The restaurant was owned by a nice old couple who welcomed us as some kind of migrants as we were the only customers around the cottage’s stile house. The menu was not a proper one as we (actually Andreas with his ‘almost perfect’ Chinese) just discussed with the lady what and how she is going to prepare for us…But finally we got a very delicious dinner (mushroom and chicken soup with special vegetables, rice and excellent Chinese tea) and the view for Taipei from our table was simply amazing!

pictures in the museum's folder:
http://picasaweb.google.com/tamasintaiwan

19 September 2008

I've started my 2nd year!


On this week the courses has started in each collage. My one is the Management one, wherein I belong to the Business Administration Department. I take 3 courses; Accounting for Managerial Decisions, International Marketing Management and Information Management. These are more-less similar to those what I would study at Sussex during the autumn period. The method of teaching is a bit different from the English one as teachers prefer to give all the course lectures on one day. So this means I have 3 lectures for each of my courses on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday and that’s it! I like it very much!:)
From the 29th of September I will start the Chinese class as well by having 2 hours in the morning from Monday till Friday. This will give me more than 120 hours of Mandarin which, I hope will be enough to acquire the basics…or at least to give me motivation to carry on later. We will see!

Yeah...and what about sport? Oh well...check out the pictures about our tremendous sport complex...you can get everything there... Now I obtained my pass for both gym and swimming facilities which valid for a half year! (It was only 1550 NTD/26 GBP/33 EUR/8000 HUF for the two one) …wow! :) So I plan to go there at least 3 times a week…and in the meantime I decided to learn some traditional Chinese martial art…what about Kung-fu? Sounds great! It has some connection to Karate Wado-ryu what I do for 8 years now back home. Also I curious about the use of sword in harmony with the movements of the body!
My lovely volunteer student, Anna has already found a local Kung-fu association…the registration is in process! :)
In my spare time, which means if I’m not in hurry to my classes…or to meet up friends to go out to some club at nights (usually Wednesday>Ladies night! or on ‘Saturday night fever’ as usual…:))… I enjoy the sights of this beautiful campus (I made a folder about NTU in my google pics album). It’s really awesome place for students….full of nice restaurants, cafeterias, shops all affordable for the poor local and exchange student’s pocket all day long. The size of the whole campus is around 1.5 of the size of Sussex’ s campus (where I lived for the 1st year) so it’s big..very big. Almost every student’s has a bike except me…ok I’m not so sad as I will get one tomorrow! Anyway, to have a bike here is crucial to get from one place to an other in human time…
There are lots of places under the palms to study or just relax during the hot sunny hours with some cool juice enjoying the company of funny local students…these green places remember me that I’m in the tropical zone actually….it also makes me happy even if this weather is way too hot. Anyway, my suggestion for others is to lie on the grass in the shadows of palm trees and just forget about everything...:)

Check out more pictures:
http://picasaweb.google.com/tamasintaiwan

08 September 2008

Dinner with Anna's family


I've got an invitation from Anna to visit her family and have a dinner together at their home. There were no question that I will be there. They live in a suburban district of Taipei which is also lively at nights but somehow the streets had a different impression on me than the ones around the campus. It's so relaxing to walk through them...
Anna’s parents and her brother are also very nice people. I was lucky to meet with her father as he works for a Taiwanese engineering company in China so he spend most of his time far from his family. Anna’s mother is a teacher at a local school and also an excellent chef! The dinner was an amazing representation of the delicious Chinese cousin. The tasty mushroom with pasta and pork was a very good mixture with all the variously prepared vegetables. One interesting thing about the Chinese eating habits is that the soup is always after the main menu.
Later we ate some Taiwanese dessert fruits while we had a nice chat. I think with this dinner at Anne’s home I gained an insight into the warm hospitality of the Taiwanese people. Thank you very much for this evening!

07 September 2008

Taipei 101


On the first day I went to the Taipei 101 with Anna. I thought the best way to start exploring a city is to go to the highest point. I think I managed it as the Taipei 101 is the tallest building in the world with its 509 meters high. The elevator is also a Guinness record: the fastest one! It took only 36 sec to go to the top floor...And than: WOW!! The view from there is so amazing! We had a look around on the city and I just realised how big is Taipei...it’s massive, there are so many mountains
around and there is also a winding river with lots of bridges.
I bought some postcards and send them from the top...yeah, for the lucky ones back home...
After a while we went back to the campus to have lunch. This was the first proper food since I’m here...typical Chinese food: beef soup with noodles...”I have to get used to it” :) no...it was really delicious!!
Than I had a siesta on the grass somewhere in the campus to enjoy the hot Taiwanese sun....and to try to set in the
local time! :)

Some more picture:

http://picasaweb.google.com/tamasintaiwan

My journey to Taiwan


My plane left Vienna at the 5th of September at 9.30am to bring me to Taipei. It was a long and tiring journey with one stop at Abu Dhabi to refuel the hungry tank after 5 hours.
I saw the palm islands from the sky and most of the big constructions around the city ...that's an absolutely crazy world! (I have to come back here at some point :) After buying some emirates dates we carried on toward the east. It took about 8 more hours of flight during the night to get to Taipei finally. My volunteer student (Anna) had been already waiting for me with one of her friend (Teddy) and they brought me to my accommodation. It's called Prince House, a completely new building situated very close to the university campus. When I finished the dorm registration I got my keys...jupeee!! The room is very nice, it has a bathroom and a fridge as well. But the brand new rooms have also some drawbacks: there were no mattress or bedding on the bed....nice, isn’t it? I was so exhausted at that point, but as I didn’t have to much choice...we went to a super market to do a big shopping! In the meantime Anna had to left to go to her German class ! (That’s also amazing! Although the presence of Germans is obvious...) So I did the shopping with Teddy’s help. The prices seems to be quite interesting...the transportation or renting a scooter is very reasonable in Taipei but all the small things in a shop are so unreal...why is it that the milk costs 3 or 4 times more than in Europe? Strange things...but I have to get used to it! –as Teddy told me when I was nattering...: )
Anyway, my first impression on Taiwanese people is very positive. They are amazingly helpful even if their English is poor.
On the way back we dropped in a mobile shop to buy a sim card. After packing out in my room and had something (homemade sausage) to eat I was sleeping ...and sleeping...and sleeping as a child until the next morning!