Sunday, February 22, 2009





Today was just about the best day, weather wise, one could possibly request. Soaring blue skies with those white clumpy cotton bud clouds just peeking into the corner and just enough breeze would waft in every now and then to take the edge off the slow cooking sun. Out on the coast it was just so amazing. I swam out from the far end of Green Bay beach into a surprisingly crisp yet equally blue ocean and lay about 100 metres offshore “starfishin” floating, only my face above water being spun slowly round in the current watching those little clouds move back and forth. Swimming back, everything seemed in such sharp relief and so clean. It’s one of those moments that you know will linger in the memory for a time to come. As I emerged from the water after bodysurfing a little shooter in to shore, two parasailors dropped down on the sand, the second one botching his landing a little and came perilously close to a watching Cassy, who had been blissing out in the sun sitting on the concrete wall by the road! The sail got wrapped around a few street signs, but all was well, and the little drama just added to our lovely little sojourn in the sun. The surf was below par, but it allowed us a really great relaxing time at the beach this morning and into the afternoon. It’s still supposed to be winter!!

We went to see “Valkyrie” at the movies yesterday and were very impressed. Tom Cruise might be a complete nutter as a person, but he can act. The support cast was a galaxy of stars and each did a sterling job. We quickly got used to the “Germans” speaking English, and the whole story was quite compelling. It was relatively early after we left the flics, so we scootered down to Alleycats pizza to dine in as we thought we’d avoid the “school crowd”. We did fairly well, as only one other colleague couple wandered in. The food was its usual top taste and we reveled in a large serve of crappy TV before retiring!

My phone finally died a natural death on Friday. The last straw for me was missing about the 3rd relatively important text, as the phone was developing a mind of its own and deciding to switch itself off and on at weird and irregular intervals. The new one is not very jazzy as I was too tight to pay too much, but it has a camera and other stuff, most of which I can’t use because I’m on a prepaid plan, but it does the trick. The iPod Touch is still my go-to machine for internet etc as well as music, so this little guy, who can do all that, will just be able to chill out and perform some basic functions!

Cass had her book club meeting on Friday night at Charlene’s and all went well, the books, food and refreshment more than palatable and the company friendly and entertaining. My company was similar and I joined up with a few guys I don’t normally get together with, but we had a great time. The photo was taken at the “Indian” beer house, which is just a cheap Chinese restaurant with cheapish beer that I famously took Cass to dinner at on our anniversary 7 years ago. I had not done my usual research and I mistook the Indian beer sign for an Indian restaurant! Oh well, I know most have been better than that one!

Photos today: Cass on the phone to her parents when we got home from school, me ready to “do the steps”. Me in tie (very rare for me these days), today on the cliff, and the boys at the “Indian”.




Sunday, February 15, 2009





Cass had to take a couple of days off this week, partly because she felt so bad and partly because she couldn’t utter more than a very strained whisper. She really copped this bug with both barrels, and she’s only just feeling a little better today and her voice is still a little croaky.

It was another Friday night of reminiscing when Peter Coombs lobbed back into town and we all caught up at the Green Bar. It was also a very strange feeling for us, as we hadn’t been to the Green Bar two weeks running for many years. “Coomba” had arrived from Hong Kong with his girlfriend Karen for the weekend and was keen to catch up with a few people. Wal set it all up for people to meet at a certain time and quite a good crowd showed up, a few just dropping in to say “hi” and a few more settling in to hear all the latest, including the fact that Peter did the Hong Kong marathon last Sunday! Apparently he was hearing the approaching footsteps of his 40th birthday quite loudly, and decided if he was going to do it, it had better be now. We all had a great laugh at his expense watching the video of him crossing the line: he couldn’t get out of a “Cliffy Young shuffle” as his legs had all but seized up at the 30 km mark. Karen was a very interesting person and very enjoyable company: we could all see the attraction. Cass reckons it was like bringing the girl home to meet the parents, getting the Taipei boys to meet her!

I managed to get an extra stairs session in today and was walking solidly for about 2 hours. I investigated right to the end of the monkey trail then went beyond, tracking the river ever upwards through very peaceful little home gardens and rustic little cottages dotting the path at irregular intervals. The rush of the water was ever present and even though it was quite a warm day, seemed to have a cooling effect as well. In the end, the path rose to the back road to Yangminshan, almost up to the Starbucks and 7/11 there….that’s a long walk! While I was doing that, Cass went for a little recovery walk to Takashimaya (which pretty much exhausted her in her weakened state) and got some hand cream, some delicious smoked salmon and horseradish mustard sandwiches for lunch and had a general look around at the beautiful things.

We watched the movie “Milk” this weekend as well and thoroughly enjoyed it. I’m a real fan of Sean Penn, and although I’m more used to seeing him do the tough guy, he was great in this as well. He nearly lost me a few years back with that awful, “I am Sam”, but I’m glad I gave him another chance!

I asked Cass if she wanted me to write anything more and she reminded me of a few things. She was keen that everyone knows that she manicured the cats with my help…one in particular is very resistant: you’d think we were trying to amputate her front legs! She also reminded me of the dinner we had down at Wendel’s on Friday night before we went out. It was great as usual and the food was excellent along with slick service and classy décor.

We’ve had a great weekend, it’s good to have Cass “alive” again and we’re looking forward to sitting down to watch the big Twenty 20 game between the Aussies and the Kiwis right now! Photos: one Cathy sent me of last Friday night with me and Cathy, Chad and Shaun. Also, me and 3 of my Grade 3 ESL boys at the lantern festival on Wednesday and a few more lanterns and marching guards. (Cassy refused to let me photograph her this week: apparently she didn’t look her best!)




Sunday, February 08, 2009


This had to be one of the most low key weekends we’ve had for a very long time. Although I got out and about on Friday night to welcome Chad and Cathy back for the night and Cass and I went to Beitou for dinner on Saturday, we didn’t do much else of anything. It was actually a very relaxing weekend because of that, but Cass unfortunately succumbed to a very sore throat and associated sickness on Saturday night, so hasn’t been really able to do much of anything today.

Chad was coaching the girl’s team from his Singapore school and our school was hosting the IASAS tournament for basketball this year, so we were able to meet up. Cathy arrived late on Thursday night as well, so after a few of us watched one of his games on Friday afternoon, we all headed down to our old traditional haunt, the Green Bar. Lots of folk drifted in through the night, so we had a great time and although there weren’t heaps of opportunities to catch up one-on-one, I managed to corner each of them for a little while, so was able to find out what they’ve been up to. Ironically, the main thing I chatted to Chad about was my trip to Singapore not long ago, and Josh’s buck’s night!

On Saturday night, it was rumoured to be all happening again, but perhaps with an even greater ferocity, so I wisely mumbled something about staying in touch, but didn’t pursue it any further! Cass was keen to get up to Beitou on the train on Saturday night, which we did, to enjoy a very delicious steak and accompaniments at the Royal Host up there. The New Zealand beef is a fine very thick cut and is probably the best steak we’ve had over here. It is consistently good, so whenever we get a real hankering for a slab of beef, we know we’ll not be disappointed at the “Royally”. Even though we only go about 5 stops, it always feels like we’ve really gone “out”, but it is far more leisurely on a Saturday night to head north to Damshui, rather than south to the cauldron of a weekend night downtown!

Sunday, Cass has really succumbed to her illness and we have just spent the day lying on the lounge and watching the one day cricket, which, as I write is in an innings break, the Aussies finally looking like breaking their longish losing streak. We’ve also been reading about the horrific bushfires and loss of life and terrible injuries and realizing that we’re very lucky. I’ve been a bit introspective for some time over here worrying about how much money we’ve lost/ are continuing to lose on the share market etc. but things like this put it all back in perspective. It’s been great to hear from both Cassy’s parents and my Mum on the phone this weekend, or through the week: hearing about what they’ve been helps to keep us feeling a bit Aussie and not too separated from reality over here!

I’ve just returned from the supermarket after going to pick up a few things Cass couldn’t get yesterday: chicken and mince, nothing exotic! Just when you think Taipei has actually got everything you need, a shelf of no chicken and no mince certainly brings you back down to earth. The shopping still takes Cass only about 20 minutes…there aren’t 5 million product choices like there are back home. Well, it seems Cass will soldier in to work tomorrow to set things up, but I’m hoping she’ll take a couple of days off after that to rest up. That’s it! As I say, an unusually quiet time for us…. Photos: Dinner at the Royal Host, Beitou.

Sunday, February 01, 2009









Apart from watching the slow, agonizing and inexorable slide of the world’s greatest cricket team into at least the 3rd or 4th best, we did lots of other stuff this week. A week traditionally known for its cold and wet conditions, this week of enforced consumer holidaying, otherwise known as Chinese New Year, was remarkable for both the fine weather it turned ion and the increasing number of bigger establishments that stayed open, at least some of the time.

Cass accompanied me out to the coast on both Tuesday and Wednesday as I surfed Green Ball on the north east and Pointies on the north respectively. Both times I met up with Dan and Cass had a great chat with Nicky while the kids roamed free! It’s great surfing with Dan: he has a real energy and excitement that brings out the best in me surfing wise, as I have to admit, since Ross left, I’ve never really recovered! It also helped that the surf was excellent on both days, helped by some generous and powerful swell. To check more of the Green Ball day, have a look at this link, and I even made a slide show of the Wednesday at Pointies, which you can see here.

As the week moved along, we luxuriated in our ability to stay up late and sleep in even later! No alarms and timetables lead to us very quickly re-adjusting our body clocks. We know we’ll have to pay for this tomorrow when the alarm goes off at 6 am again, but we’re living for the moment! Lemon butter for brekky, chicken soup for lunch and even apple cake with amaretto cream for tea…wow! How well we ate, all home cooked and delicious!

I wandered up to the gym on Thursday to hit the heavy bag and lift some weights and met Wal up there for a solid two hour session. The couple of cleansing ales turned into a couple more, but I still managed to bring home the KFC for dinner, so all was not lost. Cass and I went to the movies yesterday to watch the superb “Flashbacks of a Fool”. Whoever named this movie deserves to be shot, as I imagine many moviegoers would miss it just because of the very strange and unimaginative name. It was, however, first class, Daniel Craig and all the cast just mesmerizing. We ate out at Cassy’s favourite “Aubergine” beforehand, Cass giving her Florentine red leather jacket and Venetian glass heart a first outing.

Earlier in the day we trekked up behind the Veteran’s Hospital, through the tunnel and up the trail into the mountains beyond. The trail and steps were characterized by some rare for Taipei and rather beautiful sandstone formations and the track stretched up and farther up till we reached a pinnacle of sorts. Backtracking through another path eventually to a large popular temple, we continued yet farther, winding our way behind the temple and way down into the Beitou hinterland. Eventually disgorged from our mini wilderness in the back of Qiyan, we eventually made our way down to the station, where we MRTed back to Mingde and home.

Today, we had breakfast out at Jakes, meeting up with Wally’s mum and brother and Tina. We had a laugh and a half with them: Wal’s mum is certainly a larger than life character, a real crack-up! I think he was pleased to share the wear a little: sounded like she could talk the hind leg off a dog. We wandered down to Rourkey’s from there in a pristine sunshiney morning, just perfect weather. After that I went down to pick up the photos we’d finally selected to be printed, all 935 of them! Amazingly, this was only a “selection”, believe it or not. There are certainly some drawbacks from taking this camera around every week to take pictures for this very blog! Admittedly, we had left it rather a while: about 3 years. Cass has vowed never to let it get like this again. I’m not really fussed: I reckon if we have the electronic version, we don’t need the hard copies, but Cass is a real “hard copy woman”.

All in all, an absolutely brilliant break for us both, just what we needed after our fantastic, but very enervating romp through Italy just a few weeks ago. Photos: wilderness in the city, surf, Aubergine, cats and photos. Check the links for more surfing stuff if you’re keen.

Monday, January 26, 2009




Well, it’s Chinese New Year time again and even though you’d think we’d be used to it by now, something always surprises us anew. We’re used to the incessant small incendiary devices being exploded at all hours of the day and night, some sounding like they’re just outside our window, the explosive force shaking us from our slumber.

We’re used to the curious customs that we seem increasingly to be taking on board, quite bizarrely, as we don’t have any belief system to back these behaviours up. For example, I’ve found myself hesitating to use scissors (cuts bad luck away) yesterday and today. I’ve also found myself not cleaning up stuff and taking it easy, but I can’t really tell if this is for Chinese New Year or just my usual built-in laziness!

We’re also used to the bone chilling cold, although it seems especially intense this year. It has only just dipped into single figures, yet just feels so much colder than the Italian winter temps we just experienced. How could this be? Apart from the high humidity, which makes it feel so much colder, it may also be a stubborn refusal by the locals to acknowledge that a cold (albeit fairly brief) winter actually does exist in Taiwan. The apartments are made to stay cool and don’t retain heat, the only heaters we can get are little blowy heaters, and people just pretend it isn’t really happening!

The one surprise we got this year was enjoying, to a certain extent, our third Chinese New Year family dinner. We received this very special invitation to join one of our neighbour’s families for this family only feast. Bessy cuts Cassy’s hair in her little back alley salon and she was keen for us to join them. We dragged ourselves out last evening (hence the slightly late blog) and made our way over with a bottle of Australian red and a little Murano glass picture frame from Venice as our small gifts. Bessy’s young adult kids, Eric and Nicole were good English speakers, but we found ourselves in quite a surreal situation at times, language wise. Abe was Eric’s Japanese friend, so I found my self speaking to him in Japanese, then translating bits (only little bits!) into Chinese for Bessy’s husband and his elderly Mum and then into English for Cass and the kids. It certainly kept me on my toes! Abe was a very interesting young artist currently staying as an artist in residence at Taipei Artists’ village. He showed us his portfolio with photos of his super sized wooden sculptures, many of which are self portraits of his representations of his childhood. The elongated limbs prompted me to tell him about Cassy’s dad’s long arms (so Chris reckons!) and he thought this was terrifically funny for some reason, but he could also have just drunk a lot of beer.

The “special and delicious” foods presented to us at Mr. Lee’s place a few years ago were actually a little less special and a little more delicious than we remembered, and we didn’t have any trouble selecting some items to fill us up, while remembering to leave the fish (another tradition) and trying to serve everyone else, even though we were the guests (yet another). After a while sitting around drinking Oolong tea and hearing about Bessy’s husband’s love for a Taiwanese style of Tai Chi, which he practices at some length every day, we wandered off down the lane home feeling extremely “local”!

Somehow, I managed to drag myself out of bed to tend to my annoyingly insistent alarm at 5 am on Saturday morning. This was an unusually heroic feat I’ve decided, as it was bitterly cold and also just a few short hours after I’d gone to bed. A group of us had celebrated the coming of our Chinese New Year break under the light and warmth of the space heaters at Wendel’s, our Erdingers somehow reducing us to a hypnotic state as we gazed into their amber depths… (or more likely, just like Abe, we’d drunk too much beer!). Anyway, the alarm signified a call to drive east for surf. I got to the coast after going through the 13 km tunnel and along various expressways, just as the light arrived and we ended up getting some really fantastic waves at the “Taj Mahal”, as we call it, a spot just up from Wushi Harbour. It was great to have a surf and a chat and some shared waves with Tobes, Danno, Andrew and Gary.

I managed to do the steps today after watching the Aussies struggle big time in the cricket one dayer and Cass exercised by ripping into a big clean of the house (against all sorts of Chinese New Year rules, I might add… “I’m not Chinese!” she said). Cassy has also continued a growing tradition we have here at CNY: she has cooked a massive pot of Mum’s famous chicken soup…best ever I reckon, after sampling some for lunch. Not resting there, she has also made a big batch of lemon butter which we’re slathering over fresh hot white toast in the frosty mornings: this holiday is already fantastic! Lots of book reading and TV series watching has been done and more of the same is planned, along with some surfing, steps, cinemas and restaurants as the week progresses. Photos: a rare visit to my lap by Virgil (there’s a lot to be said for this cold weather!), the surfer boys, Cass with all the family at our CNY dinner.

Sunday, January 18, 2009






Righto, back into action. After a week off I can hardly get started again, it’s a good thing I don’t take many br5eaks I think! We celebrated our 21st wedding anniversary ion Friday, so I drove the car home from school and managed to find a space on Ker Qiang Lu till we were ready to leave about 6 o’clock. Cass was resplendent in her new Italian high boots and her “new” short skirt, which was an older high quality one she rarely wore and was taken up by the lady round the corner. She looked great, as usual, and I wondered why she hadn’t tried this look before…

The car drive down was smooth enough, but Taipei Friday night traffic meant that it took about an hour to get there, so I’m glad we left when we did as Lawry’s, the Prime Rib said they’d only hold our 7pm booking for 10 minutes. A U.S. restaurant chain which started in 1930 (which explains the waitresses and chefs attire: same as when it started) it only has a few outlets in the States and now a few more in Asia. It is on the 12th floor of the Core City Mall down in Hsin Yi that we frequented years ago as the then new and slick shopping plaza. The menu, décor, service is exactly modeled on the original and it was very classy. We had the famous Lawry’s spinning salad before our prime beef with creamed corn, spinach and Yorkshire pudding with a lobster tail on the side. Finishing with dessert (English trifle) and coffee, it was great celebration and exciting to be downtown on a weekend night in all the big city buzz.

On Saturday, I decided that enough was enough and we must find some pies! Jason’s supermarket has stopped importing Vili’s pies from South Australia for some reason, but I reasoned there just had to be a pie somewhere in a city this size trying to cater at the very least, for the expats increasingly loud voice in the culinary arena of the city. Sure enough, after some internet searching and some scouring of the local online versions of the English language newspapers, we found what we wanted. First stop way down south on the Nanshijiao line through Taipei Main then in a tunnel under the river to emerge in Yong He city. Can you believe we’d never made it to this interesting little offshoot of Taipei? Because of the natural barrier of the river, a lot of cool places are opening up as the locals seem to resent going “into town” for their restaurants and entertainment. This was all according to Frankie, of Frankie’s Pies ‘N More, an affable and interesting owner and manager from South Africa. We got his set menu of a salad and juice with a home made pie, Cass had the curry vegetable and I had the pepper steak. They were fantastic!! We had a great old chat with him and took a few cards and promised to spread the word back at school.

Next, back across the river, change trains to head east and find “Pie Boy” in a lane off Zhong Xiao East Rd. This place was set up by a young New Zealander called David (!) and his wife (a local girl). David wasn’t there, but his wife served us up a set of minced beef pie and salad and drink. Cass had the salad and drink and I managed to force down another very hearty and delicious meat pie. My head was really spinning: two different and excellent home made pies within an hour in Taipei? It was just too good. The verdict is still out as we have some takeaways to sample from each outlet over Chinese New Year (different flavours) and then we’ll decide. We did have an “apple crumble” pie for tea last night which was scrumptious, so that might be just tipping things in Pie Boy’s favour at the moment! Anyway, I’m sure the research will get all the Aussies, Kiwis and South Africans excited at school tomorrow…
Sunday and I was up, literally before the crack of dawn to drive over to the surf at 5.50am! I haven’t been for ages and didn’t expect much after reading the rather forlorn predictions of the swell charts but….you never know! Of course, it was flat as a tack, but the sunrise over the mountains and then the sea was a treat to behold and I drove back feeling very refreshed. After the two hour drive there and back, I got back just to get the start of the cricket and Cass and I settled in for the day, first with brekky, then with magazine (me) and marking (Cass, of course) to watch a great last gasp win by the Aussies. We streamed it over the internet, our new connection being outstanding. I’ll go into this more next week, but for techies out there, we now have a warp cable LAN of 10M! This tripled and more our previous speed which was a very fast 3M.
Photos: spinning salad and well dressed waitresses and chefs at Lawry’s, two old married folk, Cass posing outside our two new pie bar finds!





Thursday, January 08, 2009




















We were old pros at this train taking business, but still really enjoyed a different journey through snow covered mountains and snowscapes straight from a picturebook. A stop in Bologna along the way and then to Venice, out of the station a few steps then the Grand Canal: freaky! After an inordinate amount of time figuring out which vaporetto to take, we opted for the number 1, all stops to San Marco job. It took a while, but allowed us time to acclimatize to all that water, all that beauty and all the fairytale romance that Venice just magically presents by being itself. It was almost too much to take in as we passed all manner of watercraft and palazzo after palazzo. Reality hit when we disembarked at San Zaccharia, just one stop past the square and I realized our hotel’s street wasn’t on the map I had! Off to buy another map, pinpointed canal and street, then we carted bags through a frigid late afternoon to our hotel. Ducking into one alley after another, crossing a few impossibly pretty little bridges and there we were at Locanda Canal.

During the 5 days we were there, we experienced some amazing things. After a walking archaeological dig and sculpture fest in Rome, a high end shopping and renaissance art romp in Florence, Venice turned out to be almost completely different again. While still Italian in every way, it had its own certain eccentricities. Was it the obvious, yet delightful total absence of cars in the entire city? Was it the absolute assumption at all times that you were, indeed, a tourist and in need of some service or product? Was it that the whole place had an almost surreal feel...Venice was almost its own theme park? We had a sense that not one local person was in the city except to run a shop or a restaurant, pilot a gondola or water taxi or secure a museum, basilica or gallery. It was a strange sense yet not an uncomfortable one: just really very different from anywhere else we’ve ever been. The almost indescribable beauty was overwhelming at times, like we’d been transported and plonked onto a fantasy movie set or into the pages of a romantic novel. The gondoliers pushing off walls with their feet as they negotiated tight turns on the back canals, water swishing and sparkling in a splintered yellow early morning or sunset light. The tiny arched pretty little bridges in the less traveled lanes and canals. Snow glistening on the roofs after a dunking on New Years Eve, chunky squares falling off as the chimneys heated up and started smoking. Tiny snowmen left by children outside the entrance to popular galleries and icy slushy snow crunching underfoot as we made our way through bustling squares, small knots of people breathing plumes of steam into the air as they read the outside menus of bustling trattorias. The endless parade of people in the maze of streets, ducking in and out of shops and bars, comparing goods and prices, most seemingly destination free just enjoying the ambiance. The ubiquitous displays of Murano glass, trinkets to fine art, all glistening under dispaly lighting, the overfow of which flowed onto the cobblestones to give a cozy trail to follow.

Even though suffering from "Basilica bulimia" (a recently coined phrase from Emma and Catherine that we loved!)), we did still manage to make our way through the incredible St. Marks. From the heavily golden mosaiced ceilings to the pre Roman four bronze horses, the museum of artifacts, and the Golden Wall behind the main altar, the treasures were a sight to behold. We climbed the gallery and enjoyed the views from the terrace before investigating the church proper. After this we made our way up the campanile for the views which were stupendous, but we were disappointed to be ushered into a very boring elevator instead of being left to negotiate our steps! The square itself was larger than we'd imagined and of course held the extra romance of being trod upon by the likes of Byron and Cassy’s literary hero, Henry James. We braved the outrageous prices to have morning tea in Jame's favourite "Florian", kept exactly the same as it was in his day. We wandered in and out of his lunch haunt, "Quadri", on the opposite side of the square and even tracked down the palazzo where he stayed on the Grand Canal, the Palazzo Barbaro. It is now private apartments, but Cass stood in the doorway to have her photo taken in her erudite mentor's shadow.

The Palazzo Grassi housed a grand selection of Italian contemporary art, some of which was astounding and thought provoking, other pieces we thought were very derivative or just plain rubbish! An installment of rubber bands lit by lasers that pulled and pressed against each other in a darkened room was quite clever and freaky, while a giant plush 8 foot tall purple spider that the artist danced around was just weird. One piece that really stood out were 9 life size bodies covered with sheets (as if they were corpses) but made entirely of white Carrara marble...brilliant!

The Venice version of the Accademia promised more renaissance treasures, many of a particular and parochial Venetian flavour, but that suite me as my favourite, Titian, was a Venice boy. One marvelous rendition that had been butchered near the bottom to provide a doorway (!) was the "Presentation of the Virgin to the temple". There were lots more through the rooms and hallways and we spent some very enjoyable hours in there.

Peggy Guggenheim's old home, the low slung and beautiful palace on the Grand Canal is now home to a carefully chosen selection of some of the world's primo modern art. The fact that many of the paintings are hung in situ where they were when Peggy lived there adds further zest to their viewing. What to do but drool over room after room of the most perfectly crafted Picassos, Chagalls, Pollocks, etc. etc. A magic treasure chest of everything we love: we both enjoyed our renaissance experience, more than we possibly imagined, but to feast on these more familiar artworks was a cleansing and uplifting experience.

We went further and further up the culinary ladder the longer we stayed in Italy and Venice provided a succession of sublime meals, culminating in a special lunch on our last day of three courses and wine at an "Italy's best restaurants, 2009" entry: multiple Michelin stars material, it was exquisite.

Sad to leave Italy, but a little exhausted too, we caught a 3 am ferry to the airport, transferred Venice to Rome, then Hong Kong, then back to Taipei, 26 hours door to door. I must be getting old: I've had my first bout of jet lag ever this week....now I know how shocking it can be! Cass has been fine but I've sprung up at 2 am in the morning 4 days in a row. Oh, I forgot: Cass bought some super duper patent knee length leather boots to match her Florence jacket...very snazzy! Back to reality now, we're ready to re-discover Taipei's own peculiar charms. I won't write a blog this Sunday after all this...it's been more of an epistle than I thought it would be: if you managed, thanks for sticking with it!!