Saturday, November 4, 2017

We all go home

(Remember, when reading a blog, the earlier entries are further down the page.)

Depart Silks Place hotel at 10:45 AM by taxi - 30 minutes to Tainan High Speed Rail station.



Catch Train 636 (Tainan to Taoyuan) at 12:13 PM, arriving at Taoyuan at 13:36 PM.






Catch Taoyuan Transit bus from HSR station to Taoyuan Airport (Taipei's international airport).





Catch Air Canada flight AC012, scheduled for 6:00 PM, delayed almost an hour; duration of flight: approximately 10.5 hours.  





Clear Immigration in Vancouver Airport.  Immigration officials scratched their heads when looking through the documents - a three year old girl from Taiwan carrying a Taiwanese passport and an eTA (Electronic Travel Authorization) document, plus she has Canadian citizenship without having been in Canada.

Catch Air Canada flight AC244 to Edmonton (delayed), arriving at approximately 6:45 PM.





After scraping off the car and stopping to get some supper, arrive HOME!  (Just shy of 24 hours of travelling.)






Preparing for the big jump

Thursday, November 2, was mostly a day for resting, reading, packing and overall preparing for the big jump tomorrow to Edmonton.  Rick, Bo and Marj went to the Taijiang Ecological Cultural Zone by taxi.  They went on the boat ride through the mangrove "green tunnel".  They then mentioned to the taxi driver that they would like to visit a sandy beach.  The driver took them to one, but he told them that it would be difficult-to-impossible to find a taxi there to get back to the hotel.  He offered to come back for them an hour or so later if they wished.





We had supper together - most had pepper rice topped with corn and green onions and ringed with pork or beef or chicken, served in blistering hot cast-iron dishes which finished the cooking of the meat.  Marj had steamed dumplings.



There was a message for Christine and Rick when they returned to their room.  Maylee's birth parents were coming at 9:00 PM to pay a visit and bringing food.  The visit lasted about three hours, and in the absence of Holly and Debra, language barriers were overcome by a translation app on Christine's phone.  The phone was passed to each person as she/he took a turn speaking and the group listened to what hopefully was an accurate rendition of what was said.  Christine and Rick said that it was an enjoyable time.



Thursday, November 2, 2017

Taiwanese Breakfast and Sightseeing

This morning (November 1), Christine explained that Maylee was awake and in discomfort last night from 1:00 to 5:00 AM.  Christine believes that it is teething related, since she can feel what seems to be a molar breaking through on Maylee's gum.  So, the Makowichuks are a bit sleep deprived today.

As promised, Holly returned this morning, bringing with her (as she described it) a traditional Taiwanese breakfast - delicious.

Following breakfast, the group moved to the swimming pool, much to the delight of Bo.





Brenda and I went for a walk around this part of town, and when we returned, Bo was finished swimming.  We took him to the children's play room.  There are many toys and activities in that room, but once there, Bo immediately scanned the shelf of books and signed his desire for the dinosaur book.


Before long, Christine, Rick, Maylee and Holly joined us in the play room.

Turns out that Maylee likes dinosaur books also

After saying goodbye to Holly, the Makowichuks went for quiet time and much needed naps.

At about 5:30 PM, we went by taxi to historic Shennong Street.   The street is narrow, and the buildings are old.  Long ago, the street was part of a busy working class zone.  Today, the buildings are being re-purposed into small art, craft and food shops mostly. 

Shennong Street


Shennong Street in relation to Silks Place


We spotted what appeared to be an ice-cream shop and talked with the owner whose name is Run Run.  His English was excellent, and we discovered that, after a busy career which took him all over the world, he lived in Vancouver for a time. He moved back to Tainan to help his aging parents get new housing "with an elevator".  His wife and adult children still live in Vancouver, and he plans to return there in perhaps a couple of years, "after I fulfill my responsibilities to my parents."  His Shennong Street shop is a home-made fruit juice ice shop, "similar to sorbet", but made from only pure juice.  Brenda and I had a dish with three scoops: mango, passion fruit and lemon - really lovely.

Run Run and his shop

One detraction from the evening walk along Shennong Street was the need to watch ahead and behind for the oncoming ubiquitous Taiwanese scooters.  (My perspective: what rabbits became to crops in Australia, scooters have become to pedestrians in Taiwan.)

It was a lovely, warm evening for a walk.





After exploring Shennong Street, we started walking south toward Silks Place.  After a while, all but Brenda and I caught a cab back to the hotel.



Brenda and I continued to walk, passing many sidewalk eateries on every block,  We arrived back at the hotel sooner than we expected.

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

Visits

At 6:40 AM on Tuesday Morning (October 31), Rick texted Grammy and Grampy, "Maylee had a tough go last night..  Do you two feel up to taking Bo this morning?"  Bo spent the morning with us.  We played in our room for awhile.  After feeding him, we took him on a stroller ride to the busy nearby streets, something that he has enjoyed each time that we have gone.  He carefully observed the surroundings, and on our trip back to the hotel, at each intersection, he pointed in the direction that he wanted to go, and he was always right, leading us back to the hotel's front door.  By then, it was time to feed him again; Bo is fed his prescription formula by G-tube approximately every 3 hours.  We took him to the restaurant patio in front of the hotel and fed him there in the shade and breeze (daytime temperatures here: mid to high 20s).

Holly (director of the Xi En orphanage that cared for Maylee) and Debra (a social worker who has worked on adoptions for Xi En) came for a visit, bringing lunch for everyone, "a traditional Taiwanese lunch".  Soon after eating, Debra received a call on her cell and told us that Maylee's birth parents were in the hotel lobby, here to visit us. (Christine had discussed the possibility of this with the birth mother at their meeting on Sunday.)  We (grandparents) were glad for the opportunity to meet them.  The mom expressed some concern about the possibility of Maylee getting cold in Canada.  In fact, she was also concerned that we all were dressed too lightly for Taiwan's fall temperatures.  We have noticed that many local people are dressed in long pants, long sleeved shirts and often jackets or sweaters also when outdoors, so from their perspective, the birth Mom had a point (although her husband came today in shorts and a short sleeved shirt).  Holly and Christine assured her that there are warm clothes for Maylee in Canada.  The Mom also hoped that Christine had supports available in Canada (therapists, medical options, etc.) to help in the care of Maylee and Bo.  She was astonished to hear that these supports are readily available in Edmonton at no out-of-pocket costs to the family.  The afternoon of conversation was helped a great deal by the bilingual abilities of Holly and Debra.

L to R: Holly, Debra, birth Dad and Mom, Christine, Marj

Photo courtesy of Holly's smart phone self timer camera

Exploring

Monday morning, October 30, Bo, Rick and Marj went swimming at the hotel pool.  There is almost no other activity that Bo likes more.



Marj was experiencing a sore leg from earlier walks, so she rested at the hotel while the rest of us  headed out on an exploratory walk.


First, Rick showed us some of his discoveries along Ximen Road from earlier in the morning when he was searching for breakfast items.  Christine and Brenda were happy to find a bubble tea shop and partake of two teas on offer there.

We made our way along Yonghua Road.  One significant difference here compared to Taipei is sidewalk navigation.  In both cities, the buildings have their second floor built out to the edge of the street, creating a tunnel-like feeling on the sidewalk underneath but open on the street side.  Taipei sidewalks left room for pedestrian to walk; not so here in Tainan.  The sidewalk areas are squeezed to a narrow opening with parked scooters or cars, and often they are completely obstructed, forcing pedestrians to walk out on the street.

Squeezed


Mostly obstructed


Completely obstructed

Our goal was the Shueipingwun Park to see if it had a children's playground - it did.


The park had multiple shaded areas with groups of seniors, most seated and quietly socializing over board games or just conversing, and others practicing Tai Chi. 








Dogs resting in shade, waiting for their senior owners 

This is also a park of fascinating trees.







On our way back, we saw a small fruit shop at the corner of Xialin Road and Yonghua Road and went to check it out.





Next door, open to the sidewalk was a 24 hour buffet-like display of traditional Taiwanese foods, some hot, some cold, no English menu listings and all staff Chinese speaking only.  I watched a local getting a tray and a small cardboard container (three sizes available) and start along the counter, spooning his selections from the buffet into his container.  (I learned later that this is a very local and traditional type of eatery, almost never frequented by tourists, and it is not like a western buffet; you only go through once per payment, and there are no price listings.)  Upon arriving at the lady who was taking payments, she asked me a question in Chinese; I didn't understand.  She pointed to a large pot of rice.  I had seen a person in front of me carrying a small white bowl of rice, so, thinking that I understood fully, I pointed to a small stack of empty white bowls and said, "Yes, please."  She shook her head, grabbed a small plastic bag of rice and placed it on my tray (I now think that my chosen cardboard container indicated that I was a take-out customer, even though that was not my intention).  Then, she said what sounded like, "Bah!"  I gestured that I did not understand.  I looked at the woman standing beside her, and she repeated the same thing, "Bah!"  I thought that they were stating a price, but there was no cash register to see a dollar amount displayed, and the ladies were not writing it down.  I shook my head, still with no idea what they meant.  A young man behind me in line leaned toward me and quietly said, "Eighty."  Rescued, I handed over a NT$100 bill and received my change.  Brenda and I shared the food, unaware of what most of the items were, but enjoying the experience.




By mid-afternoon, the Makowichuks were back in their room for rest time, and the Haneys were shopping for some necessities.  In the evening we went to the basement food court in the nearby upscale department store (Shin Kong Mitsukoshi - there was one near us in Taipei also) to have supper.  Affordable authentic Taiwanese food, thankfully with no KFC nor McDs in sight.

Taiwanese dishes all around, eaten with chopsticks