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Editor's Pick

Garden of earthly delights

Updated: 2011-04-14 07:57

By Jules Quartly (China Daily)

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Day 2

 Garden of earthly delights

Clockwise from above:Wufenpu textile market is crammed with bargain-hunters but has a relaxed feel. Shin Yeh restaurant at Taipei 101. There's a temple on nearly every Taipei street corner. A plane flies overhead at Flora Expo. Cooking up a storm at Shihlin Night Market. Photos by Jules Quartly / China Daily

After the popular delights of the previous day and a street-side breakfast of youtiao (like doughnuts) and doujiang (sweet soybean milk), you will no doubt be champing at the bit for some highbrow culture and arguably there's no better place in the world for immersion in Chinese antiquities than the Taipei Palace Museum (Shilin MRT and bus R30).

It has a permanent collection of 677,687 Chinese artifacts and works of art, covering 8,000 years of history.

There's always something going on here as exhibitions come and go, but the real meat is in the permanent collection and it's certain you will be blown away by something, whether it's a painting by Zhang Daqian - China's Picasso - or a small piece of jadeite cabbage with insects crawling over it.

Looking around will take at least a morning and you are also recommended to get lunch or tea at one of the two cafes, while the elegant fourth floor Sanxitang Teahouse is well worth spending some downtime in.

After traipsing around the museum, get some wind in your sails with a bicycle ride along the riverside in Wanhua, one of the earliest settling points for seafaring traders in Taipei.

It's a 20-minute walk from Shuanglian MRT (Exit 2) to Dihua Street, but you won't be wasting your time as there are a number of stores selling traditional Chinese goods, such as dried foods, medicines and incense, in addition to the scenic value of Japanese and Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) era architecture, much of which has been preserved.

Nearby is Dadaocheng Port (marked by a full-scale model of a Qing boat), which is where you can hire a bicycle on the weekend and explore Danshui River. It's a green highway whether you head left or right, dotted with parks and pagodas and abundant bird life.

Dusk is the time to check in your bike and explore Ximending, where trends are set and tattoos inked. It's a great setting for connoisseurs of Japanese culture products and impromptu concerts by Mandopop demigods, especially on Saturday and Sunday afternoons.

If you have the time, dive into an MTV and choose from a large selection of films, moderately palatable food and drinks. Check out Monga, the 2010 film by Doze Niu that captures the feel of Wanhua district in the 1980s. Or, go to Red House Theater, built in 1908, for a drink at one of the lively and gay, literally, bars in the courtyard plaza.

The clock is ticking, the plane is booked for the next morning, and a longish MRT ride of 13 stops to Taipei Zoo awaits. It's worth it, of course, as there's a 4 km ride in a gondola up to Maokong, an ascent of 300 meters.

Observe Taipei twinkling below and then find a teashop draped in fairy lights that serves dinner, for an al fresco experience that is hard to beat.

Originally settled by mainland tea farmers from the south, there are Maokong plantation teas on offer as well as the better quality brews from Alishan and other "high mountain" resorts.

If it's after 10 pm, you will need to get a bus or taxi down from Maokong back to the MRT and downtown.

My final tip is the 24-hour bookshop on Dunhua South Road (Zhongxiao Dunhua MRT), where you can browse and read in good company to your heart's content before picking up a book for the plane home.

Yes, there's a lot you have missed, like one of the big-name temples such as Longshan or Confucius Temple, the fishing port of Danshui, Sun Yat-sen Memorial Park, Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, a hike on Yangmingshan but you can always return.

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