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Mt DaJian (Big Sword, 3594m) |
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Mt JiaYang (3314m) |
It has been long overdue to write about my last trekking
trip in Taiwan. It was a successful
climb with some members of our group making this their first Taiwan’s hundred
peaks. Very ironic as their first mountain
is a very difficult one compared to the others scattering over Taiwan’s
mountain range.
The typical touristy
peaks of the famous Yushan and Xueshan would be like a walk in the park for
them in the future. The above mountain summits form the Dajian Ridgeline that is
part of the Shei-Pa National Park that extends west from the main peak of
Xueshan, and southwards . You can trek
down from Xueshan main peak to Chui-Chi (翠池 ) and continue from there
to Xueshan South-West Peak and then to the main peak of Mt DaJian (大剑山,
3594m) which forms part of the DaJian Ridgeline. There are no lodges along the
entire Da-Jian ridgeline and camping out is the only way. There is no water
supply except a water spring source near the Mt Dajian foothills but requires a
trek down to the valley below and back up the same path so as to be able to
proceed to where the campsite at YouPoLan (油婆蘭山, 3308m) is. The campsite
is around 3200m and it is like camping under the stars at night on a cloudless
day. But do expect the full rays of the sun during midday and exposure to the
harsh weather. Preparation is needed but if all is planned out, there should
not be any worries to bring along for this trek.
Gathering a few friends from our last failed attempt of the
O-shaped Holy Ridgeline Trek, we wanted to reattempt the difficult climb but as
the mountain lodges were overbooked and even we applied for the mountain lodges
based on the official release date, we didn’t get to secure the bunk bed
bookings which will allow us to secure other mountain and park permit for the
climb. How the internal process works is officially on a first come first serve
basis and some unofficial process which we will never know but yet other big
groups of 20+ people can easily get their permits. With air tickets pre-booked,
we searched around for other alternatives and landed on the DaXiaoJian-Shan (大小剑山) (The
Big & Small Sword Mountain, if you translate directly from Chinese to
English).
Da-Xiao-Jian-Shan, is notoriously know as being a “Niaoshan,
鸟山”
(rotten), meaning something that is obviously tough, difficult , inconvenient and at not terrain
friendly. One of the Xiao-Jian Shan (小剑山, 3253m) does not even have a view
for trekkers to claim their summit victory reward of an unblock view, but
surrounded by trees like in the middle of the forest and it is the signboard marker
that tells you that you have reach the summit.
The route is difficult with no mountain lodge and trekkers have to carry
their heavy tent equipment with their food and water in full heavy gear all the
way to their campsite. Even with porters to carry our rations, each of our bags
weighed an average of 13-15kg. The route is not the longest within the National
Park, but its sheer vertical climbs and drops easily demoralize the avid
trekkers and with no water along the way, this route is often reserved as the
last to do for those mountain trekkers wanting to complete the 100-peaks climb
of Taiwan. From the trail head to the ridge takes about 2 days. And if you look
at all these conditions, you will know why they called in鸟山
(rotten route, no disrespect to the mountain). Yes it is tough and challenging,
but this is a route that is very less crowded unlike the overly crowded Yushan
and Xueshan.
It was still rewarding able to reach the other peaks like
the Da-Jian-Shan( 3594m) and the Jia-Yang-Shan (3000m) which offers 360 view of
the surrounding mountain range, which is the Xue-Pai National Park (霸国家公园)mountain
range. Luckily weather was good for us and we were able to see the other
mountain face of the popular Xueshan Main Peak, which many has climbed but very
few will take the arduous trek to Da-Jian-Shan to be able to Xueshan from
another perspective.
Day 0: Departing from
Taipei
Our hiking group of friends comes from different countries,
Malaysians working in Singapore, true Malaysians flying in from Kuala Lumpur.
But for this round, it was a smaller group with just the 5 of us. We met up
with our usual mountain guide friend at the railway station at Taipei Railway
Station and off into the mountain village of Nan-Shan (南山村)for
the night accommodation. This is a typical stay over to get acclimatize to the
mountain altitude before the climb. Well the village is just about 800m if I
remember correctly, and so the effect
may not be that effective but it is a very strategic location for climbers
wanting to trek around the Shei-Pa National Park. Again we made a stop in the
town of Yilan to stock up on snacks and drinks at a 7-eleven, walked around the
night market of Yilan and
Day 1: The Fun Begins
Morning wakeup call was about 6am, we all of us were up
packing our packs for the climb, leaving our non-essential travelling items in
another bag to be dumped inside the van. After our breakfast at the MinSu (home
stay), off we went on the winding road higher into the mountains. The starting
point of this climb is not within the Wuling Farm Tourist Park, but is along a
mountain road near Lishan, and somewhere out of nowhere we turned into a very
small narrow path going down into a valley with a wide roaring river below.
Every time during my trek, as long as we were going lower in altitude, I would
sigh on the need to recover those drop in altitude with more leg power to
ascend to the summit. It is a valley no doubt with the mountain on both side.
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Bus stop at Nanshan Village. |
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Our accomodation at NanShan Village |
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Driving up the mountain road Lishan |
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Starting our 4D trek leaving our van behind |
There wasn’t much space for parking and so our van, like the
rest of a few cars there parked by climbers, had to park as close to the side
as possible so as not to obstruct traffic.
Downhill we followed the car-wide dirt road to a concrete bridge that
cross over the DaJia River (大甲溪)below. The view was stunning and
it was a great feeling getting into the open again with nature all surrounding
us. This huge concrete bridge across the river was built for road vehicles in
the past, but now left unused as the forest road is no more accessible to the trailhead
further into the forest.
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Crossing the DaJia River below us |
In about 30mins we reach an old abandoned small house
(松茂水文站).
Heard from the local guide that the place was meant to be a worker quarters. It
was once a place with electricity and
water as can be seen from the overhead power pole with some damaged cables
dangling above. We took a 10mins break from the warm weather before moving
uphill walking along the side of the mountain forest with the raging river on
our left.
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松茂水文站 |
Another 20mins uphill we reached the damaged LeShan Bridge (樂山橋). The
bridge span across a beautiful river with pure clean water from the upstream
flowing through. The porter and local guide went down to replenish their water
supply and crossed the river at the swallow area. For us to keep our feet dry,
we climbed onto the damaged bridge with care. Taiwan is a country that is
constantly ravaged by yearly typhoons damaging roads and infrastructure in the
mountain regions and at times became too costly to maintain, esp. when no one
lives on the other side of the damaged bridge and so they just lay there to be
a remembrance of the power of Mother Nature.
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Me at the damaged LeShan Bridge |
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Makeshift ladder to get onto the bridge |
Another 30mins hike we reach the trailhead (防火巷登山口)
that would bring us into the mountain ridgeline of DaJian. This is the
notorious sky ladder (天梯) which is actually created as a fire line to prevent
forest fires from spreading should one side catches fire. This is the beginning
on the tough and dreaded part of the route which will just be more and more
further up; just that we couldn’t see from where we were. We had our
on-the-trail lunch with our own snacks (lunch not provided ). It was a steep 2
hr climb before our next rest point under some shady trees. Fire is something
that happens during hot summer points when the weather is dry and windy. We
could see at certain section of the climb the lower trunk of many trees were
charred like charcoal and the stench of burnt wood was still lingering in the
air.
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Arriving at the trailhead, up the fire wall route |
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Rest point on the slope of the fire wall route |
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Charred trunks of the trees indicated a past fire |
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Looking back at what we climbed till now |
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Taking a break. The strong ones are those that dont need to rest. |
It was about 2pm and it was again up and up and finally we reached the
campsite for the night around 4:30pm. It was not the intended campsite at Tui-Lun-Shan
(推論山) which
was another hour of steep climbing. This alternate campsite offers better wind
protection and has a readied made canvas shelter which the porters could
‘comfortably’ prepare our dinner. The
sheltered area was big enough to house the “kitchen” area and the sleeping
area. In the middle of the night, we
could hear owls hooting and the light wind rustling in the night. We were the
only group in the campsite area and during the entire climb did not come across
any hikers coming from the same path. It could be that we were the only group
on this mountain route. Well this is a route not many would like to climb
unless they are going for Taiwan’s Hundred Peaks target.
Day 2: To The 1st
Summit & Back
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Good morning everyone. All stretched and ready to go |
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Everyone taking their photos of the uphill task. |
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And here the climbing starts again. |
It was 6am, and we were all packed and ready to our next
campsite and also to reach our 1st summit for the climb, Mt Dajian
which offers a very good 360 view of the Xue-Shan Main Peak and the surrounding
Shei-Pa Mountain range. Before the climb, my research told me that out of the 3
peaks on this route, Dajian is the must go and Xiao-Jian is of the last
priority since it is the farthest, toughest and smack in the forest without a
clear view. We were taking pictures of
the beautiful morning and the steep trail in front of us when we saw 2 climbers
descending. They were the first climbers we saw since we started our trek, and
it was good to see others on the trail. The weather was great, blue skies, cloudless,
but also very warm and sunny and we would be like toasted once we cleared the
forest vegetation.
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A beautiful morning to welcome us. Burn you dry later.. |
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Arriving at Tui-Lun-Shan (2801m) |
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Really really warm. |
After 1 hour of climbing from our campsite, we reach the
clearing which is Mt Tui-Lun-Shan (推論山,2801m). The stone marker can be easily
missed as it is just a small little rectangular block near the edge of the
trail that lead into a flat clear open ground (look for the weather monitoring
station). The sun was great to warm up some of the cold clothing and to dry our
sweat also from the tethering heat.. Some of us went under the shade near the
trees to rest but were inviting bees that were swarming around us. In the end ,
most of us just tanned ourselves out in the sun.
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Looking ahead of where we are going towards |
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Getting some shade from the trees. |
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Our porter enjoying the mountain view |
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Weather station. it says Do Not Enter |
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A small stone marker for Tui-Lun-Shan (Mt TuiLun, 2801m) |
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Sun-tanning in progress |
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All strapped up and the climb continues |
From this rest point, it was another 3 hrs of continuous
climbing under the cloudless skies to reach the campsite of You-Po-Lan (油婆蘭營地), which
is near to the Mt YouPoLan (油婆蘭山, 3308m), Along the way, we had clear unblocked view of the collapse
mountain face of Mt JiaYang (佳陽山,3314m). It looked near but getting
there can take 5 hrs from our YouPoLan campsite. Although the sun and steepness
of the hills were getting over me, but being in the wide open and be able to
walk among this openness of hill pushed me to move on.
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Looking back at the mountain view where we climb up from |
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Collapsed face of Mt JiaYang. |
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Me and Mt JiaYang & packs all around |
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Taking a short rest point and a photo shot. |
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Mt Da-Jian (where we would go in the afternoon) |
At around 11:30am, we reach the campsite and yes, it was
just us, the entire campsite to ourselves, no trees to hide from the sun, and
our porter and guide had already setup a small shelter for us to hide from the
sun. It was shoes off for everyone to rest the legs after the hours of hike
with a heavy backpack. Lunch was self provide and it was again bread that we
brought along. Kind of sick of the bread and after few days in the cold
mountain, it tends to drop in taste and quality. But any food is previous food
in the mountain.
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Hiding from the sweatering sun. |
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Tanning my wet soaked back pack. Nice to walk on the warm dry grass |
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Climbing up again into the blue skies towards Mt Da-Jian. |
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Nice to walk in the open vastness. Minus the heavy back packs. |
At 12:30pm, off we start with a small light pack to the
first summit, the Mt Dajian, the legs felt a lot lighter without the big
backpack and it was much enjoyable on this part of the climb to the summit.
This trail to Mt Dajian also passes the way to the spring water source near the
foothill of Mt Dajian. From the trekking map, it was about 20mins descent and
40mins ascent from where the water source is back to the foothill of Mt
Dajian. The trail split to Mt DaJian and
the water source about 30mins from our campsite at the place called 鞍部水愿岔路
.
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View of Mt Da-Jian. (lots to climb) |
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Looking back at how much we have climbed. Campsite is behind the mountain ridge. |
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Prominent rock formation, Must have experienced some dramatic changes |
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My shadow and the rock |
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Nearing the summit. The others are waiting for me. |
It was another 2hrs from this point to
reach the summit. According to trekking time mapping, we were quite fast . Well
we have some super fit climbers in our group and the way they were climbing was
like flying. Around 3pm, I finally reached
the summit of Mt DaJian, still within the climbing time of the trekking map
estimated duration but my group members were already celebrating at the summit.
The view up there was simply amazing. First time I got to see the north east
face of Xueshan, the sheer drop on this side that make it a mountain by itself.
Normally if one climbs the standard route to the summit, they would be climbing
on the other side from where we stood at Mt Dajian, entering via the rounded
valley above the black forest before reaching the top. From Mt Dajian, it is possible to reach the
Xueshan Main Peak that and that will take an extra day to reach.
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Mt DaJian Summit |
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Mt Xueshan (Taiwan second highest peak) |
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Me and Mt Xueshan at the back |
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Another peak to add into my Taiwan Hundred Peak count (+1) |
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All packed and ready to leave the summit |
We weren’t in a hurry to get back and so since the weather
was good, we stayed at the summit for quite some time before returning back to
our campsite before sunset. When the sun sets, temperature will drop
drastically up in the mountains esp. on where we were above 3000m. We started
off at 3:30pm, and downhill was more easy but it took me quite a fair bit of
time to return to campsite as I was still low on energy, maybe from the loss of
appetite and food. And so me and the guide had our slow walk back stopping at
various point along the way to chit chat while looking out into the vastness of
the mountains.. Very relaxing….
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Back at YouPoLan Campsite awaiting dinner |
Around 6pm, I was
backed at the campsite and everyone was standing around outside the tent
sharing their experiences , and sense of accomplishment, forgetting about the
cold chill wind. Dinner was served with
a good mix of rice, meat and vegetables. The skies turn dark quickly after 7pm
and it was a good night rest for everyone in their tents. The night was
peaceful and quiet, weather was good with occasionally moderate wind.
Day 3: Yet Another
Tiring Day
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Morning 4am at the campsite |
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Dawning up at 3000m |
It was 4am and the night skies were starting to brighten up.
For me still feeling the lack of energy as for the past 2 days, I did not have
much appetite for food and the vicious cycle begins as the less you eat, the
more you would not be able to eat, and less energetic to do multi-day hikes. I
was still having some reservations on whether should I stay in my cozy tent or
take the challenge for another day of tough trekking and see how far I could
go. Since there were 2 summits and I
made my mind to reach the 1
st summit of Mt JiaYang and called it a
day unless I became super-charged after reach there. A trek to Mt JiaYang and back could take a
total of 8hrs, and an extra 3 hrs to reach Mt Xiao-Jian from JiaYang. A total
of possibly 14hr both way and many groups had to start super early if not being
risk to return to their campsite in darkness.
Some of the rock formation areas were quite difficult to maneuver in
darkness even with proper headlamps.
Breakfast was served
around 4:15am, and around 4:30am, we started with just a light pack to begin
the long day hike to Mt JiaYang and possibly for the stronger group members to
proceed on to Xiao-Jian-Shan. So I forced myself to take some chocolate bar and
energy snacks, and convinced myself to
just take the challenge and go. Not my best form during this climb but not to
the extent of system shutdown.
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The start to many more these careful maneuvering. |
We started up the hill again from the vast openness walking
into the dense forest again in the dawning if the morning. It was quite a nice
feeling to be up there in the morning with the sun rising over the horizon.
After clearing a short path of vegetation, we were greeted by the 1
st
rock formation to overcome. It looked more like a ridgeline that we were using
to transverse to get to Mt JiaYang, which both sides dropping steeply. Considering the small amount of walking
space, spiraling roots of trees were guarding the path and going around them
was the only way.
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Dense tree trunks. Can you spot someone ? |
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Taking a rest and taking some photographs |
After going up and down, clearing one hilltop, going down
and up again to another higher hilltop along the narrow ridgeline, it seemed
the end would never be there. It was about 8am after climbing for 3 hrs
continuously and Mt Jiayang seemed to be running away from me. I wasn’t in full recovery from my last few
days of over exhaustion, depletion of
energy was faster than I expected. So I took more breaks in between with our
guide waiting and chatting with me.
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Finally arriving at the collapse face of Mt JiaYang |
At
about 10am, finally I reached the collapse face of Mt JiaYang. Seeing it so close gave the assurance that my
objective for the day was met. Another
10mins was all it took for me to be standing on the summit of Mt JiaYang. One
of our group members, was waiting there for us. The other 2 has left with the
front guide to proceed on to Mt Xiao-Jian.
I knew my limit at that point and was happy to end my hike there at Mt
JiaYang. The tiredness went away with the 360 view of the surrounding. The sun
was beating hard on us, the area was totally exposed but yet we did lie down
and rest out sore feet for 20mins maybe. It was scorching hot and actually
wasn’t that comfortable to rest longer than that. Water supply was running short as well due to
the tough climb and hot weather. The guide offered us some canned corn and left
some for our group climbers who went ahead to Mt Xiao-Jian who would be
returning back the same route.
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Mt JiaYang ( 3313m) |
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Looking down at the collapsed rock face, Stone marker down at the bottom due to the big earthquake 921. |
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Yes, it is a detachable steel plate marker. |
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Me, XiaoFei(guide) & Joe |
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Mt Xiao-Jian in the distant. (me not going) |
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Our guide Xiao-Fei Coach. |
After enjoying our own photo session buffet (using timer on
the DSLR on a rock), we left the summit at 11am and start our slow hike back to
campsite. The objective was to make it back campsite before sunset for safety
reasons and also to have a good rest for the day. Me and Roy (one of our climb
mates), together with our guide slowly made our way back. Progress was slow and actually it took us
longer to get back. Well we weren’t in a hurry and so took numerous rest
points, esp. after clearing a very steep hilltop. It was payback time for those
easy descend we took to get to Mt JiaYang. The two of us spent most of the time
together climbing over rocks and tree trunks, sometimes taking breaks away from
our guide at the front who thought that we continued on but we were
chit-chatting under some shady fallen tree trunk.
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Happy to be back at campsite YouPoLan |
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Sunset rays on the mountain tops |
It was around 5pm, that we returned to the open plains of Mt
YouPoLan, and saw our cozy campsite welcoming us back. We had one member who
did not make the day hike with us as he wasn’t feeling too well. His name was Alvin , and he was waving to us
from very far at a small pond just beside our campsite. At the same time, we
also saw from very far distance, our 2
strong climbers were making their way back as way, at the top of one of the
hilltops that they need to clear before reaching our campsite. It was good to
see everyone has managed to return safely.
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Me alone, braving the cold wind on a mountain top above the campsite to get mobile signal. Lishan village in front & below |
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Looking at Mt Da-Jian for the last time before going down to campsite |
While the porter and guide was busy preparing dinner, I took
my camera and phone and walk up the hill top to get mobile signal and it was in
good reception as the Lishan village just opposite side of the mountain.
Braving the cold wind as the sun was setting and managed to send some Whatsapp
messages to family back home. For me give me a while and my body battery would
come back, but supply is short though. But at least the day was done.. It was
after that dinner and back to my tent and sleep away. The temperature was
dropping fast and everyone was tired from the day hike and all huddled back
into their tent for the night rest.
Day 4: Getting Back
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Catching the sunrise up in the mountain near our campsite |
It was 4:30am and we
were up packing, more things to pack after 2 nights at the YouPoLan campsite.
The weather was good and we were greeted by a warm morning sunrise rising from
the mountains surrounding us. Could not ask for any better weather for a
descend. Picking up any trash around us and leaving the place as it was , we
started the climb again just to descend. Well we were shelter in a small
depression of land space surrounded by walls of the hilltop. A good place to be
sheltered from the mountain winds and that is why it is a designated campsite.
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1st group photo finally (Porter, Karen, Alvin, Xiaofei, Me, Joe, CK taking the picture for us) |
We started the descend around 5am and it was long long way
to go as the distance covered 2 days of ascend. The toll on the knees and feet
was there and after 5 hrs of downhill, my legs started to wobble a bit. Not a
fan of descend, but is it less strenuous on cardio but reverse onto the legs.
The day was sunny and warm and at every rest point we were all soaked in sweat.
Well going back is sometime very motivation with the street food of
civilization enticing us.
Around 10am, we finally reach the LeShan bridge where the
river flows. It was very comforting to see the river as some us got down to
bottle some clean clear river water upstream, but some removed our shoes to
soak our tired feet into the cool water. Of course the one that was bottling
his water was doing that was slightly upstream. It was walk and walk without
further stopping until we reached the VAN around 12:30pm Seeing the van parked
there marked the end of our 4 day trek. Our first stop was at a nearby family
run provision store for a run at the drinks laden refrigerator. It was a really
warm day and seeing an iced cold display refrigerator with ice cold beer and
gassy COKE would be doing an injustice to our desire not to stop for that.
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Great food and companion at a Yilan restaurant. |
The journey down from the mountains onto the plains of Yilan
took a few hours and it was around 3pm when we were driving around the town of
Yilan looking for lunch. It was way beyond lunch time and many restaurants were
closed for the rest period. After a fruitless hunt for those stir fry
restaurant of better standard ( well the guide wanted us to have something
better and so we drive around looking for one), we decided to proceed back to
Taipei on the Xueshan tunnel which would have a a lot more choices and it would
be dinner time. But upon getting on the main road leading to the tunnel, there
was a massive jam and getting back to Taipei will be very late and would be
wasting our hunger time in the van. So again we drove back into the town of
Yilan and stumbled onto an entire street of local restaurant selling roasted
chicken. Everything smelled great for us, but the food was yummy, and tearing
apart the roasted chicken was a first time experience for me in Taiwan on how
to eat the roasted chicken. We really had a wonderful and enjoyable time having
our “lunch-ner”. Seeing the pictures of the food that we ordered make me hungry
while I am writing this blog.
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