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There was a huge heroin drug bust yesterday. Folks were openly doing lines of K on the tables and bar. There was a completely naked girl giving lap dances. Ever been to those slot machine parlors? They used to be more common in Taipei county, but not so much anymore. Ever been there at am? Tweekers, all of them. Did you know they sell little lightbulbs at Why would they carry it? Because they sell out and fast… Especially in the middle of the night. You have to know where to look and what to look for. The OP traveled around Taiwan and made some superficial observations. I have said this once already. Kaikai34 just said it. Think about it OP — we are not making this up. I think that qualifies as a problem…. Regarding other cultural stuff that was posted, what about gambling? What about affairs? Again, very common. These are two counter-examples to the cultural argument given before. It took me about 2 seconds to think of them. There are no real safety or vandalism or public nuisance or begging or shoplifting or violent robbery problems. You can make a crack pipe out of a coke can. Its much easier than the lightbulb thing, any crackhead knows that. Maybe this is why they sell coke cans? Those little, tall skinny ones would be excellent actually. Then a bendy straw is connected to the hole which goes into a small Yakult bottle filled with water. Another bendy straw comes up out of the bottle and voila. Pretty ingenious if you ask me. Partially correct. The light bulb IS used for meth rather than crack. With cocaine going for around 10k a gram, one would have to be a multi-millionaire to sustain a crack habit here. I see recently used insulin syringes every day on my walk to work and back. Lying in cute little clusters at the entrances to alleyways. I know people who live in taiwan and taiwanese who live in the u. So now you admit that Taiwan has a drug problem contrary to the title of this thread? Does it really take pages and pages of anecdotal evidence from news sources, government publications, and people who actually live in this country to assure readers that there is a drug abuse problem here? It is just common sense that any area with access to illicit, illegal drugs will have individuals who use and abuse them? Taiwan is an island, has harsh penalties for drug trafficking, and is a densely population nation where secrets are hard to hide. Thus, there is naturally less access to illicit substances and use of such substances is forced underground, far from the curious gazes of tourists. The observation of one tourist that there are no evident signs of drug abuse is hardly surprising and barely deserves mention. From my experience: 1 as far as I can recall, it was the Chinese who introduced opium to the world on a large scale and 2 the rates for tobacco and alcohol abuse seem relatively higher in Taiwan than in the Western nations that I have visited. However, these observations are based only on my admittedly limited personal experience. In the s, sporadic cases of glue sniffing were reported, and, in the s, incidences of sedative abuse were occasionally uncovered. By the early s, the drug of choice was amphetamines and heroin. Although there were fewer than 9, addicts in the Taiwan area in , it is estimated that more than , people or nearly 1 percent of the total population are currently abusing at least one substance, primarily methamphetamine or heroin. It was said to be enough heroin to serve 10, addicts for a full year. The year saw a record volume of drug seizures. The authorities seized 1, kilograms of heroin, morphine and marijuana, and 3, kilograms of methamphetamine, up percent and 17 percent respectively from In fact, there were more heroin seizures in than in the previous nine years combined, and the amount seized in was a fold increase over the level in No one can say exactly how many people use drugs in Taiwan today. But police observations and inmate confessions support an assumption that law enforcement actions reach 20 percent to 25 percent of the users. But the public health community has higher estimates, , or more. Whether , or ,, the size seems large enough to consume not only the huge amount of drugs seized but also those not seized. In the last 15 months, drug users have tended to shift away from methamphetamine to either heroin alone or a mixed use of heroin and methamphetamine. In sum, narcotic drugs from Southeast Asia and mainland China have invaded Taiwan in an unprecedented fashion. I know someone who I think used to be a heroin junkie… plus I have seen a few ex or current junkies when I was doing my military time. Also like people have said, seems the more common illegal drugs here are K and ecstasy, at least at clubs. I have personally not been exposed to illegal drugs at all, both in Taiwan and in the US. In this case the title seams to be adequate. By the way Taiwan has a huge problem with addiction. People here are very compulsive. Just watch their shopping habits and think these items were drugs. There is a huge number of young people here sniffing glue and all kinds of nasty shit. I know a high school here in Taipei were the students have to give urine samples from time to time. And their favourite English vocabulary was Amphetamine. The situation in Taiwan is getting worse in terms of drug use — skyrocketing is the word that should be used. The government has admitted it is a serious problem and they are actually trying to prevent further escalation. I know pot is a much bigger deal in taiwan than it is in the u. Your Asian American population argument is idiotic: China, which has a bigger drug problem than the US, is a country in Asia. There are Chinese Americans. They can be called Asian Americans, as well. So, how could it be culture? Chinese people use drugs! I tried to explain this earlier, but you decided to ignore it in favor of thinking in absolute terms. I lived in the US for 24 years. I am white. I am from a lower income family. Drug use has not been an issue for me ever in any way. All of my friends growing up were clean. This is all anecdotal, of course, but you are exaggerating the problem in the US. And yes, alcohol is a drug. In overall rankings from , Taiwan is ranked just under the US. China is ranked first with more than double that of the US. Organized crime here operates worldwide. Taiwan and lack of a drug problem Taiwan Living in Taiwan. I think that qualifies as a problem… Regarding other cultural stuff that was posted, what about gambling? Chris August 24, , pm Choosing a nightclub in Taoyuan is like choosing Compton to represent the whole of the US. Gambling is part of Chinese culture. Seriously what are you on about? Confuzius August 24, , pm No, they sell those light bulbs because people use them as…well, lightbulbs. Meth smokes easier than crack, which would, urm, crack the thin light bulb. BigJohn August 24, , pm Hamletintaiwan August 25, , am The threads title makes me wonder. Have I all these years misinterpreted the meaning of lack?

A Road Trip Through Taiwan's Hot Springs and Tea Plantations

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Asia Chevron. Taiwan Chevron. With a toot of its horn and a metallic screech, the Alishan Forest Railway rumbles out of Chiayi, a midsize city in southern Taiwan. As the humid jumble of roaring motorcycles and bubble-tea shops vanishes behind me, knotted electrical wires make way for betel nut plantations and clotheslines in small-town backyards that straddle railroad tracks first built for loggers. The train , a popular attraction that brings travelers up and down the mountains, sputters through rice paddies and citrus orchards so close I can almost reach out and nab the fruits from my window. Bamboo and sugar palms tickle the sides of the train. As we coil higher toward the peak, around Z-shaped bends and through mossy tunnels, the views become desaturated until they finally fade behind a veil of cold fog held up by ancient red cypress trees whose cobra-size roots cover the ground like noodles in soup. My journey to the mountain resort of Alishan is a two-hour slideshow of kaleidoscopic green that sums up the diversity of Taiwan—through tea plantations and high-altitude forests dotted with colorful Buddhist temples. This is a land where a traveler can go from tropical coast, through soaring mountains, to dense woodlands in under two hours—part of the appeal of exploring this eggplant-shaped nation less than half the size of Ireland. Alishan is one of my favorite stops on a road trip through the country, beginning in the capital, Taipei , in the north; continuing through some of the nine national parks full of hot springs, waterfalls, gorges, and evergreen tropical rain forest; over cloud-shrouded mountaintops; and on to the surf and crystalline beaches of the far south. Taiwan has been close to my heart since I first came, in , wide-eyed on an eight-month gap-year jaunt around Asia. My guide was a girl named Etty, whom I'd first contacted via Couchsurfing and met for an innocent coffee in Bangkok to share travel tips she was planning to visit my home country of the Netherlands. We happened to be in Taiwan at the same time, and I ended up meeting her parents in the country's second city of Taichung —a town of skyscrapers and steaming, neon-glowing night markets—because that's what happens in a place where family is everything. We crisscrossed the Taroko National Park on a scooter and were soon planning trips through Japan, Cambodia, and Sri Lanka, while it dawned on us that this was more than a holiday fling. We moved back to Bangkok together and are now married with a one-year-old who has a Taiwanese middle name and a Dutch last name. Visiting Taichung two or three times a year, I've come to see it through my wife's eyes—as a home of sorts, a place for crammed dinner tables and kaoliang toasts to Popo, Etty's late grandmother, who steadfastly refused to believe I wasn't American. Over Auntie Chao's beef noodle soup, which she makes like clockwork every two weeks, my father-in-law sometimes gets misty-eyed talking about the sunrise over Yushan, Taiwan's highest peak, or the volcanic landscapes, cherry blossoms, and bubbling waterfalls of the Yangmingshan National Park, on Taipei's northern fringe. A retired forestry official, he helped found some of the country's national parks and was posted to many of its wilder corners. He'll remind us that 60 percent of the country is covered in forest, and that it was for good reason that Portuguese sailors christened it Ilha Formosa, or Beautiful Island, when they washed up here in the 16th century. Taiwan was variously held by the Dutch, Spanish, and mainland Chinese until it was invaded by the Japanese in The new rulers went about building railroads, tunnels, and factories, turning Taiwan into a supplier for Japan's booming industry until they were ousted after World War II. Chiang Kai-shek, the Chinese Nationalist leader who fled the newly Communist mainland in to set up a stronghold in Taiwan, envisioned a Confucian society with respect for the past, along with a Western-friendly form of capitalism. Even as the country emerged as one of the four Asian Tigers, the genteel culture he nurtured has endured. I feel the Japanese influence at Jiufen, one of my first stops, a seaside town in the lush mountains east of Taipei. Its teahouses on the hillsides and lantern-lined alleyways were mostly built by Japanese gold seekers in the late 19th century. Today, the majority of visitors are still Japanese, though they largely come because Jiufen inspired the setting in Spirited Away, Hayao Miyazaki's surreal animated reverie. From the summit I look across rolling meadows to a lone octagonal pavilion on a distant jagged mountaintop, like a dragon's back plummeting into the ocean. In the valley behind me are the crumbling remnants of a Japanese Shinto shrine; beyond, the deep-blue nothingness of the East China Sea. Wherever you are in Taiwan, temples are never far. Their crowns jut from suburban neighborhoods and far-flung forests, topped with spiraling multicolored dragons, phoenixes, and intricate scenes dancing from one gabled roof to another. Every feather, every scaled claw, every sun-pointing whisker is painstakingly created from smashed-up plates and tiles, an ancient southern Chinese craft that has withered on the mainland in tandem with religion. In Taiwan, Taoism, Buddhism, Christianity, and curious folk customs have flourished together. We drive to Shitoushan, 90 minutes southwest of Taipei, passing verdant rice paddies and one-street townships of shacks covered in bougainvillea, where women in tartan bucket hats hawk plump pomelos and football-size cabbages from the backs of pickup trucks. Our home that night is the Taoist Quanhua Temple, a sprawling mess of staircases, pagodas, and ceramic cranes built into a sandstone cliff face. I step onto my balcony to find the sky a shade of gold, the air sweetly fragrant from smoldering joss sticks. The valley echoes with chirping crickets and the mumbling of prayer, interrupted only by the occasional clang of a gong. Somewhere in the distance, I hear a wail. Leaving the temple to trace its source, I discover a little shrine half-embedded in a cave up the hill. Another scream. A woman clad in a pink tracksuit is having a crying fit in front of the altar. Finally, I glean that the woman is hearing otherworldly voices. South of Shitoushan, the Central Cross-Island Highway cuts through Taiwan's lush inland and connects the populous west with the wild east, through the peaks and gorges of the Taroko National Park, eventually arriving at the Qingshui Cliff, 13 miles of forested bluffs that plunge almost vertically into the jewel-blue Pacific. We stop at the Tunnel of Nine Turns viewpoint, where Korean, Thai, and Japanese voices mingle with the hypnotic gurgle of waterfalls feeding into the gorge from thousands of feet above. Swallows sweep in and out of cliffs that are like layered cakes of swirling marble, topped with wild jungle. Below me the Liwu River rages around mammoth boulders, as it has for millions of years. Deeper inland, it is just us and the road, silent black tunnels opening into muffled bamboo forests or curious villages smothered in moss. Wang, the driver for this section of the trip, occasionally breaks the silence to talk of Formosan black bear encounters, boar-hunting trips, and ambushes by wild macaques. One story is halted by the sound of a gunshot in the distance. As we rise and the pressure increases on our eardrums, needles replace tropical foliage. Conifer-covered peaks huddle like giants with hairy backs. The road finally reaches Sun Moon Lake, Taiwan's largest body of water. We pull into a nondescript restaurant to eat beef noodles at circular Formica tabletops, tube lights reflecting in the soup's oily film. When they end the only sound is the gently lapping waves. South of the lake we stop to visit one of the region's tea plantations, which grows oolongs prized like Champagne. Between two of thousands of neat lines of shrubs, we meet a troupe of tea pluckers in traditional hats draped with colorful Hello Kitty-emblazoned cloths. A man in his 50s with a tar-black betel nut smile waves us closer, showing me a razor blade taped to his gloved index finger. Only the freshest leaves, the highest quality. Heading south, a different Taiwan emerges, one I remember from my first journey, though the memories have become hazy as an old photo. The dialects are trickier than the crisp Mandarin up north, the food sweeter. Everywhere seems to bathe in a permanent golden glow. We stop at a giant fiberglass pineapple, manned by a chirpy woman in a frayed straw hat and rubber boots. I can barely finish one tongue-tingling slice before another is in my hand; as we try to pull away, she rushes out with three bottles of pineapple juice. The next morning we arrive in Dulan, a surf town three-and-a-half hours south of Taroko where windswept palms fill the plains between the sea and mountains. Mom-and-pop shops alternate with surf schools and hippieish hostels on the main strip. Wrinkled shopkeepers bask on front porches. The Six Senses group is rumored to be opening a resort in the nearby mountains dotted with hot springs. Nothing ever does. But, sitting on the black sand beach east of Dulan, watching the surfers who have clambered through sweetsop plantations to paddle out to the roiling swells, I feel that happy sense of otherness I felt during my first trips here. Taiwan still feels different from the rest of Asia. It may have become a home of sorts, but it remains somewhere else entirely. Japanese brand Hoshinoya , which specializes in deep-nature minimalism, opened its first Taiwan outpost in the tiny hot-spring enclave of Guguan last summer, surrounded by 10,foot-tall mountains. The property, all bamboo forest and right angles, has 50 rooms, each with its own mountain-fed onsen. The restaurant serves excellent kaiseki-style meals in which Japanese cooking techniques marry local produce like forest mushrooms. This five-suite boutique stay is the standout in the cluster of hotels surrounding the Beitou hot springs in the lush Yangmingshan National Park, north of Taipei. Well-heeled locals relax in its sulfurous thermal baths, on the pleasant side of very hot. Overnight guests can choose between marble-clad Western suites or Japanese tatami ones—both are sleek, straight-lined affairs, with white-glove service to match. Occupying a hillside with Sun Moon Lake's most striking vantage point, the Lalu has grown from a private presidential hangout in the s to one of Taiwan's most revered luxury hotels. The late Kerry Hill spearheaded its renovation in , and the basalt stone walls and teakwood lattices still impress. The lakeside lap pool is one of the best spots for a post-hike dip, while the balcony daybeds adjoining every room are a great place for sundowners. Asia Chevron Taiwan Chevron. Save this story Save. Most Popular. By Katherine LaGrave. The Best Places to Visit in December. By Caitlin Morton. By Korin Miller. The 20 Best Things to Do in Bangkok. By Katie Lockhart. Crookes and Jackson. Steamed pork and prawn dumplings at Sun Moon Lake. Surfers at laid-back Dulan beach, on Taiwan's east coast Crookes and Jackson. Topics Road Trips destination news. Mandarin Oriental, Taipei It's all about decadent accents and a stunning art collection. W Taipei. Asia Travel Guide.

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