My first piano teacher, Grace, who was also spending some summer time in Taiwan, picked me up from the Jiantan Youth Activity Center. We first stopped at her parent's house (she lives in Toronto), and along with her parents and nephew, we headed out to Sushi Express, a Taiwanese franchise restaurant serving sushi... conveyor-belt style, aka sushi train! (It was a choice between sushi express and sukiyaki [scroll down about two thirds]; I decided to try something I've never tried before).
Her home in Taiwan is at the heart of East Taipei. Taipei 101 is visible from her window (left), though you can get a better shot just a few steps outside. The Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall (below) is in the adjacent block.
Here are a few pictures from lunch. At Sushi Express, each plate is $30 NT, just less than a dollar Canadian. I thank Grace and her family for their hospitality, and together (her parents, her nephew, herself, and I), we managed to polish off thirty plates =). After lunch, we went back to their home, and I had some "sugar apple", a rare treat I manage to try about once per visit to Taiwan.
After lunch, I was all set to return to Tainan, where I would spend most of my remaining days in Taiwan. Again, helping me around Taipei, Grace brought me to a 7-11 and bought me a ticket for the Taiwan High Speed Rail =). Good thing we got the HSR ticket in advance, as the lines in the station were very long (Friday afternoon, rush hour - I would assume so). I said goodbye and a final thanks to my former piano teacher - I'd see her again on our flights and adventures on the way back to Toronto.
The Taiwan HSR is about three and a half years old, with its grand opening taking place during my previous visit to Taiwan - but I didn't get an opportunity to ride it then. The Amazing Race, season 12, had a chance to ride it late 2007, finally in 2010, I've returned to Taiwan to see how it's like. In one word: convenient. Convenient because it's fast. Because it goes to the airport. Because it goes through the major hubs on the west coast. A major time saver, the HSR reduces travel time from Taipei to Kaohsiung by 2-3 hours, and has lightened highway traffic by 10%, and has significantly reduced the amount of air travel between the two cities (cutting the greenhouse gas emissions per person).
The video clip has not been edited in any way, showing the view
outside the high speed train as it runs at a speed of 298 km/h.
outside the high speed train as it runs at a speed of 298 km/h.
Taking the 3:00 pm train, I was at the HSR Tainan station at 16:43 (the trains run exactly on schedule. in every way unlike the TTC). The station is in the outskirts of the city, but the HSR ticket price ($1350 NT, or about $45 CAD) also covers the shuttle bus lines that run through Tainan's major roads and to its major stops, while stopping at attractions along the way, such as my Grandma's house =P. Well, maybe it's the park across the street that draws the tourists, but the bus stop is literally within 10 metres from my maternal grandma's front door =).
Within minutes, I was settled in the home that my mom, along with her brother and three sisters had grew up in, and was playing with the piano. My second aunt arrived shortly afterwards, and we headed out to have dinner with my cousin Mark, and his wife Sophia, who were married about a year ago!
Dinner was great as always. We shared some Apple Sidra, Mark's favourite drink, and soon I was back at my grandma's house, sleeping almost immediately following a busy day with only an hour of sleep to prepare for it =D.
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