Five reasons why Taiwan should be on your bucket list
10/10/2011 marks the 100th anniversary of the Republic of China. Although deposed from mainland China in 1949, the ROC government still controls Taiwan (as well as a few off-shore possessions). Despite having an immensely rich cultural and spiritual heritage, amazing food, world-class hot-springs and stunning scenery, Taiwan is normally thought of more for its exports than as a place to get into. We think this is a shame, as the island has enough going for it to make any traveller’s bucket list.
Scenery
Visually stunning, Taiwan is a shutter-bug's paradise. Running down Taiwan's spine is the Central Mountain Range, a magnet for mountaineers looking to scale East Asia's tallest peak, Yushan (Jade Mountain). Photographers are drawn daily as Yushan’s peak is the perfect spot from which to catch a shot of the ‘sea of clouds’ sweeping over the mountains at dawn. Taiwan's beaches are beautiful as well, offering some of East Asia's finest surfing and windsurfing spots.
Cuisine
Taiwan draws much of its culinary heritage from China, but to label it ‘Chinese food’ is an oversimplification. When the first Han settlers came from China, the recipes and cooking styles they brought along met the ingredients and culinary traditions of Taiwan's aboriginal peoples and became something new and different. This new cuisine was further modified, first by new immigrants from other areas of China, and later by the Japanese who ruled the island for 50 years. Seafood, sweet potatoes, taro root and green vegetables cooked very simply are at the heart of many traditional Taiwanese sit-down meals, while roadside stands and night market stalls offer variety worthy of its own story to those who enjoy eating al-fresco.
Being located on top of the geologically unstable ‘ring of fire’ has one major upside – no matter where on the island you go, you're bound to be within shouting distance of an amazing natural hot spring. Taiwan is home to one of the globe's only accessible seawater hot springs, the Sunrise Spring on Green Island (a small island off the southeast coast). You don't even need to leave Taipei to soak: a quick hike from Taipei's Xin Beitou metro stop is where you'll find hotels and resorts offering piped-in sulphur hot springs, said to be the all-around healthiest for the skin. There's also an excellent public hot spring.
Temples
Buddhist, Taoist and Confucian temples abound throughout Taiwan, not merely as static tourist attractions, but as active centres of culture and worship. Must-see temples in Taipei include Longhsan and Guandu temples (both of which have their own metro stations). The southern city of Tainan is a must-visit for temple lovers, and if you're willing to take a 40-minute flight to the windswept Penghu archipelago, you'll be able to explore dozens of East Asia's most gorgeously ostentatious – and least visited – temples.
Museums
Taiwan offers no shortage of activities for the erudite, and the capital's vibrant museum scene is yet another of its understated attractions. The most famous of these is the National Palace Museum in Taipei, which houses a sizable chunk of China's artistic heritage (taken - or rescued, depending on who you ask - by Nationalist troops fleeing China in 1949). So voluminous is this collection, which ranges from paintings and scrolls to ancient porcelain and statues, that only a fraction of it is ever on display at once.