Sunday, November 18, 2007

What a week!!

We've been here a week and getting more and more familiar with the city each day and more comfortable at restaurants with each meal. The weeks events included a trip to the Taiwanese Democracy Memorial Hall (previously known as the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall), a few days visiting with our UW Professor and friend Jeff Berman, a NCREE outting to the Yingko district of Taipei County known for its ceramics then to an amazing lunch followed by a trip to the natural hot springs, and then the weekend was packed with the annual Chiang Kai-shek Cup Rugby Tournament.

This is the shot of the entry arches to the Memorial pavilion. The place is huge and includes the National Theatre and the National Concert Hall. Large groups of highschool age Taiwanese come to the Halls to use the reflection from the front entry way to practice choreographed dances.




Later that night on a quest to find a pub we had read about in our book, we met a guy named Wei who was born in California and graduated from UC Santa Cruz and now owns a restaurant called California Grill. Turned out we were looking for a bar that had been closed for over a year. He did set us straight about where to get a good beer and which places were a bit seedy. At least now we've gotten that crucial item under control we can focus on keeping our bellies full and smiles on our faces. We've stumbled a bit at this and had a tough night on Wednesday while trying to order from an absolutely no-English speaking waiter by only pointing to the pretty pictures. I could tell we were in trouble when the waiter, who was sweating profusely, motioned to change our order. I still don't know what we ate and felt terrible about not being able to finish our plates (considered rude to be wasteful).

The next day our Professor Jeff Berman at UW arrived to give a presentation to NCREE regarding research topics (Buckling Restrained Braces and Eccentrically Braced Frames). Jeff is a great guy and was equally excited to be exploring Taipei as we've been. Here's a couple of shots of us emersed in the Shida Night Market near the National Taiwan Normal University (sweet name, right?).



Lucky for all of us, our timing of being here allowed us to be included in NCREE's annual employee outting. KC Tsai, the director of the facility, invited us to come along on friday for a day at the Ceramics Museum, a family style lunch, and to the Great Roots Hot Springs Resort. About 60 of us, staff and family, got there early to board the busses. These things were plush.



I can't say I would have seeked out a ceramics museum but this place turned out to be pretty cool. The real treat was that this part of town is known for its ceramics and has "Old Street" that is loaded with small shops selling an array of hand crafted pieces for prices that could only be described as comical. Here are some highlights...











Our lunch has been the best meal we've had since getting here. It was a family style meal where the center of the table spins and they bring out large serving trays of different courses that we all share. I think we had 8 or 9 courses that included sushi, lobster, crayfish, clams, shrimp, fish, chicken, crab, fruits, veggies, beer and juices. Every course they brought out, our table would "oooooo" and "aaaahhhh" and then we'd devour it. Incredible.




Okay. So they brought out this one dish. It doesn't look like something you'd normally find in the local QFC or Stop and Shop. We asked our friend Jay Lin, a PhD graduate from Illinois Champange-Urbana, what it was and he looked up the translation on his blackberry but laughed and said, "I'll tell you after you try it". We figured it was "chicken" so with a little pressure from the locals, Kelly and myself both tried one and Jeff willingly ate two. I'll let you all think about it for a minute or two and can see if you're right about what it is at the end.



We then headed into the hills outside the city to the Great Roots Hot Springs. I personally wasn't aware of this, but the Taiwanese are bringing back spandex bathing suits. Who would have thought?







Yeah, this friggin' thing was right off the hiking trails behind the resort. Bigger than your hand!! Yes. I did scream and run away like a little girl.


Before leaving Seattle my buddy Nigel with Valley RFC hooked me up with a contact of the Taipei Baboons RFC made up of ex-pats from all over the world (New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, England, Ireland, Canada, Sweden, Japan and the US). I trained with these guys on Thursday night and lucky enough was offered a starting spot for the tournament. The teams we faced were from Taiwan Phys. Ed., a school dedicated to athletics. The local rugby players are aboriginal Taiwanese and are built more like Polynesians rather than the Chinese. A large number of them represent the national 7's and 15's side. We won the first day 19-17 but lost in the final on Sunday 26-0.

Ball at the back of a scrum



Tap down from a line out



Tempers ran high at times.




Kicking to secure the win (I'm second on the right of the kicker)



2nd Place



Kiwi Bernie was nice enough to invite Kelly and I over after Saturday's match where we got to hang with his kids Jet and Emilene.





We even found ourselves at a house party by the end of the night. It was an American's house party, but none the less.



The weather has turned a bit here and we've been getting light rain. We've got tentative plans to hit the east coast next weekend. Beaches are suppose to be gorgeous and there's a marble gorge that I've been told is incredible.

Oh yeah. Testicles. We ate a chicken testicle. I don't know how I feel about that but then I think how Jeff Berman ate two and it doesn't make me feel so bad. Haha!!

Compai! ("Cheers" in Mandarin...pronounced com-pay)

Jake

2 comments:

Charles River Rugby said...

Hey Jake! Great blog. It looks all too familiar.....i'll probably be headed out to again in January.

If you want to hit up a good bar/dance club try Luxy.
www.luxy-taipei.com

All the best,

Mike Fair

bdoepker said...

Between the huge spiders and the chicken testicles, I think it's safe to say you guys are dealing with more culture shock than I am.

Did you know that Swedish Fish aren't called Swedish Fish over here!?! I'm still getting over that.

Have a happy Thanksgiving over there.