Sunday, July 18, 2021

Trip Back To Maine

 Here is a video I made leading up to our trip back to Maine.

~Soleil Huang-Dale



Monday, July 12, 2021

Bubble Tea Compilation


We have made drinking bubble tea a Friday ritual, and I took pictures of about 1/2 the boba we actually drank. We tried to seek out a new tea shop every week. I also tried to branch out and try new flavors every once in a while trying to find the best flavor in Taiwan. By now I consider myself a bubble tea connoisseur. 
~Soleil Huang-Dale

 

Friday, July 9, 2021

Sonate Duette (Mother-Daughter music)

 And a brief interlude from Handel before returning a violin to Zhubei and a cello to Maine.



Wednesday, July 7, 2021

So Long It's Been Good to Know Ya

 As we close up the grade book and pack up the bags for a long journey home, we wish all our friends in Taiwan a safe and peaceful summer.  Vaccines are coming and Covid cases are dropping across the island.  We've made it through 2 months of Level 3 restrictions and now we say goodbye.

Here's to all our friends far and wide.





Saturday, May 29, 2021

China and Taiwan -- What's the diff?

 Disclaimer: We found an old blog post draft that was never published. When I say old, I mean SEVEN YEARS old. Some of this information is from 2014, some things we updated to the current status of Taiwan.

Taiwan and China 
by Jenny with help from Soleil

Many people have asked us what the difference is between Taiwan and China.  It is hard to compare because I don’t know which differences are specific to certain places, and which are because I have seen China in the past and am seeing Taiwan now. But anyway, these are some of the things I have noticed. For some of the linguistic differences, please see the blog called China Penguin and Taiwan Penguin, posted June 19, 2014.

China - in the 1990s and 2000s
Taiwan - 2013-14, 2020-21
More bikes, cycle for transportation
Cycle for leisure, sport and transportation (students bike to school)
RenMinBi is the currency.
The currency is the New Taiwan Dollar.
Political protests are not shown on TV.
Protests against the government are in the news.
Lots of my relatives are there.
I only have a few relatives here.
Bathroom stalls might have doors.  Few public restrooms provide toilet paper.
Bathroom stalls have doors. Some public restrooms provide toilet paper.
Mostly squatty potties in public restrooms
In public restrooms you have a choice of squatty potty or toilet

Bathrooms are generally cleaner

More private cars and scooters

People line up when waiting.
Sidewalks are not always useable.
Sidewalks are often unusable for walking
Has REAL pandas, but not many.
Has lots of  Food Panda (drivers on scooters of a food delivery service) (2020-21)
It is very competitive to get into university
It is easier to get into university.
Enormous class size
Extra large class size
Traffic laws exist. However...
there is some degree of traffic FREEDOM.
They obey traffic rules more. Drivers are somewhat more cautious.
This is relative.  I still see people cross on a red light and in some places parking is a mess.

Less spitting
Lots of men smoke.
Some men chew beetle. bīngláng 檳榔
Many sales people are aggressive/proactive.
Salespeople are more chill. 😎
Yes, technically there are elections in China, but...
They have political campaigns and elections.
Falungong is illegal.
Falungong is accepted.
Homosexuality is generally not accepted.
Homosexuality is more accepted but there are still plenty of people who disapprove of it. (2014)
A marriage equality law was passed in 2019. (2021)


Some Food Panda Delivery Guy:

Déjà Vu

It's been a hot second since I last posted on our blog, but I finally mustered up the time and energy this weekend. 

A couple of weeks ago there was community spread of Covid-19 for the first time in Taiwan since the pandemic started. At school we started having our temperature checked, and bleached the desks every morning. The government also made a mask mandate. On May 18th we started the first day of our two day mid-term testing. After the first day, all schools in Taiwan closed. The next day students had a stay-at-home rest day while teachers (my parents) were frantically learning how to teach online.

For the past two weeks I’ve been learning new content online. Some of my teachers film a lecture and put it up on YouTube for students to watch and take notes on, while others have the class gather on Google Meet to learn synchronously. For some teachers I imagine filming a lecture once is much easier than teaching the same thing over and over to 10 different classes. For me, remote learning has its benefits and drawbacks. I spend every weekday from 8:00AM to 3:45PM on the computer completing assignments which is surprisingly exhausting even though all I do is sit on my butt. I also spend all day at home by myself and I don’t see anyone in person besides my parents. 🙄 One of the benefits is I have access to online translators. Google translate and Pleco (a Chinese-English dictionary app) have helped me understand instructions and content much better than I am able to at school with just my paper dictionary. Even with this benefit, I still much prefer in-person school.

Since this is the first time there has been major community spread in Taiwan, some people here are learning the ways of the pandemic lifestyle for the first time, but for us foreigners this is déjà vu. When school was first cancelled they said we’d be back in 10 days. Then a week in (just like we predicted) they extended remote learning a couple more weeks. You might remember in the USA there was a massive toilet paper shortage, well over here it’s been difficult to find fresh vegetables at the grocery store. One thing that is not similar to what we experienced in March of 2020 is people here are already accustomed to wearing masks. There is also an app that you can download on your mobile device that tracks where you go and if someone who also has that app and was near you at some point tests positive for Covid-19 the app will notify you as a way to contact trace. Unfortunately, vaccines have not been widely distributed among the population and when Covid started to spread, vaccine distribution was stopped to prevent more spread.

In the midst of all this craziness we are also preparing to head home to Maine. We’ve been booking plane tickets and trying to also bring a cello on the airplane, which is super complicated and expensive apparently. Now that people are getting vaccinated it seems safer in Maine than Taiwan now. I feel like we just keep running away from the coronavirus. Anyways, I am super excited to return to Maine. The weather here is getting hotter and hotter every day, so I am excited to be able to enjoy swimming in Keyes Pond at grandma’s house in Maine. I am also looking forward to raspberries and blueberries and PIE!

~Soleil Huang-Dale


Saturday, May 15, 2021

In Our Prayers

 Church is one feature of our lives that remained consistent when we moved from Maine to Hsinchu.  We still get up on Sunday morning, have breakfast and listen to NPR news (from Saturday).  Then head to Liujia Presbyterian for worship.  Although the service is entirely in Chinese we manage to sing along to hymns we recognize, greet neighbors in the passing of peace ceremony and read English translations of the bible verse chosen for the day's sermon. And thanks to modern technology, a handheld translator (also known as a cell phone) I can read the announcements for the week.

1. Prayers for the elders with health problems, that they may be relieved of their pain and recover quickly.

2. Prayers for the sisters who are expecting new children in their homes.  (There are many of these as a result of the influx of young families in this area drawn by the growth of the tech industry).

3. Prayers for the countries facing an increase in novel coronavirus infections and deaths, including the USA, Brazil and India.  

It's this last one that surprises me a bit.  I know back home we often pray for those in other countries suffering from war and hunger.  We lift our thoughts to those who face drought and natural disasters in far away places.  And yet I never consider that those people might just as well be praying for us.

This month Taiwan made news in the US twice.  We heard from many of you regarding the news of the tragic train accident on the east coast of the island.  Although it was several hours drive from where we live, it was still close enough to wonder... would we know anyone, who knew anyone in the accident.  And then this past week we received notice regarding possible water shut-offs in our homes if rains don't soon come and refill the reservoirs. Taiwan has made the news in the US again.  But besides praying for rain for us, you might consider the impact it has on you!

As it turns out, Taiwan's drought may have an impact on the US economy.  As Americans have started buying new cars again, a shortage of computer chips has put a damper on production.  And as it turns out, the city of Hsinchu where we live is the hub of the semiconductor industry.  The young families who are filling our church are also the people hired by the tech boom in Taiwan where the lion's share of computer chips in Asia are produced. This feeds the production of many things in the US, automobiles among them.

And as it turns out, the two issues - water and semiconductors - are quite closely linked.  The semiconductor industry uses around 63,000 tons of water a day.  That's only likely to increase in the coming months and years.  To take some pressure off the public water supply, the industry has developed a water recycling system as well as a desalination plant to provide fresh water, but water limits have threatened chip production.  

These are just a couple ways we still feel connected to our home and we understand even more how the world is linked in a global network.  Thank you for your prayers and we continue to pray for all of you.