Ribs, slow-cooking on my grill.
I've been so busy lately that I haven't had time to run around and take pictures of things. Why have I been so busy? In addition to making up grades, editing papers, and writing, my wife and I have been preparing for the arrival of my parents from the US for a two week visit, the first in my whole time in Taiwan. We're very excited.
A view from a spa.
A couple of weeks ago we went around some of the spas and B&Bs in Hsinshe and Tak-en looking for a place for my parents to stay. This spa tempted us with beautiful mountain views and rooms that were actually within shouting distance of our budget (which, it seemed, could get us precisely 27 minutes at the local love hotel).
Being a spa, the signs gave clear instructions on how to find underdressed members of each sex.
It sure looked comfy, and only 10 minutes from our house! We asked to see a room...
....and were shown this sweet looking room with the king-size bed. Nice, eh?
Well, the bed certainly was king-size -- if you were the king from Shrek. A room with two beds blew up our budget, so we headed into town and reserved a nice room in a respectable hotel, with good views of the mountains.
Seen on a student bag.
Do my students do dope? Well, if they did, it would explain a lot of things....
MOM: Dan-dan! You have to be more careful! You know how thin the pavement is in Taiwan!
SHERIDAN: Sorry, mom! Guess I don't know my own strength.
Are the artists for the Taichung city government inspired by Pizza Hut? You be the judge.
Here is a tiny temple to the earth god that was preserved when B&Q put up a store on the property. This inconspicuous religious site is a metaphor for the way religion works in Taiwan society: it is so deeply integrated into the way people think and act that foreigners have trouble seeing it, and will sometimes argue that the Taiwanese aren't religious.
I stopped at a night market on my last teaching day this semester, looking for something to eat.
A bulletin board outside a western restaurant in downtown Taichung.
Need furniture that just won't give in? Here's the place. Problem: prices are high. Sky high, in fact.
This little shrine nestles under a.....
.....gigantic old Ficus.
Between Taichung and Changhua. The smokestack belongs to an incinerator.
As the pic below shows, there's no place to scuba dive in Taichung. Which is too bad, because I'd love to learn.
Got goat?
A colorful lizard patiently posed while I adjusted my camera.
Silly traffic laws -- who needs'em anyway? I'm not going to wait patiently in line with these suckas! I'm going to jump into the opposite lane and head past the waiting line of cars. Suckas!
[Taiwan] [Taichung]
I really love your pictures Mister Turton :)
ReplyDeletebeautiful pictures! over 3 weeks, I will go back to Taiwan to visit my family in law.. really love Taiwan...
ReplyDeletegreatings from Tjeerd Pieter, Holland (Friesland)
Nice pics, Michael. Any updates on that half-built skyscraper on Gongyi Rd? What are they going to do with that thing?
ReplyDeleteVery nice pictures and commentary!
ReplyDeleteGreat pictures!
ReplyDeleteThanks guys!
ReplyDeleteThat skyscraper is indeed going to be finished. Eyesore no longer.
Michael
Nice pics!
ReplyDeleteMichael, nice pics.
ReplyDeleteMy trusty wife tells me that the name of the "Stubborn Furniture" store comes from the idiom "ζεεΊε·" which translates to "choose what is good and stick to it." Still, that's a pretty funny English name.
Jason, if you mean the building that looks like a big wing (or perhaps, a fish facing East, it's already finished.
A fish... looking east.
ReplyDeleteOf course!
(Rolling eyes)
Your wife is one sharp babe!
ReplyDeleteYeah, but the store sells clothing, not furniture. Go figure.
Michael