Tag: Taipei

  • Visiting Taipei and the National Palace Museum / 台北の故宮博物院を訪れて

    Visiting Taipei and the National Palace Museum / 台北の故宮博物院を訪れて

    日本文はフォートラベルのほうをどうぞ。

    I visited Taipei last week. It was the first time I went abroad in four years, as the coronavirus pandemic beginning in 2020 had prevented people from getting in and out of borders. Since the border opened this year, I wanted to travel somewhere overseas. I chose Taiwan for this trip because I wanted to see the whole exhibition of the National Palace Museum in Taipei. I also wanted to enjoy Taiwan before it was too late due to possible unrest in Taiwan, which is likely in the near future. 

    The passport control procedure at Narita Airport was more advanced than four years ago. There were automated gates instead of passport control booths. A small scanner was in front of each gate. The procedure was to place the page with the passport photo face down on the scanner, to face up to the camera in front of the gate, and to wait for the gate to open. The gate doors opened shortly to let me go beyond. No pages of my passport were stamped. If you wanted your passport stamped, you could stop by a conventional manned booth a little further to ask for a stamp.

    There were more shops and restaurants between the passport control and boarding gates. The Tax Free Akihabara was more spacious than before. The food court provided various kinds of Japanese foods. A large souvenir shop sold light meals, travel toiletries, and Japanese art and craft products.

    The airline I took this time was Starlux Airlines, an emerging Taiwanese airline founded several years ago. It was not a so-called low-cost carrier, and in-flight meals were complimentary.

    Since the outbound flight arrived late in the evening and the return flight departed early in the morning, I decided to use a capsule hotel attached to the airport for the outbound and return flights instead of staying in Taipei City. Changing lodging night by night meant that I had to carry my luggage at all times, so instead of using a carry-on bag, I packed all of my personal effects in a 20-liter backpack, always on the move with it.

    The airplane cabin was clean, with brand-new wide seats. Flight attendants were professional, and in-flight meals were splendid. A retractable tray table, a small rack for a cell phone, and a USB port were equipped on each seat back. A touch-screen LCD on the back seat provided multilanguage information and in-flight entertainment, including movies, in-flight meal information, and various flight maps. What I liked most was the cockpit mode, which displayed our plane’s current position over the map, current heading, current altitude, and current ground speed in knots.

    The airplane flew for four and a half hours and arrived at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport at 11:30 pm, a little delayed from the scheduled arrival time. The immigration process in Taiwan didn’t change from what I’d had last time. I passed my passport to the immigration officer sitting at a booth, who scanned my index fingers’ fingerprints on the scanner in front of the booth, stamped my passport, and told me to go.

    Arriving at Terminal 1, I had to take a train to Terminal 2 to get to the capsule hotel where I would stay the night.

    Finding an ATM at Terminal 2, I withdrew NT$5,000 with my US Bank ATM card and went up to the fifth floor with the escalator nearby to go to the capsule hotel.

    I found the entrance of the capsule hotel on the left side. Entering the entrance, I saw the representative of the reception. He looked into my passport and asked me to pay NT$1,800 as the fee for that night in advance. I passed my AMEX card, but he said it wasn’t available. I paid NT$1,800 in cash because I happened to have the money withdrawn just before.

    After payment, he took me to the shoe-changing space and told me to remove my shoes and put on slippers in the locker where my room number was printed. I had to have these slippers on while I was in the hotel. He guided me to the automated door, opened it with a card-shaped room key, and let us go inside to lead me to the cell where a bed where I would sleep was installed.

    A cloth shade was the only shutter that separated each cell from the outside. The sounds of other people packing and unpacking, doors opening and closing, and even snoring could be heard, making it noisy and difficult to sleep. The bathroom was shared. A placard instructed to dispose of toilet paper in a wastebasket on the side of the toilet, not flush it after use. There was a shared shower room, but no bath towels were provided (though the receptionist would’ve lent them to me if I’d asked in advance).

    The following day, I checked out of the hotel and took the train to the Taipei’s city center.

    There are two kinds of trains: the Commuter train and the Express one. The Commuter train stops at every station to Taipei Main Station, the terminal station. The Express train is faster because it stops at only major stations and skips others. The Commuter takes one hour from the airport to the Taipei Main Station, while the Express takes just 40 minutes.

    An endless walk at the Taipei Main Station to change trains, a Red Line MRT ride to Shilin station, and a dozen-minute bus ride from the station took me to the National Palace Museum.

    The National Palace Museum in Taipei is famous for exhibiting Chinese historical masterpieces collected by the Qing Imperial Household, such as chinaware, bronze potteries, arts, calligraphy, ceramics, lacquerware, and jadeites. The two must-see items are the Jadeite Cabbage and the Meat-shaped stone.

    The exhibition areas of the National Palace Museum were too large to visit and see all the exhibits in a single day. I spent all the two days allowed for this trip and could finally see this vast collection of exhibits.

    The museum ticket was valid for one day, so even if I left the building once, I could enter again on the same day. If I wanted to have a meal during my visit, I could use the restaurant in a separate building or eat at Sanxitang, a restaurant on the fourth floor of the same building as the exhibition halls.

    I had lunch at Sanxitang because the food provided there was less expensive than that served in the restaurant in a separate building. It cost nearly NT$1,000 for what I ate for lunch, though.

    The appeal of Taiwan’s food was not limited to such fine cuisine. The food served at night market stalls was also delicious and cost less than NT$100 per dish.

    This is a rice bowl topped with fried chopped fish, squid fillets and fish paste marinated with starchy sauce. It was served at a Lin-Chiang Street Tourist Night Market stall in Xin-yi District.

    This bowl sweets consisted of ai yu jelly and xian cao jelly, topped with douhua and tapioca, and drizzled with honey. It seemed to be healthy. It was served at Ai Yu Zhi Meng You Xian Cao Ai Yu Jelly & Grass Jelly, where teenage girls seem to be the favorite customers.

    McDonald’s was also one of Taiwan’s popular restaurants. Visitors were to place their order at the large touch screen instead of going to a cashier and being asked for their order by the clerk. I ordered a Big Mac combo for dinner. The Big Mac tasted almost the same as what I ate in Japan. Coke and an apple pie tasted a bit different. An Egg Mac Muffin was a bit softer.

    While walking around Taiwan, looking around a bit, I noticed an important fact: Taiwan is a small island, but it is mountainous and has many ups and downs. It is tough to invade and occupy such a place from the outside because the islanders can easily hide from invaders, and it is easy to target them. Even if an elite army attacked in large numbers, they could hold out for several months. Chiang Kai-shek was right to flee to this island in 1949 after the defeat in the Sino-Chinese Civil War, as the Chinese Communist army had not been able to attack the island until now.

  • Returned home from Taipei

    Returned home from Taipei

    Taipei International Airport
    On the last day, I gave up sightseeing in the downtown because I had not so much time, then I went straight to the airport from the hotel.
    What I ate at the airport until the flight to Japan:
    Luroufan lunch at airport Xiaolongbao Roasted duck slices
    Luroufan, xiaolongbao and roasted duck.
    CI0106 to Tokyo
    See you again, Taiwan!
    Note: all photos taken in Taiwan are uploaded on Flickr.

  • Cell phones in Taiwan

    Cell phones in Taiwan

    The Shizilin building
    The Shizilin building in Ximending is a complex of cell phone shops, arcade game shops and a movie theater. The first floor of it has plenty of shops selling cell phones, cell phone accessories, cameras, electric devices etc., like Sincere Podium in Hong Kong. The staff doesn’t understand English, though.
    My new Nokia 6120
    I got Nokia 6120 classic at a shop in the building, just for NT$5000. When I looked into my wallet I found enough money I can afford to buy it. It supports HSDPA.
    When it comes to cell phones in Taiwan of these days, I found that Nokia wasn’t dominant. I saw not so many people used Nokia handsets. Instead, Sony Ericsson, LG, Samsung seem to be popular among Taiwan’s people. Among them, Samsung’s Anycall brand handsets were seen in many places.

  • Wanhua and Ximending

    Wanhua and Ximending

    Heping Road Street view of the Wanhua district
    It’s the Wanhua district. There are old Chinese buildings and stores in the area. I like it.

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  • Sightseeing in Taipei — Longshan Temple

    Sightseeing in Taipei — Longshan Temple

    Taipei International Airport looked as if it had been a major airport in Japan. Signs looked almost as same as those in a Japanese airport, except that they were written in traditional Chinese characters.
    If you go to the bus stop on the first floor of the airport you can catch a route 705 bus to HSR Taoyuan Station, costing just NT$30 (almost 1USD). It’s too cheap!

    There were no other passengers but me in the big double-decked bus.

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  • TAIPEI101 and Shilin Night Market

    TAIPEI101 and Shilin Night Market

    Taipei 101
    Taipei 101
    This is TAIPEI 101, which HAD BEEN world’s tallest building until Burj Khalifa was built in Dubai. It was closed to general people but employees of its tenants.
    Shilin Night Market
    It’s Shilin Night Market, one of Taipei’s famous night markets crowded for thousands of people from around. At stores of both sides of the main street clothes and wallets were sold for cheaper prices than at department stores. If you get on a branch road you have stinking stalls selling foods.
    Chicken rice
    I got chicken rice at one of the stall. It tasted nice, although stalls around there stank.

  • Going to Taipei / 台湾に行ってきます

    Going to Taipei / 台湾に行ってきます

    日本文が後ろに続きます。

    I’ll be in Taipei until next Monday to see my brother working there now. The airplane will depart in an hour. I’m typing this entry in front of the gate. Flight attendants are chatting very loudly…. Anyway I’ll enjoy being abroad because it’s been almost three years since my last trip to a foreign country.

    台湾に短期出張中の兄に会いに来週月曜日まで台北に行ってきます。この時期だと往復3万円なので中華航空にしました。大阪行くより安いですね。
    あと1時間で離陸です。搭乗口の前に座ってこのブログを書いてます。現地のスッチーたちはけたたましくおしゃべりしながら近くに座ってゲートオープンを待ってます。。。ともあれ3年ぶりの海外なので楽しんできます。

    旅行記はフォートラベルに書いています。