Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Earthquake part 2





The first earthquake was almost subtle compared to today’s quake.  You can compare and contrast between videos (and if you haven’t seen the video of the earlier quake, I’ll point out that the chandelier in this video is the *good* one of the two in our apartment...and they came with the apartment, ok?)

This quake measured 6.1 it appears. It lasted longer and started with a series of up and down movements, followed by much stronger side to side motion.  I’m not sure what if any seismic dampening this building has, but it was vibrating like a tuning fork.  The chandelier and the building seemed to find some kind of harmonic resonance as the pendulum action of the light continued to grow long after the actual earthquake seemed to have stopped.  If I hadn’t stopped it, I got the sense that it would have continued swinging for many minutes.

Unfortunately it sounds as though there was at least one fatality, and a number of people injured.  I don’t know of any significant major infrastructure damage.  I think they’ve got a pretty strong set of seismic requirements for all buildings here.  I don’t know if they shut down the high speed rail to check out the tracks and other systems, but I did see trains screaming by as I was out riding my bike this afternoon, so if it was down for inspection it didn’t last too long. 

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Make it....

....Funky!


Riding the roads of Taiwan, I often encounter funeral processions. It will be good to learn more about Taiwanese funeral traditions, because they’re obviously very different than in the US.  One thing I see regularly involves a truck with people playing drums and gongs.  Since I only hear them in passing, I don’t know if there’s a standard set of patterns/’songs’ that they play or not, but so far, most of what I’ve heard sounds cool, but pretty much the same and not too special to my ear.  But the other day, there was a funeral drum/gong truck I heard that had something that always catches my ear, no matter the kind of music - it gets called different things,  groove, pocket and even, at times FUNK.  If I hadn’t been on a divided road going the opposite direction, I would have been hard at work chasing this truck to hear more.  Sadly that wasn’t possible, but the snippet I heard was enough to make me imagine the conversation before they started to play went something like this....(but probably in Taiwanese, of course)





Monday, March 11, 2013

Well, that was fun....


First earthquake here in Taiwan... nothing too big, 5.6 or something I think.  There were plenty of earthquakes during my time in LA, and a few in Portland too, but I've never experienced one from the 22nd floor of a building.  Kinda cool sensation.


Friday, March 1, 2013

I identify with this more than I'd like to admit....

..... but I will try to redeem myself by pointing out that, fortunately, I identify with Goat too, not *just* Rat, as you might have been thinking.  This has precisely nothing to do with moving to Taiwan... I just stumbled across the scan of this strip on my computer and had to share.

Pearls Before Swine (blog), website with strip archive


Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Tale of Two Ties (Phor Phonetc Eez)


One of the reasons that Julia and I were eager to make the move to Taiwan (Tie One) is the ease and opportunity for travels around Asia.  So we hadn’t even been in Taiwan for 2 months and it was time to leave for Thailand (Tie Two as it were)... 

We wanted to get out and do something active whilst traveling, and through the miracle of the interwebs we were able to find a really great bicycle tour operator based in the Northern Thailand town of Chiang Rai www.chiangraibicycletour.com   It was a small group, just 5 of us riding.  Me and Julia, a couple from the US and a woman from Belgium.  Bee, the company owner was on the bikes with us and his brother Anek (whose name I’m most likely butchering on spelling) drove the truck with our bags and water and snacks for along the road.  This wasn’t a monster ride through the mountains kind of trip that Julia and I have done in the past, but it was a great way to get out and see the countryside and travel in a way we love.  The riding was good, a mix of mostly pavement and some dirt roads (no single track, though).  We were on mountain bikes which was good, as some roads were pretty sketchy in terms of pavement.  But a  roads department with signs this cool can get away with it....




We stopped regularly at sights along our route, like The White Temple, which was pretty amazing - it's a more contemporary take on a Buddhist Temple.  It’s still very much under construction and we had the chance to see the craftspeople at work building the incredibly ornate parts for later application to the buildings.  

Lunches and dinners were amazing - little hole in the wall places but really tasty food.  Who knew you could get such great Thai food in Thailand? There was a bicycle stage race going on while we were there - we followed some of the same routes as the race. We're thinking of going back one of these years to do it - it looks fun - some dirt, some pavement and some trail riding.


As travel goes, it was, we hope, reasonably friendly to the locals and their economy. We stayed at a cool, very eco friendly guesthouse on the banks of a river that was nice, we could feel good about that - the money was staying within the Karen Hill Tribe community.  After we left the aforementioned guest house we stopped to ride some elephants.  I was really torn by this as I have a hard time with those particular animals being in any kind of captivity - and yet, my desire to have a chance to be up close to such a magnificent, hulking animal does not come along too often - and it was already a part of the trip.  The economic piece of it was warm and fuzzy - the animals themselves are owned in shares by the members of the local community.  I just hope that they are well cared for - not knowing anything about elephant care, I couldn’t say, but I know they’re really intelligent animals and they’re pressed into a routine of repeated laps around the same walk - up the hill, around, back down, into the river, walk downstream, back on the road to the start and then either chained up to wait for the next customers or straight back out with two more people riding on their backs to do it all again (and again, day after day).  I hope that they get at least some small chance to be simply an elephant and do the elephant things that elephants do without somebody literally on their back about stuff.  As cool as it was to be that close to them - (the highlight was a rather healthy trumpet from one of them right next to us) - I won’t do it again - I know that millions more will and that many more elephants will be consigned to walking endless laps with goofy tourists on their backs, but I’ll let them do it without me I think.

There were Buddhist temples all around the countryside - sometimes in sight of one another.  Many of them had shaded spots that we used for our breaks off the bike, so in addition to visiting ‘special’ ones like the White Temple, we saw many that were comparatively more ‘average’ and yet still spectacular.  

We also stopped at an enormous happy Buddha, which was probably 30 or 35 meters high, and he was perched upon the top of a building built at the top of a hill in rather spectacular fashion - really amazing to see.



Our last day on the bikes took us to the Golden Triangle - the area where Thailand, Laos and Myanmar/Burma meet.  We took a longtail boat ride up the Mekong to right where the three countries intersect - with Thailand and Laos separated by the Mekong and Thailand and Myanmar by a much smaller river that flows into the Mekong.  After we got off the boat we walked around a little town where I spied the benches below.  The area is named the Golden Triangle at least partly due to the flow of drugs and in turn gold both in the past, and sadly, the present.  Sounds like mostly Opium in the past and more Meth today.  For Americans reading this, you’ll be happy to know that our demand for drugs in the US leads to yet another arm of our government getting out to spread goodwill around the planet, offering hard tile, er, comfy places to sit.  I guess the older ones with Nancy Reagan’s face and a word balloon saying ‘Just say no to drugs’ wore out and we replaced them with this more workmanlike model? Dunno....  But in a stroke of marketing genius, fortunately 1 of the15 or so of these that I saw had the message in Thai - so we can feel good that the message about this reward program is really getting out there, winning hearts, minds and asses with this cool blue tile pile of comfy seating.  






We worked out our travel so that we had some time in Bangkok before the start and after the finish of our time on the bikes.  Bangkok is an amazing, sprawling over the top city.  2 days of city exploring was just about right for us both - we visited the Grand Palace, a bunch of other Temples,  got held up in traffic for the King’s motorcade, hung out by the really nice pool at our hotel, ate amazing food, saw a giant lizard crawl out of a sewer drain, (he stayed under a car so I couldn’t really get a picture worth sharing - but it was nearly a meter long and bigger around than my bicep in the middle (I know, that’s a weedy cyclist/runner’s bicep, but still!)... we walked all over the city and generally relaxed.  It was a great trip!


Friday, February 22, 2013

March of the Little Guy

For your viewing pleasure, here's another in a series of photos of Little Guys (first one here) with an even more international flair - a few are from Thailand.    Here's a bit more context into the spring from which the Little Guys in Asia flow.

There's a Japanimation element to many of the Little Guys, but there's also this cuteness angle.  Which brings us to Japan again - cuteness, or 'Kawaii' is actually a 'thing' in Japan.  I stumbled across this post on BoingBoing.net.  I was fairly floored, though it's not really too inconsistent from what I see around me.   Here's what Wikipedia has to say about kawaii.  If you scroll down a bit at Wikipedia you can see a Japanese jetliner with Pokemon... EVA Airlines (one of the two Taiwanese carriers) is working hard to keep up.  Julia's actually flown on one of the (several) Hello Kitty planes and says that the interiors are all decorated with Hello Kitty.


But let's get on to some lesser known little guys, like this one, a Taiwan Postal Service Little Guy.


A Little Dairy Guy in Bangkok, just loaded with vitamin-y goodness - perhaps 55 flavors of them?


A Thai chef Hat Little Guy who is clearly happy about a good inspection rating.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

We're gonna need a bigger boat...err, living room



We looked at an apartment right across the street from this, with windows and a balcony pointed straight at it, which would have been pretty surreal...