Showing posts with label Nantou. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nantou. Show all posts

Monday, August 03, 2015

Climbing through the weekend

Aboriginal inhabitants? What aboriginal inhabitants? Han-centric history is just one aspect of Taiwan's Han-centric thinking.

This week did some wonderful rides out of my Taichung base, stretching my injured legs a bit. Felt good. Thursday went the length of Baguashan and down Fengbai Road into Ershui. Saturday did the awesome ride through the Nantou tea areas on the 149, 212, and 151 to the 162A with its spectacular descent. Sunday went back to an old favorite of mine, Pinglin Road. Come below the break to enjoy...

Saturday, March 07, 2015

Scootering the 投54 in Nantou

Off to Nantou on a scooter today, since I am too injured to ride (O the pain of watching other riders out on lovely lovely bikes!). Many thanks to Drew for guiding me, and to Daniel Kianka for suggesting the road. Click on READ MORE to see more...

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Just to get the flavor of central Taiwan; Courtney Donovan Smith's Roundup of our news

Kenting, four years ago.

BREAKING: Fuxing Air plane crashed in Penghu. Reports still in, but apparently of the 54 on board, 6 were sent to the hospital. 48 didn't make it.

+++++++

Courtney Donovan Smith of ICRT posted to Facebook:

My report this morning on ICRT was a laundry list of nepotism, corruption and criminal behaviour by politicians...and I only cover Taichung, Changhua and Nantou.

Son of Nantou County Assembly Speaker arrested
The son of the Nantou County’s legislative speaker has been arrested along with 8 subordinates. The 39-year-old reportedly had been running a violent racket targeting wealthy businesspeople and more frequently their rich offspring. Using his father’s name he would offer invitations, the kind you can’t refuse, for these princelings to gamble at his underground casino. The casino was rigged so the victims would always lose, which would lead to beatings, violent extortion from the rich parent--or frequently both--if the victim couldn’t pay. His father, KMT lawmaker and speaker of the Nantou County Assembly He Sheng-feng (何勝豐) distanced himself from his son, saying they were not frequently in contact. The lawmaker himself, who is currently out on bail on charges of shooting a man who was beating him up in a KTV, is suspected of also having run a violent extortion and gambling racket in the past.

Sticking with Nantou, Lee Chao-ching’s wife ends political speculation
Impeached Nantou County Commissioner Lee Chao-ching’s wife has ended speculation she would run in a legislative by-election, and launched her first campaign billboard in her run for county commissioner. The ad, prominently and somewhat oddly features the slogan ‘a new choice’. When her campaign was announced, her husband--currently out on bail pending corruption charges-- openly made clear she was running on his behalf, announcing his wife was going to carry out plans he conceived while he had had time to rest in jail. Failing to register in time to run in the KMT primary, she is running as an independent. In other similar news, the daughter of impeached lawmaker Yen Ching-piao, jailed previously on gun and corruption charges, is running for Taichung city council. Her brother is the current legislator for the area, having won his father’s seat. Like her father, she is running as an independent. She says her father has only given her one piece of advice: to lose 30 kg.

As if that weren’t enough
The cousin of the Changhua County Commissioner and a lawyer friend of his were sentenced to 1 year 8 months and 2 years respectively. The cousin was approached by the brother of the county commissioner in 2010 to use his name to purchase a property in Taipei. The cousin instead introduced him to a friend of his, a lawyer. Using money borrowed from the family and govt contractors, the property was purchased. The brother ran into a series of difficulties, including corruption allegations and receiving a nine-year sentence for stealing campaign funds from the 2012 Ma Ying-jeou presidential run. The lawyer then refused to return the property, keeping it for himself. By refusing to return it, he and the cousin received sentences for breach of trust. The county commissioner himself was not involved in the case.

Pan-green trouble in Changhua
Refusing to bow to ever-increasing pressure from the DPP and TSU, including a visit from Tsai Ying-wen and losing her TSU party membership, ex-TSU lawmaker Huang Wen-ling (黃文玲) has reiterated her determination to see the race for Changhua County Commissioner through to the end. Though running as an independent, she is expected to take away votes from the DPP, and a recent opinion poll had her support and the DPP’s Lee Wen-chung (李文忠) support combined roughly even with that of the KMT’s Lin Cang-min (林滄敏). However, the pan-blues may have trouble of their own, with the camp of KMT primary loser Ke Cheng-fang (柯呈枋) refusing to rule out running in the race as an independent. Ke vehemently accused Lin of cheating in the primary.

Taichung transportation milestones
Last week saw the trial launch of Taichung’s iBike bicycle rental system. Though initially only 3 stations with 100 bikes, it is expected to hit 60 stations and over 1500 bikes within 2 years. It was also announced that Taichung’s iBike system will be mutually compatible with Changhua’s Youbike system. In related news the Bus Rapid Transit Blue Line is scheduled to begin semi-normal operations at completed stations starting this Sunday at noon. How many stations will be complete by Sunday is uncertain, but construction does appear to be accelerating. The bulk of the buses running along Taiwan Blvd are scheduled to be effectively turned into shuttle buses to the BRT, freeing up the slow lanes.

Bamboo Union shooting
A top Bamboo Union leader, by some reports the head of the triad in New Taipei City, was gunned down at close range on Monday. The so-called temple-master was attending a banquet at a temple in Changhua’s Erlin Township when he was shot seven times at close range, killing him instantly. The baseball-capped shooter then escaped in a waiting car. Police suspect the assassins followed the gangster’s car from the north, possibly for the entire trip.

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Too bad you missed it: Alishan

This weekend I repeated a ride that Drew and I had done back in Dec of 2010, Taichung to Caoling on Day 1, then Caoling up Alishan to Fenchihu and then down to Chaiyi city on the glorious 159甲 on Day 2. The ride up Alishan and down the 159甲is one of the loveliest on the island and I had long wanted to repeat it. But there was a problem: on that ride, I was pretty wiped out after the climbing on Day 1 and had to walk a long stretch of the brutal 169 on Day 2. This time I was determined not to fail. I had the 11-32 cassette on my bike (I have a SRAM Apex groupset) swapped for an 11-36. With a 50-34 compact dual up front, this gave me a 34/36 for a climbing gear. Last weekend I tested it: could I spin more and go up hills more easily? It seemed so. Bring on Alishan!

A gazillion pics in this post. Click on READ MORE below to see them. Drew's wonderful posts on the ride may be accessed here.

Sunday, July 08, 2012

In Jiji with FTV: Chinese version

...and for your edification and enjoyment, on the road with Michella and FTV in Jiji, this version in Chinese.
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Saturday, July 07, 2012

With FTV in Jiji, Nantou

Ok, here's the Jiji segment of my travels with FTV two weeks ago (pix).
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Sunday, May 06, 2012

Riding Sun Moon Lake

Great day Saturday. In the morning some old students of mine put together a ride around Sun Moon Lake. In the afternoon I drove up to Hsinchu for an impromptu farewell party for Jim Boyden of Sponge Bear as he is leaving Taiwan. Nothing like spending the whole day with wonderful people having a great time.

We stayed in the Taipower dorm 388.30 meters above Shuili town in ErPing Bing Dian, just outside of Sun Moon Lake.

In the morning we all breathed a sigh of relief as we had fog and clouds but no rain. Looked like it was going to be a beautiful day. Click on READ MORE to continue....

Monday, June 13, 2011

Awesome Nantou 63

I did some really great riding this weekend. Saturday I went up to Guguan, always an enjoyable ride. Sunday I drove down to Shuili with Drew of Taiwan in Cycles and another friend, Andrew, and rode a little loop out of Shuili -- up 131 and over to 21, around the corner of Sun Moon Lake to Ita Thao (Dehua Village), then south out of Dehua Village on Nantou 63 back to 16 and Shuili (map).

The picture above I took from a scenic spot on Nantou 63. It utterly fails to do justice to one of the most beautiful moments of my life: after lunch in Dehua Village, we followed the switchbacks up Nantou 63 to 800 meters, surmounted the ridge above Sun Moon Lake as it began to rain, and then beheld the utter glory of Taiwan at its most beautiful, the interplay of gentle light and rainy cloud in the deep mountains framing a classic alpine descent of switchbacks through farm, forest, and field down to Route 16 and the Choshui River. Pure biking heaven.

Just knew the day would be good; the mountains were as clear as I have ever seen them as we drove down Highway 3 to Shuili.

In Shuili a peanut seller was out harvesting sales in the early morning.

Andrew readies for the ride.

131 sweeps north out of Shuili past the reservoir. The grade is not difficult and the views across the betel nut covered slopes of Nantou are splendid.

After farms comes a national forest.

Tunnel on 131 in the land of betel nut trees.

The rain and cool skies meant lots of critters out and about.

On 131 nearing 21 just below Sun Moon Lake. In this area the B&Bs and other tourist stuff begins.

Taking a break at Sun Moon Lake after climbing 21.

Dehua was overrun with tourists, as always.

After lunch and coffee in Dehua, we turned south onto Nantou 63 and began climbing the switchbacks out of the basin of Sun Moon Lake. There are excellent views over the lake on this side. Soon it began to drizzle.

Not everybody was hiding from the rain.

Coming over the other side, we found ourselves among the great peaks of central Taiwan.

I didn't take many pics on this downhill, roughly 7 kms of switchbacks through the mountains, farms, and fields of central Taiwan. Just rolled slowly down, soaking it up. If it had just been the terrain, you might say "Whoa, awesome." Or if it had been the switchbacks, you might say, "Whoa, awesome." But together, the effect was amazing, especially on that day with the clouds and the light and the rain. Put Nantou 63 on your list, it is in a class by itself.

At last we reached the bottom, and 16.

Andrew rests at the bottom among the peaks lining the river.

Drew waits out a cloudburst at a betel nut stand.

Back to Shuili along 16.

Looking back toward the imposing ranges of central Taiwan. What a wonderful ride. Hope your Sunday was as enjoyable as mine!

ADDED: Drew's excellent account.
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Don't miss the comments below! And check out my blog and its sidebars for events, links to previous posts and picture posts, and scores of links to other Taiwan blogs and forums! Delenda est, baby.

Sunday, November 07, 2010

Riding the Stimulant District


Saturday it was time for my monthly Century (100 miles) ride. Drew suggested we ride down 3 in central Taiwan and ride 149 just to see what was there. The result was a rewarding ride through the tea, coffee, and betel nut district of south-central Taiwan.

We met up in southern Taichung, where the size and number of the political advertisements are growing geometrically as the election approaches. It looked like it might rain, but the rain never really materialized, and in the afternoon we even got some sun.

We hit 149 in a couple of hours.

Going south down a long river gorge, 149 is bordered on its west side by the sheer gravel and rock faces common in central Taiwan.

Such as this one, for example.

Great views throughout the trip.

Shortly after we entered 149 we ran across this old temple. It had been built in the Qing Dynasty, Drew told me later. He found some interesting tombs nearby from plains aboriginal soldiers who had died in WWII. More on his blog later, I hope.

Along the roadside stood tombs of plains aborigines. It was an interesting mix of religions.

We soon entered an area of low-altitude tea farms.

Like this one.

Tea plants.

The road began climbing, yielding enjoyable views over the river vally.

Tea farms lined the roadside.

In the distance, tea pickers at work.

The Man in Black explores a side road.

Plenty of little villages lined the road.

Drying tea leaves.

Taking a photo op break.

We stopped by some tea pickers close to the road.

Watching the foreigner with the camera.

"What if this thing goes off?" a friend captioned this photo.

Tea pickers at work.

A coffee plant.

Another photo op break.

The mountains were coated with haze and fog. Can't wait to ride this when it is clear.

A bend in the forest.

Tea farms tumbling down the terraces to the river.

Near the turn for 158 there is a suspension bridge just off the road.

From the suspension bridge.

Gone fishing.

We climbed on 158A through forest for a couple of kilometers, not a car in sight......

Before winding up in the tea farms again.

Near the top.

We rolled down 149A back to Douliuo, a wonderful ride which I took no pictures of because I was having too much fun, then it was lunch and back on 3 to Taichung.

Along the way Drew took me on a nifty little diversion along 141 and 152 to Mingjian where we picked up 3 again.

It is really a pretty little ride, well worth the couple of extra kilometers.

The Formosan macaque research center near Mingjian.

Alas, it was back to dull, betel-nut-girl-and-auto-repair Rte 3 in Mingjian. Both Drew and I consider missionary proselytization a great evil, and in Mingjian we ran into a couple of Mormon missionaries spreading their centralized authority worship and securing new income streams for their organization. The encounter with that peculiarly Mormon combination of smug colonialism and arrant ignorance left an ugly taste in our mouths, but soon afterward we fell in with a group of Taiwanese guys on mountain bikes. The switch from the loony authority-worshipers to a bunch of sane, rational, good-humored intelligent Taiwan folks out for a Saturday ride was a life-affirming one, and we-renergized for the long ride home with a good-natured race down 3.

A wonderful ride! I'm a slow rider, but despite the climbs I kept up a good speed for me, averaging 20.2 kms/hr over the entire 166 kms. The entire area from 149 on south through Meishan and down to Alishan is surpassingly lovely and is highly recommended. Looking forward to spending more time there this fall, and hope to see you on the road soon!

ADDED: Drew's post on our ride.

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Daily Links
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Don't miss the comments below! And check out my blog and its sidebars for events, links to previous posts and picture posts, and scores of links to other Taiwan blogs and forums! Delenda est, baby.