Tuesday, December 29, 2009



On December 24, we had a talent contest where the kids performed. We saw some wonderfully talented kids! Here is one of the students in my French class...

Thursday, December 24, 2009

The Night Before Christmas

Christmas is a funny thing here in Taiwan - I confess that I don't understand it.

There are Christmas trees everywhere and Santa Claus is a visitor in many shop windows. Yet, December 25 is not even a single day holiday as it is in Korea... it's work-as-usual for everyone. My school has been generous enough to give us foreign teachers the day off on December 25, viewing it as an important day in our particular culture... very considerate, indeed. Unfortunately, our students will all be in class as usual tomorrow and our Taiwanese colleagues will have extra classes to cover in our absence. I felt badly when I learned this from my students.

December 24 was the day on which the foreign language department held a talent show in which the students performed. There were singers and dancers and all had a wonderful time. I had initially been skeptical of this and hadn't seen any educational point to this but I was wrong. The students prepared diligently for this show and presented well... they gained confidence and emerged stronger from the experience. I was delighted to be proven wrong in my assessment of the project. There was a lot of value in it.

I was one of the three judges so I had no opportunity to video record the proceedings. Fortunately, one of the Taiwanese teachers was doing this with a wonderful JVC Everio HD camera and she has promised me the raw data from her recording so I expect to be able to take some excerpts and post them next week when I get back to school. My Taiwanese colleagues are very friendly and cooperative people and thoroughly professional teachers... I was used to working with people like this in Korea and I'm delighted to find that Taiwan teachers are just the same.

My Christmas Day plans are strange... The senior French teacher, his girl friend and I are going to a local restaurant which calls itself COFFEE SHOW. The lady who operates it serves western style food and appreciates it greatly if one reserves and orders in advance because she prepares the meal from the very beginning. If one just drops in, as we often do, it means a long wait. The food is excellent and the price is very reasonable... friendly service (even if I don't understand what is being said!).

Today I took my motor scooter to the Yamaha dealer down the street. My old scooter (more than ten years old and I'm at least the third owner) had suffered from starting problems. He solved that so quickly he didn't even charge me anything. So today I asked him to repair the speedometer which has not worked during the time I've had it. That was about an $8 repair! I'm sure it would have cost me about $50 in Canada or the US. That brings my total investment in this scooter up to about $160 (US) - and this is what takes me to school and back each day, takes me shopping in nearby towns and to Taichung City when I choose to go there... and all at very low cost. I can't ever remember a $160 purchase being so productive. It ain't pretty but it sure is proving reliable.

It's Christmas Eve and I have a mosquito in my apartment that is annoying me greatly. I can't ever remember a mosquito on Christmas Eve.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Furniture Delivery in the Morning and Earthquake Tonight.

This morning my shipment arrived from Korea. Clothes, books, furniture... the residue of the last eight years. Thirty-two boxes, ranging from the manageable to the unmanageable and I have now unpacked all but four - and that's quite enough for one day. Hyundae Shipping were expensive and the almost four months' wait was not short but the job was really well done. The boxes arrived looking as fresh as when they were packed in my apartment in Korea. And one of the Chinese employees spoke enough English that we were able to sort things out quickly, efficiently and quite amicably.

The Taiwan company was just as efficient as the Korean companies. They called in advance to set up the time - I had specified that it must be a Saturday - and said they would be here between 10:30 am and 11:30 am. They arrived early at 10:15 and had finished and gone in an hour.

And this evening, after a day's unpacking, we had an earthquake. http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2009/12/19/taiwan-earthquake.html. This is the third quake here in the almost four months I've been here. It's disconcerting to be sitting at my desk marking student essays watching my desk move! And wondering... Would it be a good idea to go outside now? And should I use the stairs rather than the elevator?

Then my neighbor, the French teacher, came barging in through my front door - I leave my front door unlocked in case he wants to barge in - and said: "Let's go. We should get out of here. The aftershock will be worse". I was a touch skeptical because by now my apartment was no longer rocking and things looked normal again and I could go into the kitchen and start picking up the things from the floor. So I asked him if our Chinese neighbors had already gone out. He banged on their door and they opened with puzzled looks on their faces as he explained to them the necessity of immediate evacuation.

The daughter, our neighbors are a mother and her two grown daughters, smiled at him and explained that there was no problem. I convinced him that they had lived here all their lives and were better judges of the situation than we so he settled for coming into my place, watching part of an old Laurel and Hardy movie and having a glass of Glenlivet to calm his nerves.

These earthquakes are unsettling - and there's no pun intended there.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

A Trip to the Mountains



I haven't been very many places in Taiwan so two of my colleagues, Eric who teaches with me and Constance who teaches in Kaohsiung, generously took me up into the mountains nearby today for lunch and some sightseeing. So it was a party of three English teachers and two French teachers - but there were only three people... that's your riddle for today!

The roads are very narrow and there is some footage of a car off the road, teetering on the brink of a deep canyon. Fortunately a truck arrived and pulled the car back to safety.

The village we were in was on a rail line of the old narrow gauge variety that has now been abandoned but the station remains as a focal point in this little town which is now a tourist stop. Eric and I were the only non-Chinese tourists in sight throughout this entire day and Constance kept us out of difficulty by asking all the directions and getting all the information!

A little further along, we saw a bridge that had been destroyed by an earthquake. You can see from the ruins of the bridge the horrible destructive powers of earthquakes... and through the ruins the jungle returns to once again take command.

And everywhere the scenery was beautiful.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

December Settles In...

The CWB (the official Taiwan weather office) describes our temperatures this week as ranging from "cold" to "cool"; i.e., 16C to 22C. While that doesn't sound cold to the average polar bear it is not at all comfortable, especially when the wind is blowing into the unheated buildings here in Taiwan. My students assure me that by the time we are all released for a winter vacation in late January it will be most miserable - I believe my students!

We have just finished an examination session and it was somewhat disappointing for the students. Because we're preparing them for the Taiwan language test and the TOEFL test our grades are similar to those the kids get on TOEFL; i.e., abysmally low. Still, they are making progress and this examination session has been something of a wake-up call for them.

I FOUND KIMCHI in the grocery store in a nearby town! Delicious and it isn't even very good kimchi... I miss Korea and the food and the people but it's the people I miss most. Everyone here has been very good to me but I know very few people. That's okay because it's still early days.

People ask me what I think about Taiwan and I have to say that I don't "think" anything. I'm learning, not making judgments. I spent 11 years in Korea and didn't make many if any judgments there... just never felt I'd been there long enough to really know. I'd rather spend my time learning than making judgments.

Motor scooters are ubiquitous here and accidents are frequent. I'm told that it's a point of honor among Taiwanese scooter riders to never look in their mirrors as they run red lights, take corners too fast and weave in and out of traffic. Last night, I saw a man being carried away on a stretcher from the remains of his scooter. He didn't look to be in very good condition.

Car drivers are not very predictable either (this is an observation, not a judgment). People have not been driving cars here for a hundred years as they have been in the west and the driving skills one sees demonstrated are not good. Korea has for many years held the unenviable rank of worst among O.E.C.D. countries - that's because Taiwan is not a member of that particular club. I'm very careful on the road and am quite glad that I have nearly 180 degree peripheral vision - I'm using every degree of it all the time!

Foreign teachers, like me, who come here usually acquire scooters because they're a dependable and inexpensive means of transportation. Among these foreign teachers there is a significant accident rate because they feel they have to test the limits and their limitations are usually greater than they think. So far, I'm still alive... I've had some interesting situations, though, when drivers have cut right across in front of me or made sudden turns that no one could anticipate. Fortunately, I don't feel obligated to prove that I'm an expert on two wheels and my speeds and road position are always quite conservative.