Friday, October 5, 2007

The Road to Yilan

Yilan City is roughly a 25 minute scooter ride from Luodong. I visit at least twice a week for Chinese classes and work. Yilan is home to Fo Guang University, a Buddhist school, where I have 4 hours of Chinese tutoring each week.

Yilan is also home to 6 of my colleagues, our advisors and the Yilan County Teacher Training Center. Wednesdays we all meet at the center to discuss County wide initiatives and group projects. On the table for the moment is the development of Yilan County's first ever English Village (a simulated English only environment, the merits of which are debated by Second Language Acquisition experts), as well as the initiation of a "Let's Go! Yilan!" project, intended to leave a tangible lasting influence on English education in the county. This is also the site for professional development and teacher training workshops.

I make the drive on my scooter: 8 years old, maroon and scratched but fully functional scooter (wearing, mother and concerned, a full-size, at least mid-shelf helmet - as opposed to the upside down bowls most people wear; death-caps, they were called by one American in Taipei, alive today after a bad wreck because of his full-sizer). Scooters are to Taiwan what bicycles are to China. The amount of stuff people can stack up on them here is amazing. I will post soon (I always say that) on the scooter culture. My favorites are 1) newborn babies in arms (better than the one I saw in the basket of a bicycle the other night) 2) families of dogs at the drivers feet 3) boxes of pomelos, and so on.

Here is a taste of what I encounter on some of the Road to Yilan:

****Always digging around with something near the river****
****Protective Spirits - My scooter has been officially blessed at a temple and carries with it a talisman of the protection that a whole pantheon of gods have to offer. Most Taiwanese will bless their bikes when getting a new one (or so I'm told)****
****Temples Galore****
****Kitty Prowling the Fields****
****Floral Buddha****
****Watery agriculture fields stand in between all sorts of buildings, in the cities and out country roads****
****MSG - yup. I'm sure this was unintentional. I think the "P" stands for "pai", the last character in red, which is kind of like patty. So, MSG chicken patty.****
****These white fellows find plenty to eat****

****Knee deep in mud on a Hot Day****

****And one for all worried mothers out there!****

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Here is the explanation of the MSGP sign you saw on the road...it's just the abbreviated letters of "Sweet and Cripy Chicken Fillets", as the original sound in Mandarin would be like "Mi Su Gee Pai"...hope you're not too disappointed by the truth!! :P

Micah Tillman said...

This is amazing. So new and "Other" for someone like myself. I hope your work is going well!

Dalbanese said...

Hey, thanks Micah! Appreciate the visit. Glad to know that the blog is reaching a few others. The goal is to share a little with what I can see here and hopefully reduce some of the unknowns in the world, for it is all knowable.

育慈 - Thanks for the explanation! That was my thought, that the "pai" was for fillets/patties - I was mostly struck by the irony; hardly intended to give that image to foreigners, yet for those seeking English in a Chinese language environment will immediately be drawn to, then turned away from, the initials. :)

Anonymous said...

Olá Dalbanese
It is a pleasure to be visiting your nice blog. I liked the photos of "Temples Galore and the other"
Wishing you a very nice time.
Kind regards from Brazil.....and if you could give a visit on my little space too.
Geraldo

Anonymous said...

You have to express more your opinion to attract more readers, because just a video or plain text without any personal approach is not that valuable. But it is just form my point of view