Taitung buying weed

Taitung buying weed

Taitung buying weed

Taitung buying weed

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Taitung buying weed

After my month-long bicycle tour around the island nation of Taiwan with my friend Kevin, I decided to stay in the country for another 40 days on my own. Kevin flew back to his home in Australia and I traveled to the city of Taitung , where I took up residence on the third floor of a small hotel located near the Showtime shopping mall, KFC , Subway , and the Donutes coffee shop. Taitung is the city that stood out the most to me. I liked it there. In the photo below you can see the owner of the hotel where I was staying on the left and his son Justin — on the right. They were extremely helpful and understanding when I asked if I could stay in their hotel for more than a month. They even gave me a fairly significant discount off the price of my room because I was staying for so long, which I greatly appreciated. Below you can see the small room that I was living in during my stay in Taitung. I usually had to sit at an angle, kind of working off the side of the desk. Plus, there was almost never any hot water in the hotel. During my total 40 nights in the hotel, I had a hot shower only three or four times. One of my favorite places to work was at this Tao temple on the hill just a short distance from my hotel. From inside the temple I had a really good view overlooking all of Taitung… and there were rarely any people ever around. One day I rode my bike along the coast to the south of the city and found an abandoned graveyard that had been washed into the sea. All along the beach were concrete sarcophagi that had fallen from the sandy cliffs above and were now laying lopsided in the earth below. I probably cycled around this path at least a half-dozen times during my stay in the city. Further proof that Taiwan is a country designed with cycling in mind. The best thing about Taitung… and the main reason I wanted to stay in Taiwan after Kevin left… is that the city contains a large table-tennis club. I ended up going to play table-tennis at this club just about every other day while I was in Taitung. The people there were friendly and accommodating. By the time I left Taitung, I felt like I had become friends with a number of the people I met at the table-tennis club, despite the fact that we were really not able to communicate with one another. Plus, my table-tennis skills improved greatly. The people in Taiwan are really good at table tennis… and I learned a lot by playing with and against them. I would usually go to the table tennis club around 4 PM and then leave around 6 in the evening. Luckily, the table-tennis club was located right across the street from a big art market, where every day there were artists selling handmade goods in small stalls and a number of giant art installations were in place for the public to enjoy. One of these giant installations was a string of hundreds of papers lanterns which had been decorated by school children and then hung from the trees in the area of the art market. It was quite a sight to see so many paper lanterns illuminated in the dark! Sometimes at the art market there would be singers, musicians or dancers performing. The photos below are from one night when a group of aboriginal singers were performing. Night time in Taitung was a fun time to walk around the city. Unlike some places in the world that grow quiet after dark, Taitung only became more color after sunset each day. On Friday nights an entire street was blocked off for the weekly night market and local vendors would come out to sell food and all sorts of wild things. For the first several weeks during my stay in Taitung there were political rallies going on each night. Fireworks were being blown up all over the place, large groups of people marched in the streets, car horns were blaring, and it was a wild, colorful time. One day, while I was walking through the park down by the beach I ran into this young woman named Amber shown below on the far left who was riding her skateboard through the park. She told me that she worked at a local eyelash studio and asked me to come by one day and meet her co-workers, who all turned out to be super nice and friendly. Amber and I went out for ice cream a couple times while I was in the city, and we even rode skateboards together one night down on the beach. I went for several days not being able to hear much of anything — hoping that the problem would soon go away. At one point, my ear canal had swollen completely shut, my jaw was clamped shut and I was in serious pain! After nearly a week of this… and several sleepless nights, I went to the owner of my hotel and asked him to take me to a doctor. With the help of the hotel owner, I was able to find a doctor in Taitung and get treated for my ear infection. It took the work of three different doctors, four doctor visits, a bunch of ear drops, and a high-powered vacuum to suck the junk out of my head to finally clear my ear canal and get rid of the nasty infection that had me walking around the city for two whole weeks — deaf and in pain. After fixing the issues with my ear, I decided to conduct a mini 4-day bike tour from Taitung up the east coast toward the city of Hualien, and then ride back to Taitung through the Rift Valley. The first day on the road was cold and windy. While it had been hot and dry for most of the bike tour around Taiwan with Kevin the month before, my last 3 weeks in Taiwan were cold and wet. I spent the first night of my miniday bike tour camped out in a grove of coconut trees just a short distance from the beach. The next day I cycled further north up the coast before turning inland, climbing a short mountain road, crossing through a long tunnel, and the emerging on the other side of the mountain near the city of Yuli, Taiwan. Kevin and I had spent some time in this area during our bike tour the month before, so it was kind of fun to return to the same spot more than a month later and see the area in a totally new way. The road was dirt and gravel for about 10 full kilometers, but I love this type of cycling. I would have been quite happy if the road had been dirt and gravel the entire way back to Taitung. I took my time and made sure to stop at several points along the way to take photos and soak in my surroundings. At one point during the ride, I came around a corner and in the middle of the road spotted two small animals I had never in my life seen before. When the marmots saw me on my bicycle, they took one good look at me and then dashed off into the bushes… never to be seen again. The last night of my mini-bike tour north of Taitung was spent camping in the forest just off the side of the road on the It was a dark and slightly scary location to spend the night. It was windy and raining, but I slept well and was woken the following morning by a man with a weed-whacker working on the road just a short distance away from my tent. I quickly packed up my bicycle and hit the road, nervous that the man might discover me camped out in the trees just a short distance from where he had parked his car. I knew that this would be my last bit of cycling in Taiwan. I returned to the hotel where I had been staying before, checked into a different room on the third floor, and spent the next week working on the new Bicycle Touring Pro Adventure Podcast , playing table tennis with the locals, eating pastries at the Donutes coffee shop and preparing myself or the long trip back to China, England, Germany and Poland. I had spent more than 70 days in the country, but the time sure had gone quickly. Before I knew it, my travels in Taiwan were over! My goal as the 'Bicycle Touring Pro' is to give you the confidence and inspiration you need to travel by bicycle anywhere in the world. I'm here to help you plan, prepare for, and execute your first bike tour and remove all the guesswork, wasted time and frustration that plagues so many first-time bicycle travelers. Great post — I lived in Taiwan for four years, and seeing your pictures and reading about your experiences brought back some good memories. Looks like Taitung has some great things going on — wish I had had a chance to explore it more while I was there. Love the bike path around the city and table tennis set-up! Did you see many places selling reasonably-priced used bikes there, for example? Did you find it easy enough to find spots? I wonder how easy it it in the mre crowded West of the island. And you do it quietly, but regardless, did you feel the Taiwanese are relaxed about campers? There are bike shops and little bike rental places all over the island. As for camping, yes, I think wild camping is pretty easy in Taiwan… and yes, I think the people in Taiwan are pretty relaxed. If you just ask to camp at a temple, you can probably do it. The temples are nice because they are covered, have water and bathrooms, and food nearby! Remember me Log in. Lost your password? Darren Alff My goal as the 'Bicycle Touring Pro' is to give you the confidence and inspiration you need to travel by bicycle anywhere in the world. Amy says: Great post — I lived in Taiwan for four years, and seeing your pictures and reading about your experiences brought back some good memories. December 31, at pm. Karl says: Great post, Darren! Beautiful pictures you took. However, I will need to arrive very light and without a bike. Loved your new podcast! Keep going! January 7, at pm. Have a wonderful time in Taiwan! January 8, at am. March 8, at pm. Search for:. Send this to a friend. Send Cancel.

The Month I Spent Living in Taitung, Taiwan

Taitung buying weed

The country still famously retains the death penalty for some offenses, and international travelers must sign off on that knowledge when they fill out their landing cards. That considered, the events of the past week might come as a bit of a surprise to some. Taiwan announced this week that it was reducing the penalty for growing cannabis plants from a minimum of five years to a maximum of seven. The event, which was held in anticipation of Weed Day on April 20, was aimed at raising awareness about cannabis and legalization efforts. A petition to legalize marijuana put together by Green Sensation has reportedly garnered more than 12, signatures. While these developments hardly total up to nationwide acceptance support for legalized cannabis, they do occur as attitudes toward to substance appear to be easing. Around , people use cannabis recreationally according to Ministry of Justice data, while medical marijuana is currently permitted in Taiwan in some circumstances. Currently, four types of medicine containing THC are permitted for patient use. Cannabis is now legal in a handful of regions globally, but laws remain tight in Taiwan. Photo: Oregon Department of Agriculture. As in other parts of the world, cannabis use in Taiwan and East Asia goes back millennia. According to Washington D. Today, however, the plant has lost this spiritual association. Unlike countries like Canada, where recreational consumption of cannabis is widely seen as similar to nicotine and alcohol, it is perceived in Taiwan as a gateway drug and a threat to public health. Currently, cannabis is listed as a Category 2 drug under the Narcotics Hazard Prevention Act, making it just as illegal as methamphetamines and raw products like coca and opium poppies. That means a sentence of up to two years in prison for possession, while selling can land you with a life sentence. She explained that part of the problem is a lack of understanding about cannabis in Taiwanese courts. The fact that much of this information is more likely to reach Taiwanese young people, who incidentally made up most of the attendees of the Green Sensation event suggests that wider awareness about cannabis may only be budding among younger age groups. Social Links TripAdvisor 0. Instagram 0. Facebook 0. Twitter 0. YouTube Changing Attitudes toward Cannabis While these developments hardly total up to nationwide acceptance support for legalized cannabis, they do occur as attitudes toward to substance appear to be easing. Share 0. Tweet 0. View Post. Destination How to Northern Transportation. Search for: Search.

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