My 28mm Journey of Taiwan
Recently,
I rewarded myself with a trip to Taiwan – a land full of nice scenery, food,
and people. There is nothing better than travelling with your love one.
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Cover |
The Gears
First I would like to talk a little bit about my gears. For those who only interested
with the photos, you may skip this section. In summary to my setup, all my videos and photos were 28mm!
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That's all I bring to the trip. + Fuji Instax as well! |
I
would like to carry my DSLR with couple lenses together with my tripod because
I have plan to capture long exposure landscapes, portraits and some nice street
photography. However, all these gears for me to bring would weight me down,
like a lot! So, by just bringing the X100S is the answer? Yes and No. The last
time I was in Bangkok I’m travelling with the same setup. Although it gave me
great images, but at a certain point I wish it was wider. You don’t always have
few more step backwards flexibility. As a result, the composition only consist
of the person face, without the background to tell the place.
Long
before the trip I was researching on the X100 series add-on, the WCL-X100 wide
angle converter. It convert the X100s 35mm field of view to 28mm. It doesn’t
sound like a lot, but in practice, it really matter. I get a used unit for
about RM600 and now it is permanently on my X100S body.
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WCL-X100 |
However,
here come the new problem. The on-camera flash would get obscure due to the
additional section of the wide angle converter in front of it. I could have get
the Fuji flash for ttl and better looks but they are too expensive, and less
powerful too. So, I just bring along my YongNuo 560 flash that works well with
X100S (but only in manual mode). Although it looks funny and the weight ratio
is top heavy, but I don’t really have a choice for some fill-flash scenario. I
only pop the flash on when only necessary.
Next
is extra batteries and memory cards. All of it! I shoot only jpeg because I’m
lazy to process the photos and I can fill more photos in each card compared to
just RAW. Oh, the bag fits one Fuji Instax as well!
The Trip
Once we arrived at the airport, we get the sim pack from their service centre. Only at here, you get the bonus NT100 credits! Then we depart to TaiChung, via their high speed train. The train ride only takes about 40 minutes! Then our adventure begins~
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Departing from Taoyuan to Taichung |
逢甲夜市
(Feng Jia Night Market)
The
happening night market (even in weekdays) is flooded with foods and people. Even
though it is difficult to find rubbish bin, the streets are free from it. The
cars and motorbikes will gives priority to pedestrian crossing.
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The street is busy even on weekdays |
Another culture
I notice is their passion to keep dogs as pet. You can see many dogs accompany
their master to the streets.
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Nicely groom dog accompany the owner to the street |
彩虹眷村 (The Rainbow Village)
This
place used to be an army residence that were meant to be demolished. There was
one man, also known as
彩虹爷爷 – 93 years old, decided to paint the whole village
with colorful paintings in order to raise awareness for historical site
preservation and prevent the government from demolish the place.
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The whole village was hand painted by one man |
Drawing such
as artists, politician, and even sportsman are all over the walls on the
surviving house which is still lives by 12 families. Obviously, this strategy works. Right now, he
wakes up 3am every morning to maintain the paintings and it has become one of
the must visit place around Tai Chung area.
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The rainbow grandpa - 93 years old |
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There are still 12 families live in the village |
Besides selling some merchandise
such as postcards, key chain, t-shirt, there are also one man with Iron-Man
mask distributing postcards for free and you are allowed to take photos with
him! “Don’t give up your dream!” He said that after taking photo together with
me.
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"I got the power..." |
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The walls always have to be repainted, all done alone by the old man |
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From the entrance |
中社花市
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The view is simply stunning... |
The
garden is planting different flowers according to season. Right now, the garden
is full of red tulip. Colorful flower combine with nice decoration offer plenty
of photo opportunity. I was never been so overwhelmed by flowers before. Being
there is simply breath taking.
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Red tulips blooming |
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Immersed in a sea of flowers |
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Close Up |
薰衣草森林 (Lavender Garden)
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Lavender fields |
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Taking photos in front of a giant mirror while having lavender ice-cream |
日月潭 (Sun
Moon Lake)
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The fishing net boat |
Sun
Moon Lake is a fresh water lake that is more than 2,000 ft. from sea level. The
weather here is windy and cooling throughout the season. The 2 main town around
the lake are
水社 and
伊達邵. There
are plenty of home stay around the area. We only managed to go for the boat
tour.
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Town of Shueishe |
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The taiwanese sausage is a common street food |
There are cable cars connecting the lake with Formosa Aboriginal Culture
Village theme park area. The view here is nice but is more for relax area as
the place is quiet after dark.
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The street went quiet as the sun goes down |
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Trying the "pigs blood cake" |
小瑞士花园 (Swiss
Garden)
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Overall view on the Swiss Garden |
High
up in the mountain, the garden also offer plenty of decorations for photo
opportunity. However, the garden is quite small, and going once is more than
enough.
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nice ambient |
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wooden giraffe |
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Into the woods |
清境农场(CingJing
Veterans Farm)
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The show begin |
This
place is so overrated and can be considered as one of the most visited place in
Taiwan. Since we are in winter season, the farm grass is not green and the
place is pack with tourist. The sheep show is talking more than the sheep
itself. At the end, we don’t bother to went to the Horse/cowboy show.
Regardless, I can imagine how the place used to be beautiful and peaceful
serenity.
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The blossom plant is everywhere |
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wooden windmill |
合欢山 (
武嶺)
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panoramic view |
While
on our way to Hualien, we pass by the peak know as 合欢山 (武嶺).
3275 ft. above sea level, if you are lucky you can see snow at this area. We
only can see icicle there. Temperature there is 4 degree Celsius and it was
seriously cold as we are under-dress.
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icicle sword |
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It's really cold for me and the x100s too I guess |
太鲁阁国家公园 (Taruko National Park)
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The iconic tourist shot |
After that, we slowly descend to the Taruko National Park area which
consists of several spot such as
燕子口,
白陽,
宁安桥 and others.
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huge bedrock |
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The bridge over the Tianxiang town |
花莲(Hualien)
While
this place is famous for the beach (
七星潭), we could not have chance to be
there. First the weather is against us. We start experiencing rain during our
trip. As we no longer hired driver for the rest of our trip, it make sense that
we stay near the train station where we will travel to Taipei the next morning.
The homestay do provide the bicycles for us but the seats were not comfortable.
Since the beach is 6km away from the homestay, we only manage to hang around
the town and the night market there for dinner. The next morning, we pack and
leave for Taipei, a 2 hours journey on their fastest train – The Puyuma Train
type.
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The streets of Hualien |
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queueing for the famous bun |
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The Puyuma train type |
十分 (ShiFen)
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Shifen train station |
This
place become popular after the movie
那些年 (You are
the apple of my eye). It’s the place where you write you wishes on KongMing
Lantern and let it fly to the sky. There is a waterfall about 25-30 mins
walking distance from the train station. After the tiring walk, the view of the
waterfall is magnificent. We were there after the rain, so the waterfall flow
vigorously. The sky is raining lightly and the water vapor from the waterfall
constantly covered my camera and I have to wipe and cover it while shooting and
holding umbrella at the same time! I would say this is the best landscape shot
I have made on this trip.
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Heavily decorated signboard |
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1,2,3, and let it go~ |
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posing on the railway |
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The famous Shifen waterfall |
九份(JiuFen)
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Thigh streets and nice decor |
This
place is high up on the hill overseeing the Shenao Port. The streets around
there are narrow and full of tourist. Not to mention the rain is getting
heavier and navigating through the streets has become an issue. At this very
moment, I get to know from the TV that TransAsia airplane has crashed. The vendors
around that area start having discussion while watching the news.
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Having a hot dessert in rainy weather |
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The iconic street view |
台北(Taipei)
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The mighty 101 |
As the capitol of the country, it is nothing other than any
place. The city is very organize and clean. They have very complete public
transport infrastructure for metro and buses for instance. We get to places
such as
九份
and
十分easily.
The iconic building of the city is the Taipei 101. Being the second tallest
building now, it’s the cliché that you cannot missed.
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blossom close-up |
After the trip ...
I have to point out few things about the
camera equipment that I have brought with me. The lightweight X100S did not
weight me down. However, the camera has its limitation. First, the autofocus is
not consistent. Most of the time during backlit situation, where you just have
to give up. Next, with the absence of optical low pass filter, I do see moiré in
some of the images, but more on the video. The rolling shutter effect is even
worst. However, this is not a do-it-all camera. I did not expect it to perform
on the video aspect. Just point it out for those who considering this to be a
perfect camera. The rewarding part of it is I don’t have to think about
changing lens, focal length, setting up tripod, or choosing ISO (I use auto-iso
quite often). You just need to focus more on composition, lighting that all
matters. Being in the trip, the worst thing you can have is to fiddling too
much on the camera where you should have been enjoying the moments. Sometime,
you just have to hide the camera side of you.
The most important part is I
enjoyed every bit of the moment there. The purpose of travelling is to being
there, to learn and experience their culture and ambient. Lastly, enjoy a
simple montage that I have prepared. Thank you for reading.
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