I’m leaving Shanghai with my bike in 3 weeks. At least 10 hours of Chinese classes a week until then…I’ve gotten over a grammar hump! To top that off I can read and “type” now too. Yae for me.
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Back in China
Photos from the tour will be up soon.
We left Taipei on Feb 28th and completed the route on March 11th. It was wet, windy, and heck of fun.
Upon our return that weekend, the devastating disaster hit Japan. Being in Taiwan, a Japanese friendly country (unlike another very unsympathetic place) we watched the news unfold right before our eyes. There are at least 10 Japanese news stations and we would stop in the street, or subway, and just look in horror at the tv. By Tuesday I couldn’t watch anymore. What I saw on those was horrific.
Jason moves back to the US on the 30th, I am staying with some friends in Gubei, working non stop…saving every single rmb to get on the road by the end of the month.
My latest publication of photos can be seen here.
Day 11 (and the end): Dalin to Taipei 第十一天:大林道台北
A too long of a day, too much rain, too much cold, too much wind, and we rode in the dark (with rain) for nearly 3 hours. Not smart but we just wanted to get this over with. I hate being wet…it’s one thing I really really hate. When I’m touring solo I always sit out the rain if I can. There’s nothing like soggy feet and and wind/wet chilled digits.
Oh, speaking of digits (fingers)…the night before Jason and I flew back to China he gave me an engagement ring. After 6 years, living in 2 countries, a few thousand kilometers riding…we decided to commit to “Team Awesome”.
Day 10: Běigǎng to Dàlín 第十天:北港到大林
We’ve almost made it back to Taipei. Making our days as long as possible because, frankly, we are both a little tired of the crappy weather and look forward to the luxuries of Taipei. Although our destination had a pretty good night market…we got this tuna burrito of sorts and I also gobbled down a bag of popcorn.
Day 9: Kaohsiung to BeiGang 第九天:高雄到北港
The West Coast of Taiwan has a lot more going on than the East Coast, although I prefer the solitude and beauty of the Eastern shore.
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It's very difficult finding accomodations in Taiwan. I think one reason it being that the country is so small that you can drive the island in 2 days. The hotels are generally over priced and sometimes you have to call a phone number to find the place and talk to the laoban. For this place, we drove well into the night. We were really racing for sunlight towards the end and found ourselves in a crab shucking village without a hotel around. Our first attempt here, Bodi Bear, we declined because of the price. We drove an additonal 5 Km to another weird hotel that was sold out. So we went back to Bodi, where Jason and I had a little run in with each other...don't ride at night folks. Luckily our bikes were okay, and so were we. It turned out that we got the second to last room at Bodi Bear.
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Our own private garage that I would of been completely content just sleeping in one of these for the night. weird hotels.
Day 8: Kending to Kaohsiung 第八天:墾厅市到高雄市
PUPPY LOVE!!!!!
Puppies are plentiful in Taiwan…random little adorable pups. We actually travel with cans of dog food just for this reason. Jason had to use his hands to scoop and lost his cycling gloves in the process. My first visit in 2007, to Taiwan, we took a short trip to Kending and Jason and I walked the streets at night feeding the pups hot dogs and then I found the cans of dog food at 7-11’s.
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Day 7: Rest Day 第七天: 休息吧!
After this Taiwan tour I have decided that writing will be very minimal for now on. I’m getting the swing of things, to tell my story and remember these moments with photos. I’m not a writer, I’m not a cyclist…I’m a PHOTOGRAPHER! that happens to be on a very tight budget and decided to use a bicycle. I have about 4 journals full from my previous 7600km and not one word written for Taiwan. Now for the next 8900km…journals of photos. Promises.
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Surf Fishing. I didn't see them catch anything the entire time I watched. It reminded me of the times fishing with my dad. I know my parents would love to visit Taiwan...I think it's the perfect country.
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For those of you that know Jason, you may suspect that is a bag of beers. No, it's dog food. Taiwan has an amazing amount of wild dogs. Usually in the areas with more humans, they are quite friendly and of your household variety breed. We had seen a very very skinny puppy walk down the beach so we went back to buy some cans. We were trying to track it down by the paw prints but no luck.
Day 5: Yuli to Beinan 第五天:玉里镇到卑南
Lots of rain, cold, and just a really sore butt.
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I could really go for some 'nan'er puddin' with extra nilla wafers. If you don't understand, you don't understand Southerners.
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Day 4: Heping to Yuli 第四天:和平到玉里镇
It’s always wet and at one point I’m cycling at 9km/hour on level ground because my chain is slipping all over my rear cassette. I can’t apply any pressure what so ever. To add to it all, we’ve got wind and my feet are soaking wet. Seriously. What saved my a$$ this day was the sweet pair of Swrve knickers I have. Kept the chill at bay.
And of course, we are racing against night fall. What’s new? Jason gets a little irritated with my Tropic of Cancer photo shoot. Literally we have 20 minutes to no light.
Day 4: Heping to Yuli 第四天:和平到玉里镇
Taiwan Tour 2011
如果你在中国拟不可以看。你需要用 “VPN”, 不好意思。
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