Sunday, April 29, 2012

Love Motels


We hosted a Professor this past week from a respected university.  Since my blog policy is to avoid identifying locations and people by name, including myself, let me say this Professor is from the Palo Alto California area.  We had a great time with him and our conversation included the love motels of Taiwan. 

Similar to Japan, the love motels are big, big business in Taiwan. Today’s love motel evolved from the “rest hotels” of the past, where a room is rented for one hour, maybe two if you were really ambitious.  Today’s motels are themed based and generally used by young unmarried people.   In both Taiwan and Japan, children typically live with their parents until they marry, and couple sleepovers in the parent’s home are culturally frowned upon.  A young woman will typically select the motel and the man will pay for it.  Love motels include a large Jacuzzi tub, karaoke, steam room and of course a big bed.  I’m sure cheating married couples use them too.

The motel attempts to create a perception of discreteness. You pull up to a drive in window, view pictures of various room themes with a young woman in a very short skirt, and make your selection.  A key is provided and you drive your car into the awaiting private garage.  Once the garage door is closed, you make your way upstairs to the room.

On a recent Saturday night, after touring a mountain area in the center part of Taiwan, we checked into a local motel.  This love motel was highly recommended by many people and decorated by a famous designer.  We selected a room that had a theme of female dolls in erotic poses (I think that was the theme).  There was a KFC room, however this was already occupied.  I really wanted to see what the Colonel does at a love motel, so naturally I was disappointed we couldn’t get this room.   The love motel was not a room that I could possibly use for sleeping (I’m getting old), so we took pictures and then left.  My wife told the girl in the short skirt that her American husband was too freaked out by the hundreds of little dolls to stay there.  Actually I have my own Barbie collection, so the dolls were not a problem.

Date night in Taiwan often includes the love motel and I had to see one.  If I were 21 years old, this might fit me, but my curiosity was only to see one and not to complete the experience.  I’m not judging any of my readers that are regular customers.










Saturday, April 21, 2012

The Recycling Mafia of Taipei

I have watched the recycling activity in Taipei since late last year and find it fascinating.  The Taipei city government is involved in recycling, however the private enterprise street level recycling handles the majority of the materials, and it is big business.  From what I can tell, it is run very similar to the mafia.

At the bottom of the recycling  process is the Piciotto which are the lowest ranking soldiers.  This group is made up of thousands of elderly people that have been assigned an extra wide wagon that is pushed around the neighborhood, collecting recyclables.  The elderly can often barely walk, but yet they find a way to push the wagon up hills and over curbs.  Every night the city government sends their musical garbage recycling trucks to the neighborhood, but the Piciottos are ready to intercept you as you attempt to place the recycling in the city truck.  I refer to this activity as freelancing.   Why would someone be opposed to letting an old lady take your plastic milk jugs and cardboard containers to make some money?  Because they are your next door neighbor and the hoarders that allow garbage to ferment in the apartment below you, if you live in the slums.

The next level up is the Sgarrista .  These mafia soldiers ride bicycles and motor scooters.  They are younger and more prosperous.  You see them riding through the city with stacks of cardboard or bags of bottles attached to their bikes.  If you don’t behave well as a Sgarrista, you will be banished to Piciotto level.

Caporegime or Lieutenant gets to drive a vehicle suitable for hauling materials and doesn’t have to perform too much physical labor.  Caporegime pick up the materials from the Sgarrista and deliver them to the Capo Bastone.

The Capo Bastone is second in command and the person that moves the material to recycling yard.  These Capos are well entrenched in the mafia and get to drive large trucks, that compete in size with the city vehicles.   Capo Bastones are respected in Taipei and cause fear among the Piciottos.  If a Capo Bastone wants to double park their truck without using their emergency blinkers, who will argue with them?

At the top of the food chain is the Capo Crimini.  This guy moves the recycling materials to the end user.  This guy owns Taipei recycling and causes the city government to wonder why they even bother.  If you are lucky to witness the recycling yards where materials are ready to be loaded onto a boat, you may find a sleeping Asian.



 
























Sunday, April 15, 2012

Sleeping Asian Hidden Danger

I’m continually amazed that Asians appear to be able to sleep anywhere.   I mean anywhere and it is largely all Asians. I have witnessed people sleeping on public transportation, in restaurants, public parks, libraries, their work place and much more.  It appears to be widespread throughout Asia, and I see it in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Japan.

I’m sure there is a cultural aspect to this behavior, but there must also be a level of genetic ability to sleep on public transportation with some level of dignity.  Other than a long distance plane trip, I never sleep other than at my designated bedtime.  If I slept in public, especially while sitting, I would be head bobbing, head banging, leaning on my neighbor, drooling non-stop and maybe worse.

When I get on a bus or train, as much as 90% of the travelers will be sleeping.  How do they sleep so well and still wake up at their designated stop?  My theory is that Asians must be superior.   

One time I took a trip to Germany with my Plant Manager and he drank too much beer at the Hofbrauhaus in Munich.   While traveling on the train back to our hotel, he unexpectedly bolted out of his seat, exited the train and watched me as the train left, while he was on the deck outside.  Long story short, he boarded the next train, fell asleep and ended up 60 miles from our hotel when he awoke, only to find out the train had stopped running for the night.  This is not the end of the story, but it is over for purposes of this blog.  The relevance is that Caucasians can fall asleep on public transportation if alcohol is involved.

Asians don’t need alcohol and will typically have their eyes closed within 30 seconds of sitting.  How do they not hurt themselves and how do they awake in time for their stops?  Actually they are not necessarily as good of public sleepers as I had originally thought.  My wife and I witnessed one woman sleeping on a bus, only to have her head slammed hard against the window, when the bus turned abruptly.  It had to hurt and everyone was surprised there was no blood on the window or head.  Another time I watched a woman wake up thinking she missed her stop.  The panic on her face, followed by the relief when she found out she hadn’t passed her stop was fun to watch.  Both the woman and I laughed.  My teenage stepdaughter is often late coming home, for suspicious reasons I won’t discuss.  One of her excuses is that she fell asleep on the bus and missed her stop.  Actually that is probably true.

Asians sleep easily and don’t mind sleeping in public.  Caucasians are more self-conscience and will typically avoid sleeping if they can.  Nobody sleeps well in public and it has become one of my favorite forms of entertainment.  I went to the internet to borrow some pictures of sleeping Asians.  I was amazed to find hundreds of “sleeping Asian” websites created by Caucasians. 














Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Nan-ao Trail

We joined the Mountain Climbing Club of my wife’s employer and hiked the first three kilometer portion of the 27 kilometer Nan-ao Trail.  The trail is located in the north east coast region of Taiwan near the town of Yilan.  The group traveled the entire portion of the recently restored trail and then returned, for a total of six kilometers.   The trail is easy to slightly moderate in difficulty and follows the South Nan-ao River.   The overall elevation change is about 400 meters and the trail provides some great views of the river gorge and mountains, including a great diversity of vegetation. 

The area has been inhabited by the Atayal indigenous people for hundreds of years and the trail was a primary route for the movement of salt from the plains along the east coast.  During the Japanese occupation (1895-1945), the trails were enhanced for purposes of controlling the Atayal.   Original Japanese markers can be found along the trail. After the KMT replaced the Japanese, the Atayal people were relocated and the Nan-ao trail fell into disuse. The forest bureau has improved the trail significantly, including the addition of two suspension bridges, and recently opened the section the club hiked.

The most difficult part of the hike is the travel along several very narrow trail sections with steep cliffs falling to the river below.  The Nan-ao trail is best known for the true story of a 17 year old Atayal girl name Sayon, who fell and drowned in 1938, while carrying the luggage of a Japanese officer she loved.  The story has been captivating to both the Japanese and Taiwanese, and the subject of books and movies.  Last year, Taishin Financial Holdings President Lin Keh-hsiao fell to his death hiking a nearby portion of the trail.  Ironically, reports suggest that Lin was intrigued by the story of Sayon since childhood and hiked the trail numerous times as a result.

The trail guide was very knowledgeable of the vegetation and insects found along the trail and provided the group with instructional information.  A picture of a Bird’s Nest Fern is included below. An original suspension bridge constructed by the Japanese about 100 years ago is still visible, but unusable.

After completion of the hike, the group rest at the river basin and then traveled to a nearby restaurant for a dinner of favorite local cuisine, which everyone appeared to enjoy.  Strangely, the highlight of the trip appeared to be a shopping trip to a small tourist town with a famous bakery.  The entire group joined a crowd of hundreds of other people, eager to buy breads and cakes made with local green tea.  I enjoyed the bakery and free tea samples, but it wasn’t a highlight for me.













Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Movin' On Up

“Well we're movin’ on up, to the east side, to a deluxe apartment in the sky.”   The lyrics are from the theme song of a television show The Jeffersons, which was a spin-off of one of the most popular shows of all time, All in the Family.  The Jeffersons debuted in 1975 and lasted 11 seasons, which oddly, was longer than All in the Family. The show was about a black family that moved from a working class NY neighborhood to a luxury Manhattan apartment.

In 1978 my friend and I moved from the upper Midwest to the Northern California East Bay area.  We were offered jobs with a newly formed distributor of our previous employer.  My friend moved there several months before me; I had to finish a semester of school and complete my Best Man obligations for a very good friend.  In retrospect, I think my friend would have preferred I didn’t fulfill my obligations.

The friend that I moved to California with, was a very frugal man.  He rented an apartment for us in the lowest cost part of a very low cost city.  The day I arrived after a 44 hour drive, a drunk neighbor lady smashed into my car and drove off, a man broke into our apartment at 2:00 a.m. (he claims it was just an honest mistake) and I woke up in my sleeping bag next to a pile of vomit left by the previous tenant.   I was unable to recover damages from the drunk neighbor, though I compensated myself with entertainment that included repeatedly lighting firecrackers in her apartment, and standing on top of her boyfriend and pouring water on his head, as he tried to crawl from his car to their apartment, in either a very drunk or incredibly stealth move.  We had a drug crazed neighbor smash the front picture window and his girlfriend entered our apartment with a rifle in her hands and blood dripping off her body, as she attempted to escape him.  We lived in the slums.

My friend is a good person and he now lives in a very nice home in the suburbs, so I’m not sure why he chose to rent where he did.  I attempted to get him to move to a nicer location, though he could never commit to the higher rent required.  I ultimately returned to the Midwest, and he also did later.

Recently, my wife and I decided to rent an apartment in Taipei, which is 100 km north of our beautiful home in a gated community. The apartment was necessary because our daughters attend school in Taipei.  My wife selected the apartment when I was in the U.S. and based on her Chinese frugality, it is low cost.  Besides the usual downside of living in a very low end neighborhood, we have other issues to contend with.  The landlord asked that we not use the only bathtub in the only bathroom, because it was about to break.  She asked that we stand over the toilet and spray water as a shower.  We have refused to do that and have showered in the tub, which is now cracked. 

We have a hoarder lady living below us that participates in the lucrative recycling trade (more about this in the future), however her apartment stinks and she yells loudly at any time of the day.  The old couple across the hall screams loudly at each other often.  The man supposedly has dementia and his wife cannot control him, but I think it may be the other way around.  She locks him out of the 4th floor apartment, trapping him on the balcony.  He yells to us to please release him.  When we don’t release him he calls us heartless.  They prefer to scream at night and early morning, though they are extremely versatile and can scream at all hours. The upstairs neighbor doesn’t scream ever, but she enjoys vacuuming her hard surface flooring above our bedroom at 3:00 a.m.  We live in the slums.
My wife regrets the choice and we have a new upscale apartment being prepped for us in a nice neighborhood.  The new building represents typical luxury Taipei real estate.  The Chinese would prefer to own real estate over any other asset type. Mainland China restricts the number of properties you can own, so a great deal of money flows to Taiwan.  The ratio of sell prices to rent is by far the highest in the world, with Monaco a distant second.  Even though Chinese own many multi-million dollar apartments, they don’t necessarily choose to rent them out, and often prefer to leave them vacant.  It is hard to rent an apartment in Taipei and it is even harder to justify buying one, when the price/rent ratio is crazily upside down.  Leases are typically for 3 years and require significant prepayments.
Living in the slums hasn’t been all bad.  I appreciate watching how the people live and the simple joys they seek.  One neighbor has a bird with the most beautiful song I have heard.  Most neighbors grow wonderful houseplants; there is no shortage of flowers in the area.  Crime is low and I actually don’t have too many complaints.

I look forward to moving into our new 19th floor apartment, which includes the use of an indoor swimming pool, gym and underground parking.  I also look forward to nice bathrooms and a big kitchen.  Well we're movin’ on up, to the east side, to a deluxe apartment in the sky.”   
April 7-new update on the screaming neighbors.  The man with dimentia decided he could no longer deal with the hoarder lady and her stinking apartment, so he broke into her apartment to confront her, which led to a large screaming episode.  The neighbors across the alley couldn't stand the screaming so they began screaming that they were trying to sleep.  I want to scream too...

I have attached a picture of our neighborhood and a lady involved in the lucrative recycling trade, which will be featured in a future blog.