Welcome back:
It has been a long while since the last post, and although the post previous to this was bemoaning a lack of time, I have nothing to add other than a continuation of that lack of time. Though, not a lack of importance. We like to keep this for us and for anybody who cares to read, so that in time we can look back (we already do, to be honest) and rekindle memories and things learned along the way. We will change that soon, I promise. If you took the time to come here and check, after all this time, we owe you a post.
We have China, Malaysia, Canada, Taiwan and a little vegetarian chicken that was made of chicken-chicken mishap to share, and will do so within the next few days. Piece by piece, the pieces of the last few months will be pieced together...
peace,
Trevor
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be (Douglas Adams)
Monday, July 23, 2012
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Back to Borneo...
While I write this we are both separately tidying up loose ends in preparation for our winter vacation - we have a hefty chunk off for Chinese New Years (5 weeks, all told) and have spent the first three doggedly working. Field work, class prep, studying...all coming to a conclusion this weekend. The next 12 days will be our payment...
We intend to visit some new places, and despite this being our third trip to Borneo there are endless places yet explored (by us!). Hiking, birds and night walks through the forest will be our fodder for enjoyment...and we will stock up on Sabah tea and Tenom coffee!
So, as the whirlwind of classes and field work that will hit us upon our return will probably make updating here a tertiary priority at best for a while, we say good-bye... for a while. If we are not back in a month, call the authorities and tell them to scan the coastal forests of Borneo for two foreigners who are walking the trails in barefeet with mud soaked and leech covered clothing, mumbling random bird calls and demanding to the listening trees that AirAsia changes our return flight to any time after we find one last bird.....
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Pingxi: back in the spires
A mid-week trip (Chinese New Year holiday is just revving up....one week down, four to go) to Taipei County got a little turned on its head for us this time around. Originally we intended to stay in RuiFang, catch an early train to Pingxi and go hiking for the day among the spires and ropes in the forest. However, after leaving home around 6pm and arriving in Ruifang around 9pm we were greeted at the only hotel in town with a "sorry...no...". They were closed for the holiday and we were immediately homeless.
We cranked out as many ideas as we could muster - Ruifang is not exactly a bustling place, nor is it really near any other bustling places - that would give us a place to sleep and allow us to get into the mountains the next morning. Dry on all accounts, except for the last: Keelung to the north.
Another train, more waiting and then .... Keelung! Hotels! People! Alive!
Full. Full. Full.
One last try, one last place....and they had rooms. But we were far enough away from where we intended to go that we decided to opt out of hiking and visit the Gold Ecological Park. A memoire of Taiwans gold mining past, it was supposedly a nice place to visit. It was raining, it was cold....we checked out the brochures.....not happening. On a nice day, with bird opportunities and perhaps butterfly observation possible, ok. But not on a day like this.
Back on the train....back to Ruifang....into the mountians....
We ended up where we intended to go, it just took us a little longer to get there.
Pingxi is well known by hikers as a haven of spires to climb with formidable stairs and vertigo inducing views and climbs, but also as a mecca for lantern releases. The simplified version of this is - you buy a lantern (they are HUGE) write a wish, light it, watch it fly off up to heaven where your wishes and prayers will be answered. Obviously that doesnt happen, for no best wishes can possibly counteract the physics of reality. Namely gravity.
All within the forest surrounding Pingxi are countless....we literally lost count....piles of aged, burnt, ugly wishes and prayers of yesterday. It is abysmally depressing to see the air filled (seriously filled) with lanterns and families joyously lighting them and watching them fly away....and countering that with the wretched garbage dump that has become of the forest around Pingxi. Beautiful place to hike, nagging reminder that superstitions and faiths not only ruin minds, but pollute forests..and rivers. Pingxi is proof. Ongoing proof....
Sunday, January 22, 2012
The animals we see here....
The last week.5 have been a mix of things for the both of us, and instead of updating the specifics we will hit only the highlights - the critters of the woods.
I spent the last week in Kenting National Park doing my first fieldwork, and Crystal met me on my way home in Taitung. We ventured to Zhiben National Forest for a wee hike and some quality time with monkeys. Here is the result of a few night hikes, a rainy day hike and a chance encounter with Taiwan's macaques and birds.
L: Blue Monarch; R: Gem Faced civet
L: Bamboo Viper; R: Taiwan Habu
L: Oriolus chinensis; R: Strix leptogrammica
Snow Mountain
This past
weekend we got our chance - through a permit and a ride into the misty mountains - to stand atop Taiwan and look down at the island we call home.
Freaking surprise - rain in Yilan. Who could have imagined such a state?
Leaving the sodden Yilan train station we and 9 other "standing almost on the top of Taiwan" hikers to be made
out way into the dark valley of the central mountains. Arriving at the
trailhead at a shade after 1am we re-organized, prepared and started the 1.5 hour hike up into the hills to the first cabin. Arriving at the cabin after 2:30am we did what all high mountain adventurers do...set out our bedding, arranged out wet gear to dry during the short night ahead and guzzled water to abate the approaching high-altitude desiccation that was approaching.
Perhaps.
What we really did was drink wine.....freaking good wine at that stage of the game.
The next day (in summary) was an uphill battle through intermittent sunny breaks and spells of drizzle to the next cabin. Stunning scenery....simply stunning. Taiwan high mountains fail, yet again, to disappoint. Sub-tropical alpine madness.
We made it to the cabin, warmed ourselves (a pointless endeavour in the high mountains) and ate. Then to bed, with the altitude welcoming us with headaches and nausea. We were there...almost....we could taste it. We could feel it. I wanted to drink liquid advil and vomit because of it....
Morning came early and the altitude did not let us get away with a simple morning, but we fought through. At 3am we awoke and prepared for our trek to the peak to see the sunrise. Choking down breakfast, wanting to vomit with each bite, time ticked on until we were in line and stepping up away from the cabin to the forest and alpine ahead.
By 6:30am we were watching the nuclear furnace that we all revolve around poke above the horizon. The cold, the pain, the tiredness.....everything melted away. Taiwan sunrises are simply stunning, especially when you have to work for it.
And here follows the visual repeat of the story you just read......
Taiwan's second highest peak has for some time been off limits to our vibram soles due to a whacked permit system. At more than 3800masl it towers above the rest (save for Yu-Shan) of Taiwan and is a hidden gem among the central mountains.
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