Random Lunch

by Sander Tams 10. March 2010 10:54

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Today I had English Debate as my first class in school. Just like last week. People are quite good at English around Chihlee, and it's not only the college students. I also met a student from Chihlees high school department with a pretty good grip on English. I guess people are more focused on international trade and such at that place. It's great.

After that first class, I went with classmates to eat as I've been doing since day 2 on the school. No canteen is inside, so students will go raid the aroundlying area every day at lunchbreak. It's a bit of a phenomenom there. Just near the school, there's a heightened abundance of stores that mostly flock around fashion districts. And of course, unnaturally many restaurants and food-stands. Went to eat veggie food again.

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No pictures of the store, but it's pretty popular and rather crowded. Need to go there early if one wants to finish up and get back to school before classes start as it takes a long time to prepare peoples meals during the rushy hour that lunchbreak is.
That thing above is my finished noodle dish with monkey head mushroom, tofu and awesome amounts of capsaicinoids.

It got bloody bad cold again. 為什麼?! It was just like Danish summer last week and then winds changed. Stupid Taiwanese weather.

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Dagligdag | Taiwan

Not writing much lately

by Sander Tams 8. March 2010 16:41

Am sorry about that. I go to school and talk a lot with people there, so there's not much time or new subjects for my blog at the moment. (Actually, there's loads of subjects waiting to be written about, but that'll require me to use some more time in front of the pc obviously. Besides, I want to get into programming browser games again. It seems like I have been contributing nothing to the tech game since I got here, and I've also got a number of other ideas for more simple games that need to get out. So far I have only sketches of code.

Anyway. Some weeks ago, methinks. ? - I went to take some pictures around Xinpu. That's still inside Banqiao, so I can walk there in a few minutes. My school is in that direction too, so now I actually frequent it. It's a lot more interesting than this little blue corner where I'm currently at.

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Dagligdag | Taiwan

Some reflections

by Sander Tams 4. March 2010 16:22

Didn't really take any photos recently. Been busy going to school.

Yeah, school just started for me. School started this Monday (1st of March) and it started really well. It's really great now. Everything is much better for me: I can speak not just more English with students, but also gets the chance to use my Chinese much more with students that have time for other things but studying and are more outgoing.

I've really been feeling like just going straight home to Denmark lately. The weather was really depressing during the Chinese new year. (Chinese New Year lasts more than one night. It's essentially a Chinese counterpart to Christmas where people will have vacation and eat traditional food and go to temples n' stuffs.) One American I met told me it has probably been the worst (coldest, rainiest) Chinese New Year the last five years.
Not that it compares with Denmark, though. The sea froze and it's been the coldest winter since 23 years ago. Damn. That's at least one good reason to be far away in Taiwan.

Actually I'm more than halfway through the exchange program. When I look back upon my last ~6 months here I feel pretty empty. Really. They were a waste of time and I wasn't really as happy most of the time as I had preferred. Got to see a lot of stuff and got me a nice foundation for learning Chinese. But except for the first about one or two months I'd say the time could've been used more efficiently. Am not exactly unhappy about only having so little time left apart from feeling I've wasted away my first half year seeing more and more empty space between the good times. Don't misunderstand me. When I write in my earlier blogposts that I really like Taiwan and being here too, I mean it. Just been having to hide away the bad things more and more lately.

You could say that during the Chinese New Year, I got into what most people with their pocket philosophy would deem as Culture Shock (or Language Shock, anyone?). Not that I agree completely when skimming through wikipedia once again, but seeing as people kind of interpret it as something simply like feeling down because you're lonely and being a foreigner at the same time. Wouldn't say it's exactly the culture that's the problem myself, although. The language is a somewhat bigger player, but that should be manageable by taking the right precautions. All in all, I don't care much about the recent time.

Coming time is hopefully (and seemingly) going to be much better. It's getting hotter again. (Taiwan's weather is crazy these days. One day I'm covered up in thick jackets while inside or outside of the house so as to prevent another cold or flu of suddenly getting foothold. The next day it's summer. (Well, in Taiwan it's called spring but like I care.) Suddenly I'll have to throw off most of my clothes to survive outside and spin the aircon up during the night so as to be able to sleep.

I love hot days, of course. I know from the time when I arrived to Taiwan that it sometimes might just get a little uncomfortable with so much heat, but I'd dislike the slightest bit of cold weather more. Everything is just so much more nice with all this sun. You get enough sunlight so as to get rid of that nasty winter depression that gets to me every year. You can wear light clothes. Might just make you feel a little better looking, and of course, it works really great on everyone else. Especially the young people around here. Most of the girls in Taiwan are hot. And then they get hotter. And for girl readers: Of course the guys do so too. Maybe even more. Girls will often show their legs in various uniforms from school or work even during winter. (How can they stand it?)
But yeah, anyway, there's generally more beautiful people during hot and sunny days, agree not agree?

Also, you'll sweat a lot and thus have to drink a lot more. (Here, you don't have to worry about sweat that much. Taiwan is generally a smelly place and people don't care much about their own smell anyway, so it'll be hard to distinguish your bad sweaty-smell amongst all the others. Besides, with all that sweat, I bet a bigger percentage of it must be water. I don't know. Even though sweat would be dripping from me, sometimes from just climbing a stair, it doesn't seem to have such bad an effect.)
About drinking more. In Denmark it's probably a bother. You have to carry a big bottle around or even pay a fortune in convenience stores if you can find one, should you need some hydration. Here, there's drink shops everywhere serving the most delicious tea and they'll charge you almost nothing. Well, if some 45 NT$ for a just-mixed delicious fruit tea with ice around the corner is too much or if you live in one of the rare not-so trafficked areas, you could head around another corner and buy refrigerated drinks at 25 NT$ a litre.

My Chinese did improve a lot I'd say. Actually to the Taiwanese here, it would probably sound more hilarious than a Google translation from French to Danish. You could say, Danes are probably often amused listening to immigrants who try to speak Danish, seeing as Danish is an immensely hard language to pronounce correctly. My Chinese is probably worse, but I use it where English can't be applied or where I just feel I'd like to make that order right away instead of waiting for some Engrish-speaking clerk to get dragged over at my place. I've been using it a lot. Even went to play arcade games and competed with other Jubeat enthusiasts and getting a new experience out of the game today. That's something that you can't do if you only speak English. People who have an interest in arcade machines apparently don't speak a single word of English apart from those words the machines will occasionally burst out.

Yeah. It's going to be better. Because if it doesn't, I'm jumping on a plane back to cold Denmark where I know ppls and can do almost anything I want. Just for now, it seems I might not need to consider that possibility at least for now. Taiwan is a great place. Just wish it wasn't so goddamned traditional.

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Dagligdag | Taiwan

Kaohsiung trip part 2

by Sander Tams 27. February 2010 21:42

Following up on my trip to Kaohsiung. You can read Kaohsiung trip part 1 first, if you want the whole story. I also tell a bit about my trip down there with THSR in my Taiwan High Speed Rail Photos post.

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I don't know if this piece of art have a special meaning or name, but it seems to be some sort of tourist attraction here. Makes sense in some way, seeing as Kaohsiung is a city with a very big harbour.

Went on a trip around the port after running into the container-sculpture above. Mark must have prepared well and knows just the places to go to. It's probably mostly because I have a big camera with me this time, but the trip around the port didn't bore me one bit, which is quite amazing. Tourbuses and tourboats especially don't do the trick for me, and this one was even all in Chinese. Perhaps the size of the harbour and ships in it made it worthwhile.

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There's the Tuntext Sky Tower in the background.

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Travel | Taiwan

Taiwan High Speed Rail Photos

by Sander Tams 26. February 2010 21:24

Drove high-speed train for the first time in my life on 24th of February and brought my DSLR Camera. Here's some of the pictures I took.

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First picture taken while travelling the HSR from Taipei to Kaohsiung. Exposure time: 1/400 sec, ISO speed: 200, Aperture: f/2.8. Wtf was I doing?

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Second try. ISO changed to 100. Of course it has to be 100, it's in the middle of the day! Exposure is still way too high, but the camera actually managed to capture a somewhat sensical photo. Shutter speed can still get higher. Train is still accelerating at this point.

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Shutter speed is now 1/1600 sec. Is damn bright today.

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Now at 1/2000 sec. Objects close to the railway are almost clear, so I'm satisfied with this setting. Exposure is still a notch too high, but hard to manage when moving so fast. My Canon 50D can shoot at speeds up to 1/8000 sec, but didn't want to set it that high as I would probably have to increase ISO and thus, make more digital noise. Not that it would be a problem of course.

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Photography | Taiwan

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About Me

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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