Singapore Day One: Part One:

To get to Singapore, I boarded the train at Bahau, Malaysia.  They said it would be a nice, comfortable, air conditioned 5-hour trip.  Instead, it was an uncomfortable, overcrowded, 8 hour trip with a rattling air conditioned unit that broke 30 minutes into the trip.

I was in good spirits, though, so I didn’t let that get to me.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v1J8MpuWu2M&w=560&h=315]

There was a slight drizzle when I arrived at the station that turned into a downpour that only let up just before we got to the Singapore border.  And all the while, I was shrugging off the unbelievably smelly, older Chinese man that kept falling asleep on me like I was his wife.  Eventually, I found that it was a bit more comfortable (and hidden away from the slight smell of human bodies cooking in the humid air inside the coach) sitting at the opened door of the back of the train.  Thankfully, the rules are much more lax on these third-world transit monsters.

I can say with all confidence that I was very pleased at my forethought to bring along food with me on the train.  Something told me that it would be a non-stop train on which there’d likely be no in-transit food service.  When the train left, 25 minutes behind schedule (6:10am), I figured it would be a bit longer than they told me.  But the food (some plums, bananas, a couple ramly burgers and a hotdog cooked into a croissant) definitely stayed me over what would otherwise have been an uncomfortable, hot, elongated trip while starving – and therefore likely being very cranky.

The night before I left, I only got a couple hours sleep because I was busy catching up on things and packing for the early morning trip that left after a long day at work (when I was called in unexpectedly).  So I actually wound up getting some sleep along the way.

Once aboard the train, I asked the coach official where I needed to go to find my seat because the ticket was written in Malay and of the 10-or-so words that I know in Malay, the ticket included none of them.  He shrugged, not seeming to care that much whether I found my way and I brushed past him with my equipment in tow just to passively let him know that I was not in the mood to give him any more patience than he’d offered me.

I was panting and sweating all over the bags that I’d just finished organizing in a safe and out-of-the-way place (as much as possible on the zoo of a train car that it was), when the same coach official came to me and asked for my ticket.  It was then that he began to care about where my seat was located.  He then directed me to move from the slightly uncomfortable, air conditioned car that I’d slumped over in, to the very uncomfortable, hot one for which my ticket was designated.

I made little fuss and grabbed up my things to give him a second pass at the back of my tripod bag, ensuring that he knew I was still aware of his universally translating distaste for foreign travelers.

In any case, I spent the next 10 sweaty minutes wading through overflowing luggage, pushing open steamed glass doors to each next car and tripping over the little, Asian feet sticking out into the aisle to finally get to my seat.

Reluctantly, but with optimism, I made myself as comfortable as possible and positioned myself to catch some shut-eye after eating a little bit of my breakfast.

Once past customs, I found out that my train would not be continuing any further into the country.  So I had to head for the taxi queue outside.

Next stop: Little India, to lock in my accommodation at the Shop House Hostel and take in the flavor and atmosphere of the Kampong Glam – the sauciest, hippest gathering of restaurants in the east-of-center downtown area.

Once I’d exchanged some money I checked in, locked up my things, ate the rest of my food and took a quick shower, I napped for a few hours in hopes of catching up to the non-groggy, non-agitated person that I strive to be.  Then it was off to explore Singapore.

Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Part Ten

Taipei is no Dubai.  But they sure try.  And in this tenth and last part to the Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan series, that’s where I make my send-off.

Having visited basically every other part of the country, I thought that this was a suited end to the all-nation trip I’d made overland and to the isles on both sides.

I’d hate to say that Taipei is just like any other city.  But I am not really a “city guy.”

Having said that, there’s still an interesting and recent history that I cover in this portion of the film.  And having studied it from the traveler’s perspective, it’s got a unique story indeed.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cxu5RuAbPDc&w=560&h=315]

Coming from humble beginnings, and having not been the country’s original site for its chosen capital, Taipei has risen like a phoenix from its representative, communist ashes.  And it’s done so with gusto.

Having been ruled with the same iron fist of mainland china for so long, once freed, the Taiwanese people chose a different future for themselves.  And while this made China definitively covetous over their newfound kinship with freedom, they were steadfast and anything but reticent, maintaining their very public stance as the new world’s international posterchild for indignant, anti-communist ideology.

And it proved very fruitful, as the once- neglected town has become a gleaming city, far removed from the antiquated designs and attention of its fledgling self.

Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Part Nine

Likely making a visible scene from space, the Lantern Festival in the Changhua township takes up the 9th portion of the Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan series.

The entire town hosts lanterns from the small and lackluster, to the three-story, motorized, dragon-shaped behemoth adorned with synchronized lighting and a sound kit that would rival a Metallica concert.  There are snake-like lanterns spanning an entire city-block and fashioned with a million pin-wheels.  There are Spongebob Squarepants likenesses.  There are seated Buddhas.  And even hanging lanterns creating pulsing, writhing ceilings hanging over the roadways.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U_Sk9G_KDxo&w=560&h=315]

All of these lanterns have been imported from across the country.  And each one represents a family business, a school or a bank or corporate alliance.  And for one year, each team works painstakingly to outdo the next in this everyone-wins competition of showmanship and pride.

And this isn’t a small collection of a few interested parties who’ve come together in a yearly rivalry.  This takes up the entire expanse of the town that is chosen each year.  Forget Disneyland.  Epcot couldn’t, on its best day, compete with even one street corner here.  When I say they go all out, these people put Nasa to shame in their show of lights.

To say it’s epic, simply doesn’t do this event justice.  It’s an experience like no other.  And throughout the night, all one needs to do is walk, snack on the countless roadside vendor’s offerings and be amazed at the sheer size of this festival.

Originally starting in the mountains, this festival first resembled a few, scattered lanterns shooting skyward as the warning of an invasion was eminent.  Today, while China claims tenure over this event, Taiwan definitely takes the event to the next level and has a death-grip over this celebration like an angry dog defending a bone.

As far as I am concerned, a lantern festival that encompasses an entire city, draws in an entire country and represents a year of the nation’s focus simply has no rival.  It can get no bigger.  And it need not.  Because after something like this stretches beyond the city limits and contends internationally for the brightest light on the year’s darkest night, I’d imagine that the quaintness and personal touch would move from the impressive and awe-inspiring to be replaced by spite and shark-like antagonism.

Besides, by the look of things, they’d have to start hiring outside assistance to make this any grander.  And that would mean it’s no longer a native event.  The electric bill alone might require taking out a loan from China anyway!

Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Part Eight

In this eighth part of the Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan, I explore the grand and inescapably mystical village of Alishan, high above the cloudline of the Tainan region.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tcByQTtpMc&w=560&h=315]

Alishan Village should be on your To-Do list if you come to Taiwan.  While I only had a limited time to enjoy the “sea of clouds” phenomenon that takes place high up in these mountains, I still came away with a great experience.  And there’s plenty more to do and see.

The food and locals are charming and warm.  The little restaurants aren’t so corporate that the personality has been stripped away.  And the old train that everyone embarks to in the wee hours of the morning is a neat little jaunt up the hill to the viewing spot.

In addition, there are trails to hike, nature to enjoy and pristine, crisp air to fill the nostrils with a continuum of reminders of where you are and just how nice it is to be there – or at least not back at your office.

And that’s just the top.  Getting there is just as much (if not more) fun.  Rent a bike at the train station, head up the mountain and make a wonderful day of the switchbacks and splendid views of the Taiwanese townships below.

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Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Part Seven

Tainan’s temples are the focus of this seventh part of Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan series.  From the Buddhist- and Dao-inspired templage to the oldest, finest and most genuine, architecture to reveal itself to Far East Asia’s history, Tainan is definitely the premier spot to visit the world of old warriors and emperors.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEiMVc8z7hw&w=560&h=315]

Traditional temples here are based on the old world style of Asian templary.  They contribute to the larger assemblage of region.  And they never fail to amaze.  There are more temples in this area than most places on earth (of equivalent size).  And with the exception of the Penghu Islands that I just visited, I’ve certainly never seen a more condensed collection of them in my life at any other place in the world.

Walking through this area, one may as well don a suit of armor and wield a samurai sword.  You’d fit right in – if not become part of the ancient scenery.

Looking in all directions, my eyes kept searching for some semblance of recent times.  And I couldn’t figure it out at the time, but the confusion was actually normal.  There’s simply no sign that you’re in the 21st century.  It seems as though the grounds to many of these walled-off, palace-like places of worship (and residence) have been kept precisely as the original architects envisaged them at the drawing board.

The koi fish are likely not descendants of their ancient keepers, but they may as well have been transported right through the same time that these temples endured.  The electric fountains are probably far cries from their mechanical predecessors – hand-cranked by myriad servants.  And the shaped concrete walkways trailing throughout the gardens and over the watery moats most likely postdated a much more attractive and artful wooden assemblage of risers, pilings and intricately carved railings.

But as I’ve learned from the many wonderful experiences that I reluctantly behind: nothing lasts forever.  Some might even argue that nothings lasts for very long at all.

In any case, these stoic relics of a more ancient time are testing the limitations of that ideology.  And for now, they’re a treat to behold.

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Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Part Six

Part Six of Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan, explores Tainan during the Fireworks Festival.  In this hand-to-hand fireworks combat, people actually soot each other with a barrage of pretty dangerous explosives — many of which are rocket propelled and uncontrollable.  But that doesn’t stop this crowd.

The entire town goes up in smoke, literally, all in the name of fun at the behest of the loudest, most dangerous means possible.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WxbpxILGznA&w=560&h=315]

Explosions light up the sky from dusk until about 2am.  And all the while, people swing ropes of detonating M-80s,  live moon rockets and flaming Roman Candles.  Throwing caution (and may other dangerous things) to the wind, this festival is more akin to the dashing of the gods, the smothering of the weak-willed and the ultimate game of Smear the Queer with a high school dodgeball team mentality.

I witnessed several people on motorbikes making their way through entire, elbow-to-elbow crowds with two handfuls of shimmering rockets darting to-and-fro, sending people all a-scatter in a raucous rage in every direction.  It was a sight I never knew possible, to see crazed hoards bursting through a haze of sparks and smoke as jet-like, spiraling tracers with ember tails exploded in dangerous proximity to the onlookers.  Wails of chaotic fear pulsed through this mad scene like banshees letting loose their shrill cries.  And all the while, any shadows in the commotion were quickly created and destroyed by the strobing, shooting explosions flickering throughout the multitude.

And at any moment, you realize that the scene unfolding on the hapless saps just meters away could just as haplessly become your momentary reality.  In which case, you’d be the one ducking and covering, wincing in preemptive pain.  It’s a troubling thought.  There’s nothing quite like it, I’d say.

The week prior, trucks haul in tons of fireworks for the event.  Throughout the weekend (normally preceding Chinese New Year) they are set ablaze amid a curtain of rope lights, blinking Christmas lights and lit-up lanterns.

The day after the event, it’s like it never happened.  By noon, the townspeople will have taken to the streets with their brooms, buckets and bags.  And they sweep away all the ash, paper and still-smoldering leftovers.  I’m sure it’s like watching ants attack a pound cake from a bird’s eye view.  And when it’s all done, the sidewalks, alleys and streets are just as spiffy clean as if the city-wide conflagration had never taken place.

It’s quite a spectacle, indeed.  And I even after having been in Taiwan for six months, I’d never even heard about it until a couple of days prior.  But once I found out that there was a festival where people shoot fireworks at each other, a team of Clydesdales couldn’t have kept me away.  I knew that I had to go document this amazing scene and experience it firsthand.

When I arrived, however, I realized that I was a bit under dressed.  It seems that the players in this explosive game sort of cheat a little bit.  When I found out about the battle, no one ever told me that they dressed themselves in modern day armor for the event.

When I showed up (in shorts and a t-shirt), I looked around amazed to see people all over the place looking like spacemen who’d recently been left behind, abandoned by their evacuating ship.  They were covered head-to-toe in helmets, towels, several layers of clothing and what looked like work boots.  Every inch of skin had been covered.  They even duck-taped towels to their helmets to ensure that no ricochet or stray mini-bomb would find its way into their only patch of overlooked skin and detonate – taking with it that same overlooked patch of skin.

I was not so prepared, though I wish I’d used some foresight in the matter.

At one time in the ordeal, someone had taken it upon themselves to stack a giant column of rocket-propelled M-80s right in the middle of the street.  And without warning, my friends and I were stuck in the middle of what must have been the familiar feeling of close combat soldiers in Afghanistan.

There were explosions all around my head and face.  There was smoke everywhere.  All I could do was take refuge behind an adjacent column and hope that none of the screaming explosives made their way to any part of me that I couldn’t do without.  It was pretty frightening.  But, all told, I think I weathered it pretty well.  Because the friends that I met there were amazed that not only had I not worn any protective clothing, but also that I’d made it through unscathed – as far as I can tell.

A week later, I’d be hit by a car (that didn’t stop or even slow down at all during the entire process) and leave me with an inch-long scar on my left foot.  So I guess Taiwan still made a dent in the Travel Geek after all.

Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Part Five

The Penghu Islands are just epic.  I don’t know of any other way to say it.  In Taiwan, I have two favorite places (or, at least two top spots tied at first place); Taroko Gorge and the Penghu Islands.  And perhaps this is because I am a bit biased on the side of geological marvels.  But these places are just otherworldly.

For the common traveler, it gets no better than to rent a bike and be alone for a few days with no rules, no risk and no limitations.  Once on the back of a simple 50cc scooter, one is free to putt around, buzz through the back alleys and drive right over the grass to reach these amazing sights.  And in few places of the world are they more plentiful.  They simply cast a shadow over the nearest conglomeration of natural wonders.

And did I mention they’re cheap?  It costs around $30 to fly there from the mainland.  It takes 45 minutes to get there.  And once you’re there, pop a tent and spend your nights knowing that when you unzip your vestibule the next morning, you’ll be overlooking 500,000-year-old volcanic columns that were pushed up from the center of the earth… and a sunrise.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WxbpxILGznA&w=560&h=315]

In addition to this portion of the film, I am also including one of my most recent uploads from the “Outtakes & Extras” section.  Of the many outtakes that I had to refrain from including in the feature length film, I regretted this one a lot.  It’s a nice, succinct introduction to the behemoth columnar basalt formations in the background and I wish it could have made it into the film.  But as it stands, I simply had to trim all the fat if I was going to keep the documentary under two hours.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPZHmAqQaMk&w=560&h=315]

But as far as the bulk of my amazing experience in Penghu, this portion of the documentary really says it all.  It’s got the best parts of the three-day trip that I took there.  And what I didn’t release with the feature length documentary, I published to the web on the Taiwan film page of my website.  So after you’ve watched this part, be sure to head over and check out those outtakes and extras.  And if you feel so inclined, make a donation and support future trips.

Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Part Four

Traversing the world’s markets has got to be one of the most interesting and fun things for me.  Some people just hop in and hop out – never really realizing what they’re passing by.  Some people like to go, sit down and eat.  Others enjoy them for the aromas, sounds and variety in its many forms.  Others still go to sell goods, to talk shop or even perform for the masses.

I like to go for all of these reasons – well, probably not to sell things or perform.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQEUcSQcLQk&w=560&h=315]

I like to take it all in.  I am there for the experience.  And no matter how many times I go to the same market, I always meet new people, discover new foods or learn something new and interesting about the culture.  It just never fails to be a cool experience.

To date, I’ve bought the most amazing things I’ve ever seen at various Asian markets.  I’ve bought (and eaten) everything from tarantulas and snakes to bugs and alien-looking fruits.  I ate sewer rat at a market in Indonesia.  I picked, cooked and ate a guinea pig at a market in Peru.  I even bought a squirrel – I’m not kidding; I bought a squirrel at the Jatujak market in Bangkok and kept it as a pet.  But all this is nothing compared to what I’ve passed up.

On any given day, you can buy a cobra, an asp, a viper or any number of other deadly snakes at markets in Cambodia, Laos and Thailand.  You can buy all the newest pirated films, music and software that’s been hacked and unlocked.  Fashion items from Gucci and Lauren to Elle and others.  There’s just no limit to what you can find in markets.

And the Kaohsiung market is no different.

In Part Four of my latest film, Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan, I dive right in and take viewers for a spin through one of the country’s biggest and most mesmerizing collections of food vendors, stall restaurants and niche workers.

Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Part Three

In Part Three of the documentary series in Taiwan, I visit Lanyu Island.  And before I even arrived, I came upon some harsh realities of this part of the country.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4oh6Aohfvo&w=560&h=315]

Firstly, it’s only on the whim of the boat captains that the ferries disembark.  This was troubling since I knew that if I had a more stringent schedule, I’d have been very disappointed about the turnout here.  My camera person and I didn’t have to wait long for our trip.  But I heard that we were lucky.  We were only there for an hour when the boat captain gave the signal for people to load up.

This is actually not uncommon for the area, I’ve heard, though.  In fact, the whole of the east coast in Taiwan blends much of an “island feel” into its way of life.  Things happen when the initiative of those in charge of the task topples the inertia that resists it.  Aside from that, the weather pretty much determines everything else.

Especially here in the south of the east coast, the climactic changes are sudden and often fierce.  This is where the Pacific finds its ending point.  And the last remaining fetters enacted against it have either been destroyed by the damaging elements or are weathering away to the realm of obsolete.

On the boat trip, there were similar and negative challenges to the comfort most of us expected to have.  We all heard that it was a bit bumpy.  But what we didn’t hear was that it was three hours long in choppy seas, the “choppiness” of the seas were such that 20-foot swells were common, and that the engine’s exhaust pumped right into the passenger deck, inflaming the sense of nausea by removing what little air was available to quell the initial upsurges of sea sickness.

About an hour in, I started feeling it myself – and having been on boats for a good portion of my life, I considered myself to have a pretty strong stomach.  But this was not doing much to keep me from turning quite pale in the presence of people blowing chunks every couple minutes.  I fared well until the fumes from the engine made me almost pass out from aerial poisoning.  But once I was out on the back deck for a breather, I could feel the blood making its way back through my body, rejuvenating what was previously a circulating concoction of toxicity that could kill a nest of cockroaches.

Lightheaded but aware, I made several trips in and out of the cabin to keep myself conscious.  And once we arrived, all the passengers sort of gathered on the concrete harbor to collect themselves for a few minutes before heading off to their respective destinations.

I’d say tourists comprised only about 10 percent of the travelers on board.  The rest were native Yami bringing goods and supplies back to their homes or coming back from school to visit their families.  So I instantly knew that we were there at the right time of year to bypass the tourist rush (late January).

After snapping a few shots, I had my first encounter with the long, bony arm of Taiwanese law.  The Coast Guard was on watch with a few semen at the helm of a wind-worn look-out shack just past the main harbor.  And since they were the only live bodies around after I’d stupidly wasted my first few minutes snapping away at the amazing view of the imposing mountains abutting the southern coastline along the boat dock, I pestered them into getting in touch with the locals that were in charge of the motorbikes that were parked in a random place along the concrete boardwalk.

It wasn’t too much hassle to rent a bike.  I finally worked out that I’d be renting for a couple days at $NT500/day.  There was no need for a driver’s license, a passport or even a handshake.  These guys knew that there was no escaping this tiny island without everyone knowing about it.  And even if I’d had it in mind to try and skip town, the boat captain was probably related to the bike owner in some way.  So, keeping things honest by way of the scarcity of white faces in these parts, it was a quick conversation, and off to see the sights.  I donned a helmet, cranked the engine over and set off into the nearest village.

Tribal villages in Lanyu are not what they seem in writing.  When you drive through this area, it’s immediately evident that this area was once much more “native” than it is now.  Currently, concrete slabs and continuous construction of small buildings takes place everywhere you’d hope to go here.  And with every direction boasting Levy’s, satellite TV and rap music blasting out of the sheet-for-a-window cottages, it’s a lot like driving through south Chicago – if it laid against a lush, green hill.

In between villages, though, is where the real allure takes the mind on a pleasant, time-forgotten journey, with its less humanized topography.

Every few hundred meters driving up the east coast of the island, a giant, overhanging ledge would spew up a giant, bluish mist and fill the chilly air with a palpably salty fragrance.  If I wasn’t on the bike, I’d think I was flying through a sea of clouds that took on the hue of a glacier and filled my nose with the essence of table salt.

I’d stop and snap a few shots as humongous surges of ice-blue water thunderously beat down against the jagged, weathered, charcoal-colored rocks below.  It was a vivid pallet for the senses.  And the grime in the air added a tone not unlike the old harbors of the south Maine coast.  All that was missing was the infrequent clanging of the offshore brass-bell buoy… and the incessant screeching of giant seagulls.

[baby goat shot]

I’d stop between every village and climb around on the rocks, snap photos of the free range goats.  We even took the little off-shooting roads to see where they’d lead.  We came up on this open field where this particularly brave batch of them let us approach quite closely.  And I almost stepped on this little infant goat (what is the name for them anyway?).  It was cute.  The camera person thought it was a good idea to pick it up.  And by all appearances, it seemed like the natural thing to do.  This cute, little, scruffy animal seemed about as threatening as a marshmallow at a campfire.  But I knew better.  I knew that this little guy was born with a set of chompers and jaw muscles that would just as soon take off with my finger as sit there and continue to look cute.  So I let it be.

When we arrived back in the original town that we’d started at, we asked around until we met an English-speaking native.  Her name was Zoe, and she was on the boat with us.  She’d returned along with a few others from the mainland for the college break to catch up with family at the onset of the Chinese New Year festivities.

She and her friend invited us to stay with them in one of their extra rooms.  It was bare-bones.  But it was workable.  The room itself was spacious, or perhaps it felt that way because there was literally nothing in it.  We’d brought our sleeping bags with us for the road trip around the southern tip of the island.  So we were prepared to have colder weather.  But it’s a good thing, because without those, we’d have had nothing between us and the hardwood floor underfoot.

But for what the accommodation lacked in amenities, the family more than made up for in hospitality.

As soon as we arrived the ladies invited us over to their house for a midday lunch that was cooking in the kitchen.  We sat down and the women started hitting on me – it was uncomfortable.  But we made it through the meal and headed back to the room for a siesta.

That night we found out just how difficult it was to get a hot meal at night.  The shops closed up pretty early, and if it wasn’t for a neighboring grocery/everything-else store, we’d probably have gone completely without food for the rest of the day.

We managed to score some noodles and hardboiled eggs for about three times their normal selling price on the mainland.  But it was what we needed to finish off the night and we slept until the morning.

The second day was much like the first, with the exception of increased difficulty in finding food.  But we knew enough to plan ahead at that point – and we knew right where to go for provisions.  So we were spared of a night full of tummy-grumbling and slept soundly.  That is, we slept soundly until the storm hit in the middle of the night which shook the floorboards underneath us until the early morning.

And it was that fateful storm that would also prove to be quite a first-perceived wrench in our plans.

We’d started the road trip with the intention on going all the way up to the gorge in the car and camping for a night there.  But the storm had left the sky above the southeastern coast with enough remaining pressure to churn the seas into a roiling, non-navigable fusion of combers and gales.  So, while I was disappointed that we’d be missing out on Taroko Gorge (which I made up for by filming later), I was okay with maintaining my current status of “alive” by staying on the island until the high winds passed.

In any case, there were no boats adrift today.  So our opinions on the matter were about as persuasive as a prey’s appeal to a predator.

And this turned out to be a good thing in the end.  Because when the family found out that we’d be staying another day instead of taking off that morning, they invited us to eat this huge meal chock-full of all the local delicacies.

Soups seasoned with local herbs whose names I’ll never be able to recall; a stack of locally endemic potatoes, squashes and other root vegetables; and a variety of teas and other hot drinks – these were all meted out with dizzying generosity on our last day on Orchid Island.  And this is after a giant pig was butchered, quartered, divvyed and shared with bottle after bottle of Taiwanese booze.  By midday, we simply couldn’t keep up any longer.

We passed out to a drizzle plinking beats in the tin roof overhead and awoke in just enough time to make another pass around the island before savoring our last moments in Lanyu with the guest family that evening.

Latest Travel Geek Release from Documentary Taiwan: Parts One and Two

In the last month I’ve gotten a lot of feedback about my latest film, Travel Geek: Documentary Taiwan.  This latest film doesn’t represent my latest film “capturing” efforts, but certainly is inclusive of my “post-production” skills gained at film school this past summer (2012).  So while the critiques about camera work are solid and I will be implementing these insights into my upcoming films, I have to say that the good reviews on my latest editing technique are really rewarding.

The other compliments have been very nice as well.  But I just wanted to point out that last bit because of what I’ve decided to do based on the other comments from the video views.

I currently have somewhere around 1,200 followers on this blog with an additional 300-or-so blog followers through WordPress.  I get around 2,000 visitors from Twitter each month.  I have more than 120 regular followers through my YouTube channel.  And more than 2,500 through Facebook (from several pages and non-friend users).  So, while I am eager to get more followers (wink, wink), I am happy to receive comments from these various sources.  And this latest film has really drawn some great responses.

But one of the recurring comments that I have received is that it’s a bit too long to just sit and watch in one shot.  So, to assist those of you without gobs of time on your hands, I am releasing the film in 10 separate parts over the course of the next 14 days (one part every two days with the Intro (Part One) and Part Two on the first day).

And that starts today.  So below, I have uploaded the first two parts and if you’ve already seen them, you can feel free to just wait until I get caught up to where you’re at in the film, and start watching from there.

Included with subsequent parts of each new section, I will also be adding blogs as to the background of the filming from the personal journals that I kept along the way.

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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P87sbEzJ14c&w=560&h=315]
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[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfrJ9yusDpg&w=560&h=315]
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In this first portion, the Taroko Gorge, I spent a few days driving through the entire park, camping in random cut-aways and hiking around the myriad trails, rope bridges and cliffside temples.  It was an absolute blast.  And it was splendid to get away from the hustle and bustle of the city grind and step back into another realm of this mysterious, geological jungle of sheer rock faces and strange fauna.

Along the trip, I saw wild pigs, what looked like the back of a giant dog (but what was later what I found out more likely the Asiatic bear) and some amazingly diverse species of winged creatures – not all of which were diurnal.

From the swell of sounds bellowing around my tent at night to the breathtaking natural vistas during the day, this trip was amazing.

Most of the footage that I have of the trip wasn’t even used for the film.  It was a memorable collection of short, voiceless footage of birds landing all around me, not caring (or perhaps knowing) I was there, snakes lazing around the abandoned trailside, or waterfalls slowly chiseling away at the earth from far away on top of a mountain pass or overlook.  I guess, looking back a year after I captured this footage, I was likely taking this footage more for me than anyone else.

And as I spent many hours reliving my mindscape of the time, it brought back many sobering memories of the entire time period surrounding all those moments in Taiwan.