Posts Tagged ‘Taiwan’
Alishan (Ali Mountain) is the most famous scenic spot which is formed by Dawu Mountain range, Jian Mountain, Zhu Mountain and Ta Mountain. 18 large mountains, stretching from Nantou to Jiayi in two counties. It takes 4 hours by mountaineering train from Jiayi County to reach Alishan scenic spot. There are connected mountain peaks low and high, streams and ponds. Vertical and horizontal in the area, which have not only utter danger of sheer precipices and overhanging rocks, but also the elegance of flying waterfall in deep valleys. The highest peak is 2663 meters above sea level. The mountain is well known to the whole world for its four beautiful scenes of mystical tree, oriental cherry, a sea of clouds and sunrise, thus goes the saying; “Those who haven’t been to Alishan can not know the beauty of Taiwan.” Read the rest of this entry »
On the street, the thought of a walking tour in Taiwan may not seem like the best, or safest, of ideas. But it seems to work in Tainan, Taiwan’s fourth largest city located in the southwestern part of the island, where things move just a little bit slower than they do in Taipei or Kaohsiung.
The Tainan walking tour is the brainchild of Lily Pi, a Tainan businesswoman whose family runs the Asia Hotel in the city’s former night market area. Pi, who graduated from the city’s National Cheng Kung University and has been a caterer from the time, as she puts it, her mother was expecting her, wanted to find a way to combine her two loves of history and food. She came up with the walking tour idea because she felt that much of Taiwan’s old culture, beliefs, and customs were disappearing in the island’s rapid industrialization and modernization. Read the rest of this entry »
The exquisite locales and a colorful heritage of Taiwan draw in millions of tourists every year. Scenic beauty however, is definitely not the only attraction of the island, and the tourists here delight in the unique shopping experience that Taiwan presents. Taiwan is in fact, a shopper’s paradise and every city in the island has numerous shopping malls and alleys that sell a variety of national and international products. Taipei is especially famous for the host of options it presents to its shoppers.
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Taiwanese are proud of their tea-producing tradition. Just about all visitors to Taiwan will at some time in their stay be offered a small cup of steaming, golden oolong tea. It is fit, then, that Taiwan should be the location of what is reputed to be the world’s largest tea museum–the Pinglin Tea Industry Museum, which opened on January 12, 1997. The museum, located in the green hills of Pinglin in Taipei county, took eight years and US$10 million to complete.
Visitors can enjoy a refreshing cup of tea at the museum’s tea house.
“Pinglin has over a century of experience producing tea,” says Mayor Huang Ming-feng, whose family has planted tea in the area for five generations. Paochung teaan aromatic, sweet-tasting brew is the type of tea most commonly grown around Pinglin. “The quality of our paochung tea has steadily improved,” continues Huang. “It is the most fragrant tea available.” Read the rest of this entry »
Taiwan is practically a paradise for the shoppers, and every city of the island has fantastic shopping malls that promise to satisfy every taste and requirement. Shinchu in Taiwan houses one of the largest malls in the island. The Windance Shopping Centre in Shinchu is indeed a huge complex that occupies a giant floor area of one hundred and two thousand square feet and ranks close in size to the Living Mall in Taipei. Located in Zhongyang Road, the mall is a complete entertainment arena with its restaurants, cinema hall, theme park and a variety of stores. Read the rest of this entry »