Taiwanese Weather Sucks

by Sander Tams 16. March 2010 17:45

Yeah. Now you're warned. Taiwan's weather is infamous for having some pretty hefty temperature swings. This year has been one of the worst.

Seen those pictures from Yangmingshan I took last Friday? It was rather hot, and that's even though I was up in the mountains. Apparantly, two days ago, there had been "snow" in the higher regions of the mountain. (According to Andre.)

Weather has been especially harsh just recently. So much that people all around me are telling it's one of the worst years for a long time. (It's not often the temperature goes as low as 5 degrees, but it did recently.) Today was cold too, and metreologists are having a hard time.

Rainy days are the worst here. When it starts to rain, temperatures skydive and lots of people will get colds. (Including me. Actually I've been fighting with what I suspect to be a conspiration between cold and flu since last thursday or so. And I'm not even taking that stupid medicin that stops your immune defence from fighting it that's become so just that much popular amongst people here since "H1N1" broke out and killed thousands of people. Ridiculous name by the way.)

You could say, my body probably is going through some sort of culture shock now. It's used to much more cold environments, but it can't really figure out the high air humidity I guess. Chinese new year was pretty bad and somewhat colder, (also the worst in the last 5 years or so,) but it didn't really hit me as hard as this weather rollercoaster we're in now. The poor machine here is completely out of it. I'm feeling cold one moment and then, after walking for a few minutes, I have to change my shirt because it's soaked completely from sweating. (And there's no way it'll dry with humidities like this. Especially not while it's 10 degrees celcius. It'll take sometimes a day to dry something even when it's 36 outside.)
Tonight is going to be really cold too. I imagine my cold and flu will strike back hard tomorrow if they're still alive in there.

I don't have much new pictures for you right now, as it's pretty boring out there and I'm too busy sleeping at home anyway recently, but Here's the most recent photos I shot at Chihlee College. If you're reading this article a long time after it was written, I might have added more photos from that place, but just now I've only taken some pictures of guys playing volleyball there from last Friday.

 IMG_1932

Just FYI: Moved to my third host family last Friday too. (Busy day huh?) There's my packed luggage from before I moved. Their house is close enough to Chihlee too and it's a really cool place that I ought to tell about soon.

And then, to fill in some more, here's another youtubed piece of my new passion. The Japanese band POLYSICS, which is honestly a bit unrelated to Taiwan:

Actually I went to look for some of their music in Ximending some weeks ago. After some Mandarin/English juggling, clerks at the first store I decided to enter, managed somehow to inform me that POLYSICS didn't release any CD's in Taiwan. Most of their releases would be Japan only, and just a few were sold in America too. Damn it. *哭*

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Dagligdag | Taiwan

Typhoon Rain

by Sander Tams 5. October 2009 12:17

Today it's finally on for real. Lately it's been raining first a little bit in the afternoon now and then, later also a few times during the day, and since yesterday night, constantly and quite strong. So strong, actually, that some parts of Yilan, which I visited earlier, has already been flooded amongst a bunch of other places.

 

In Taipei it's not really too dangerous, althout your umbrella can take damage. If it's made in China it might even break over on the middle so that you have to grab the top part to not have it hit someone else in the head. That's what mine did last week. Retarded. But I have a better umbrella now. Umbrella is btw called Y San around here, where Y means rain and San mean umbrella or cover, essentially. (So what is meant is, these are Rain Umbrellas.) This naming always get me to think of Japanese when they put ~san at the end of peoples, animals or even items names (althout ~tan is the more correct suffix for objects as far as I've understood)...

Usually the schoolgrounds are pretty lively during the breaks, (and also during classes). Now you can just spot people with umbrellas, sometimes sharing with each other.

This is just outside my school. And of course there's a seven eleven just around the corner.

Actually the news just told us this evening about the typhoons condition: It's currently a little south of Taiwan but not really far out in the sea. Because of high pressure around the typhoon, it's not moving, so it's probably going to stay there for some time. This way, it will just cause a lot of rain, which is a big problem for the southern part of Taiwan where the earth is very loose and causes mud-floods. For Taipei residents this just means that you have to use your umbrellas all the time and that more people will take the car. Plus it's getting much colder now, so that you can almost feel a little cool when a strong wind is blowing on you. But still just almost.

Here's another cultural perculiarity. This was taken in Taipei Mainstation while I was tranfering from the beitou line to the danshuei line on my way back home from school. Maybe not a super bad idea since this is a place a lot of people change trains. This way perhaps less kids will drive you crazy with screaming when you're in transit? (Not that I thinks it's ever really used. I've only seen someone taking their baby with them through the MRT about 4 times so far. And funny thing was, it was the babies fathers all four times carrying them around.)

Nagato is quite smart. She chose to put on a raincoat. This way she won't have to struggle with her umbrella in the typhoon windgusts like everyone else here in taiwan. (But then again, she's a Japanese, so that's probably where the culture difference lies.)

This is also mooncake. I'm eating a lot of these right now, because my birthday was just before the mid-autumn festival. So of course, a had to give me a bunch of those, so that I could eat them the next day. Not that I got the chance, because I got a lot of mooncake from the family on that day aswell. But they taste quite good, really.

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Dagligdag | Travel | Taiwan

Another typhoon coming probably

by Sander Tams 2. September 2009 15:51

The last week, Joni has been commenting every time the sun was really strong, that she thought another typhoon would come soon. Yesterday it rained a little here in Taipei but today it rained a bit more. Much like the danish weather, it rains a little now and then, sometimes light, sometimes very heavy, but still just for short periods, and later up the day it has been more and more.

Yesterday, some meteorologists said on television a typhoon might come soon, but remarked they will still be watching the weather for two more days before they will confirm if it's another one. Today, though, it seems very unlikely that a typhoon wont come, because as Joni tells me, the rain at the current time indicates a typhoon is coming, because it rains the way I explained above.

I can't show you any pictures of typhoons ripping Taipei apart yet, so here's another subject: 

 

This evening, Joni bought these. She likes them a lot. They're little nori snacks, seaweed with a little seasoning that you just eat without anything else on.

  

They're not very big, but crunchy and tasty. If you like seaweed or anything related like sushi, then these are probably something for you.

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Travel | Taiwan

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My name is Sander Tams.
I am an exchange student from Denmark in Taipei, Taiwan.
I'm mainly focusing this blog on how it is to try and live a life as the locals here as a foreigner, commenting on the differences in culture and whatever I find amusing or interesting.
Have fun with the info about my life here. 

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