Action adventure girl and I wanted to
head out to the coast one day to see a different view of Taiwan. We
didn't have a car and we wanted to have someone actually show us
stuff, so we decided to do one of the bus tours we had seen
advertised. I guess there are a number of little companies that offer
these tours and they all seem to have similar itinerary and costs. We
decided to book one through the Concierge at the hotel, both for ease
of booking and also because I felt that the hotel would get us a
reputable company.
The bus picked us up at the hotel
promptly at 9:00. We were in a little 10 person van with a driver and
a tour guide. The tour guide spoke English and told us that there
were only 2 other people going on this tour and we were going to pick
them up over at another hotel. All well and good and we headed the
few blocks over. At this point we were running quite a bit early and
the other couple were not ready to go yet so my partner and I walked
around the other hotel for a while.
The architecture in Taipei (at least in
the part of the city where we were) is modern and diverse. Lots of new buildings and
lots of stone and glass. Perhaps I haven't been around big new modern
cities in a while, but Wow, these are really impressive. And they also
had a unique style about them. A difference from what I am used to
seeing in western buildings. I was trying to classify it somehow and
define the.... well the oriental style of what is basically an office
building. With Taipei 101 it is pretty easy to identify the difference. The
many stages of the sky scraper are designed to look like the roofs of
the ancient Chinese (and Japanese) pagoda style buildings. I realized
that many of the buildings have this unique roof styling that make
them stand apart from their western counterparts. Even many of the
mid rise condo buildings I saw had this unique and attractive manner.
Upon returning to our van we met the
couple that would be touring with us. Two older Taiwanese ladies. They were
both visiting from the states but had both originally come from
Taiwan. They were very polite and thanked us for “letting them join
our adventure”. They spoke English pretty well but the tour guide
still did the tour in English and Chinese.
And we were off.
I think there must be a course of study
and a test required to be a tour guide. Lots of little things you
have to learn and you have to be able to talk on and on to amuse your
customers. Our tour guide talked a lot about the area and the weather
and so on for the hour it took us to get to the coast. Mostly in
Chinese. This was OK with me as we were in the back of the van and
couldn't really hear well. The first city we visited was a big
commercial port and fishing town. The navy had some vessels there as
well. We went up to a large Buddhist shrine up on the hill that
afforded a good view of the port. There was a big budha up there
also, surrounded by a number of lesser gods that guarded the big guy.
It was a very funny place. Here is this very sacred area set up for
the worship of their deity, and even as I watched, local merchants
were setting up for the day. There were lots of carny type games
and rides being set up. I was very fond of the electric rideable
Panda. Only 50 NTD in the slot by the neck !!
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A Wishing Well |
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An Electric Wishing Well |
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Riding the Panda |
Inside the building was the business
section of the religion. Here is where you could get the priests to
pray for you to get the job done. They were very efficient about it.
You would pay money to buy a little prayer sign. This tiny sign was
put on a big rotating light column with all of the other little
prayers and it would spin slowly around and automatically pray for
you. The ready adaptation of technology to the appeasement of the gods
was heartening. There were also a set of prayer sticks one could
throw. The arrangement of the sticks when they landed determined if
the gods were for or against the endevor that you held in your mind
at the time of the throw. I think you also had to pay the right
amount for their favor. Sounds a bit like Vegas.
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Prayer Tower |
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A close up of the individual prayer slides |
Once done there we got back in the van
and headed north up the shore to the main attraction of this little
trip. At the town of Yehlui there is a unique geological area caused
by the ocean and wind eroding an area of different hardness of stone.
The softer underlying sandstone wears away to leave large, head
shaped toppings. The Taiwanese are very poetic and have named most
of these stones for what they may look like if you are standing at
the right position. Perhaps you have to be standing at the right
position right at dusk. A half bottle of Bushmills might also assist.
Anyway, they have names like, “The Majestic Queen”, or “The Little Princess” or “The Bison”. From the pictures in the flyer
we had seen, these mighty stones must stand like 50 feet tall. I was
looking forward to seeing them.
But first we had to drive along the
shore and see the sites that waited for us there. Two interesting
things.
First, the fishing boats. Lots of lots
of 60 or 70 foot vessels. Not really set up for nets or anything.
Perhaps doing hand line or hand net fishing. But arranged all around
the boats at just over head height are hundreds of huge incandescent
light bulbs. These bulbs are the size of a gallon milk bottle and are clear glass. They must really light up the surface of the ocean at
night. I think they are for squid fishing. Here are some pictures.
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Yeah, a little blurry. I think that is the window of the Van. |
Second: The artificial breakwaters.
There were all made out of giant cement Caltrops . You know Caltrops?
(not to be confused with Trollops, though both have anti-infantry
uses). I am talking about the 4 spiked gizmos that are made to strew
in the path of your enemy to puncture their tires or feet. No matter
how they fall, there is a spike up. These were the size of half a
Volkswagen and seemed to be made to be dumped off of a boat and fall
such that they would easily interlock and stay together to be built
up into a seawall. They were pretty cool.
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Caltrops from Amazon.com |
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Giant Freudian Caltrops |
Third: (ok, 3 interesting things). The
seafood vendors. If you catch fish, you should sell fish. The main
street at the little town we got to was lined with seafood
restaurants and fish mongers. And the front of these establishments
were crowded with large aquariums filled with live food. Sort of like
the Lobster you might see at the Safeway back home, but here it was
much more exotic. I saw one big tank filled with one big octopus. I
wonder if he was really for sale and if so, would people just take
him home to eat. Not that I am knocking eating Octopus. When I lived
on Guam, my friends and I would often snorkle out to the reaf with
our spears and bring home a giant octopus or two. Giant Octopus is a
great thing to bring home in a bag for your mother if you are a 13
year old boy.
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Yes, a 7-11 |
The entrance to the Geological park was
a big deal. It had a lot of signage saying things like “Entrance to
Geological Park”. It also had a lot of people. And now we come to
the first bad part. I guess if you live in a crowded island nation
and you go to a unique geological park on a particularly sunny and
beautiful weekend day in late fall you are going to have a lot of people
there with you. The large parking lot out front was filled with
scores of the large tour busses and there were.... like thousands of
people going in and out of the park. The park turns out to be the
peninsula attached to this town and you have about a 10 minute walk
to get from the entrance (ticket please) to the actual geological
park part. First thing you walk by is artificial replicas of the
most famous rocks (The Queen) made to like half or quarter scale.
Strange. Why would you look at this little thing when the real thing
is just a few hundred yards away? Let's go.
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I wonder what that sign says. |
There is a cement walkway all the way
out to the little peninsula, so at last got to see the stones. Second
bad thing. Those replicas? Actual size. Not 50 feet tall, but maybe
20 feet tall. Not huge and awe inspiring but small and... cute? Still
very interesting however. Still very pretty. Also, if you looked at
the stone at your feet you could see a lot of ancient sand dollar
fossils coming out of the stone. Now we get to see the marvel of this
place. These rocks have been standing for thousands of years and no
one has ever come out and cut them down and carted them of to their
home land. Perhaps the Japanese didn't see them during their
occupation.
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Fossil Sand Dollar. 10 meters across. |
You also find out that the Taiwanese
seem to consider most signs as sort of advisory. So the “Stay on
Path. Do not Walk On Rocks” signs that are everywhere? Those are
for the tourists, the real taiwanese can just walk right up and stand
on the signs for a better view. When the security guards runs up to
you and starts yelling at you to get on the path, you just tell him,
“sure, in a minute, can't you see I am taking a picture?”
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She is standing on the "don't stand here" sign. |
Personally, I think that most of the
rocks should have been named things like, “Semi Flacid Phalus”
and “Hard Love”. But, I will let you be the judge. Well, I will put the local names on the ones that I know.
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The Queen |
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You can sort of see the layering that causes this feature. |
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another angle on the Queen |
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This is just a cool pattern in the rock. |
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"Young Lover's Nipple" |
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Woman with Lucky Husband. And a bunch of rocks. |
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