First Time in Taiwan đšđź | 5 Days in Taipei: Morning Markets, Street Food, Temples & Teresa Teng
First time in Taiwanâ
a 5-day trip Finally, the day has come. My very first trip to Taiwan New place, first time.
My heart is pounding. Since booking the ticket, Iâve been nervousâ
barely sleeping. LOL I planned to visit Taiwan
sometime this year, but moved it up suddenlyâ
going in September. This is why! A lottery campaign: win NT$5,000
(about US$165) The campaign runs
until the end of Sep 2025. In short, I was tempted by money.
Guilty! So I hurried and bought my ticket. If I win, Iâm going all out! Check-in completeâsmooth and easy. So nervous itâs my first Taiwan trip,
I just noticed I forgot my watch. I want my empty stomach
to meet great Taiwanese food, so Iâm flying hungry on purpose. I also tried to learn a few
basic Taiwanese phrases, watched âTop 5 First Phrasesâ
about 170,000 times. To remember them, I wrote the basics
on my phone wallpaper. Best way is saying them out loudâ
again and again. Practicing right up to boarding.
Thatâs me. I booked a window seat, but a senior lady
was sitting there. LOL Switching seats is a hassle, so I just said,
âItâs okay.â Why does no one check
their seat number? First time Taiwan nervesâso anxious
I canât focus on my book. I can tell my breathing is shallow.
Captain, help me! Hello, Taiwan! Officer: âPurpose of visit?â
Me: âThe lottery.â Immigration wasnât crowdedâ
I got through in five minutes. First stop: the âLucky Landâ
lottery counter. This must be it! Scan the QR code on my phone,
then tap a balloon. Waitâdid I win? Too quietâno big ding on the screen.
I didnât know if Iâd won. LOL I went to the desk to confirm⌠I actually won! Thank you,
Taiwan Tourism Administration! Got an IC card (icash) loaded
with NT$5,000. Exchanged money, loaded an eSIMâ
ready to go! No idea where to head next,
so I follow the crowd. If I follow everyone, Iâll probably
get a train to Taipei Main Station. Glancing at my NT$5,000 card,
I grin to myself. For the next 90 days, I can use it
at 7-Eleven, transit, and more. I just kept following everyone and
arrived at the MRT platforms. Fare to Taipei Main is NT$160. Let me check how much is left
on my IC card. ConfirmedâNT$5,000 is really there.
Grinning again. How many times will I check it?
Enough already! Honestly, it still doesnât feel
like Iâm in Taiwan. Maybe because the vibe isnât so different
from Japan. No one talks loudly on the train.
Itâs super quietâjust like home! Wowâso this is Taiwan! So much greenâ
nature everywhere. Looks like no eating or drinking on trains
or platforms. You may be fined. I almost took a sip
from my water bottle. Uh⌠where do I tap the card again? Panic mode⌠I watch where everyone else
is tapping. Oh, rightâbig âICâ sign
right here. LOL Face red with embarrassment,
I walk through the gate. YepâNT$160 was deducted.
All good. What is this massive station?!
Isnât it too big? But it still feels openâprobably
the high ceiling and space. Traditional Chinese looks so cool! But why is everyone
sitting on the floor? Isnât that tile cold
on their butts? Even from outsideâitâs huge.
So big itâs kinda funny! A huge high-rise stands
right by the station. First, Iâll head to my hotel. All these signs in Traditional Chineseâ
it finally hits me: Iâm in Taiwan. Now that I think of it, I havenât heard
any car horns at all. Even that is like Japan.
Nice! This neighborhood feels so Taiwan.
Looks super cool! I canât read the sounds, but the characters
give me the meaningâlove that. To English speakers: this is
how it looks to me. âI canât say it, but I get it.â
Does that make sense? Is this rain just a quick squall, or is it going to last
all day? I decide itâs just a passing showerâ
no umbrella, Iâm running! Made it to the hotel. Searched booking sitesâthis was
the cheapest dorm. Itâs cheap, but cleaned dailyâ
nice and tidy. Security also seemed solid. Four bunk beds in the room. Climbing up is a pain,
so I took a lower bunk. Inside this secret little cubby⌠A comforter and a pillow
were hidden. haha Hot water plus great pressureâ
awesome shower. Toilets were clean, tooâ
cleaned every day. My only complaint: the toilet paper
was behind the toilet. so my back cramped when I turned around. LoL Thereâs a lounge in the basement. Kitchen has a fridge and a microwave. Two washers and two dryers. Iâm so tired… A first-time country
uses ten times the energy. Heavy rain tonight, so Iâll eat
at the place next door. From the characters, it looks like
ânoodles with beef.â No clue how to order, so I just pointed
straight to the food. Whoaâthis is a massive dish!
Looks epic. LOL Didnât expect this much meat
on top. I wonder what it tastes like. Oh goodâ
itâs tasty! New flavor for me,
but I like it. Thick, chewy
wheat noodles. Oops, I slurped the noodlesâ
force of habit. LOL Maybe thatâs why the lady asked,
âAre you okay?â It has intestines and other
organ meats. Not sure what this is, but itâs stewed
until it melts apart. Iâm so glad my first meal in Taiwan
was really good. Coming hungry
was the right call. Hey! Even abroad, stop
slurping noodles! And sip the soup
more quietly! Foreign convenience stores are funâ
just browsing the shelves. Boiled eggs?
Why so many? Iâm curiousâŚ
Iâll try one tomorrow. I can read âtea,â but I donât know
what kind it is. Oh, does this mean
âcaffeine-freeâ? Maybe itâs like Japanese
barley tea? This one I get! Ice cream âstraight from the farmâ?
Canât go wrong. Farm-fresh chocolate ice creamâ
so good! On a trip, nothing beats ice cream
for a quick break. After traveling the world, I know:
ice cream never lets you down. Huh? What is this taste⌠Not good at all⌠Kinda tastes like a hospital.
LOL What even is this
awful drink?! My mouth is saying ânope.â
LOL Let me read the ingredients. Is this basically
Chinese herbal medicine? It tastes like kakkonto
(herbal cold remedy). I take herbal meds when Iâm sick,
but not what I want now⌠Good morning, Taipei. First, letâs grab breakfast. Still curious about those eggs
from last night. Do I put them
in this bag? Not taking risksâgoing with oolong Tea.
Familiar in Japan too. Taipei at dawn is beautiful. Why am I eating here?
Wasnât there a better spot? LOL Looks like a regular boiled egg. Huh, whatâs this flavor? From the color I expected soy sauce,
but itâs totally different. Complex, but tasty. Taiwanâs boiled eggs dry out
my mouth too. LOL Breakfast in bus-stop chaosâŚ
Couldnât I pick a better place? One thing I noticed
while walkingâ There are convenience stores
everywhere. Feels like 100,000Ă Japan.
LOL Walk five stepsâ
thereâs another one. A spot famous for shuijianbao
(pan-fried buns). NT$20 eachâgot pork
and chive buns. At a big park in the city center. Birds Iâve never seen⌠Bright red eyesâ
kinda spooky. Uh-oh, my buns are being targeted. Run! All over the park, people do
tai chi and exercises. People here are
so health-minded. Huh? Somethingâs moving! A squirrelâright in the middle of the city! Itâs upside down,
eating a nut! Maybe thatâs how it keeps crumbs
off its body. Never thought Iâd study squirrel habits
in Taiwan. LOL Okay, my turn to eat. So, so good! Chewy wrapper, juicy pork
bursting with flavor. Can this really be NT$20?
Itâs so good. Next up:
the chive bun. Didnât expect much from the veggie one,
but itâs amazing too! Packed with chives
and glass noodles. All veggies, yet
really filling. Good food, fresh airâ
what a perfect morning. I love checking out
other countriesâ money. Baseball on the billâ
thatâs pretty rare. Everyoneâs smiling.
LOL Taiwan baseball is famous
for cheerleadersâI want to go someday. Like everywhere, airport exchange
gives you big bills. And theyâre a pain to use. I hate using big bills
at small shopsâyou get a dirty look. So Iâm thinking how to break these
into NT$100 notes. Do banks have a change machine? I came to a nearby bank. I know itâs a big ask, but I tried
asking to change the bills. I asked as politely as I couldâŚ
and thenâ They exchanged them with a smile! Thank you,
Kaohsiung Bank! Iâll never forget your kindness. When Iâm a millionaire, Iâll come
open an account here. Niceâshopping will be easier now. Iâm heading out on the subway.(MRT) Staring at the display so I donât
miss my stop. Iâm on the train,
super nervous. But this made me smile.
LOL I know where to tap now.
LOL Arrived at Longshan Temple. Taipeiâs oldest temple,
founded in 1738. People say itâs the strongest
power spot in Taipei. Huh? Thereâs no reception
counter here. This grand temple is free
to enter? Why are these figuresâ faces
covered? This might sound rude,
butâ Taiwanese temples are flashy,
and super cool. This templeâs vibe reminds me
of the jiangshi âhopping vampireâ movies. I wonder how Tian-Tianâs doing these days. What are they doing hereâŚ? People drop small wooden pieces
on the ground. It reminds me of a game where you toss
shoes to âforecastâ weather. Sole down means sunny.
Sole up means rain. No idea what it means,
but Iâll try. One flat side up, one rounded side up⌠not a match. These are probably fortune sticks
for drawing your luck. Iâll draw one too. Number 87. Looking for parts I can read⌠Found one! Illness: âYes.â
Lost item: âBad.â Let me pray for safe travels. I also bought a travel safety amulet. Okay, now I can enjoy Taiwan
without accidents. Maybe thanks to the charmâ
Iâm getting used to the MRT. Gliding through the gates like
a local. Thatâs me, Hiro. I often saw fires burning in bins
outside shops while walking. Curious what it was,
so I asked. I asked in English, but they replied
in Japanese⌠How did they know Iâm Japanese? LOL They burn ghost money to honor lonely
spiritsâpart of a ritual. Ask in English, get Japanese backâ
what a moment. Apparently, they studied in Tokyo
for three years. All spoke fluent Japanese and explained it
so wellâlucky me. Honestly, if theyâd explained “Obon festival” in English,
I might not get it. Japan has Obon too, but the way itâs done
is quite different. Iâm really glad I could witness
a local custom. I learned âTo-siÄ-nĂâ and âLi-hoâ
(Taiwanese: thanks / hello), No one seems to use them,
so I told a stranger about it. LOL Iâm so glad we met.
Thank you. Souvenirs? Of courseâ
postcards. Found Longshan Temple and a super cute
postcard set. Heard thereâs a great place
to eat, but is it really in this alley? There it isâ
with a line! Seems you pick your favorite
side dishes. I love this kind of restaurant. You see places like this a lot
in Thailand too. Best part: even if you donât speak,
you can just point. I just call it a
âpoint-and-orderâ restaurant. Bought it with âThis oneâ
and one finger. Oh rightâI havenât had beer in Taiwan yet. Wow, so many choices. When in Taiwan,
this is the one. In Taiwan videos, this green-label
beer shows up a lot. I got excited and ended up
buying a lot. LOL When you think of Taiwan,
you think bananas! Cheers to Taipei at night! Clean, crisp taste. Less bitter than in Japanâ
easy to drink. Ta-da! Sweet and spicy fried chicken. Thought it was tofuâ
itâs taro. Eggplantâmy favorite. Some veggie
I donât know. Added it just to make the bento
look colorful. LOL So, how does it taste? Itâs crazy good. Itâs so good
it makes me tear up. Eating like a hungry stray dogâ
canât stop. LOL I don’t need fine dining
when I travel. In the end, homestyle dishes like this
are the best. Totally satisfied! PoPo tempted me,
so I bought bananas. Small, but sweet
and delicious. Ever since I learned that bananas
with black spots are riper, I go for the spotted ones now. Iâm getting used
to Taiwan now, so I bought a mystery snack
I canât read at all. Playing a solo game:
guess the flavor. From this unique shape, I have
zero clues. Onion, maybe� Not sure what it is, but it goes
great with beer. Oopsâsorry, my nipples
are kinda pointy today. Today Iâm taking on a local bus. A bus stop in the middle of the road?
Thatâs unusual. Honestly, boarding a foreign local bus
takes courage. I donât really know the system
or the routes. So I just hop on, even though
Iâm not fully sure. Looks like Iâm calm, right? Truth is, heart racing and sweaty underarms. No room to enjoy the view, of course. Eyes locked on the sign showing
the next stop. Every time I ride a local bus abroad,
I lose a year of life. LOL Phew⌠local buses are mentally tiring. I came to see a local market, but it might be
more for wholesalers. Still, itâs fun to see Taiwan-style
fruits and veggies. Since Iâm here, Iâll buy something. Picked a fruit Iâve never seen in Japan. Theyâre finding the one
thatâs ripest. No idea about the going price, so I just paid
what they said. Okay, I got bananasâ
and a mystery fruit! Oh, this side has
lots of shops too. Feels like this is where
locals actually shop. Maybe I shouldâve bought things here. Love itâlocal markets like this
get me excited. Still, itâs a weekday morning and
itâs packed. Feels almost like a festivalâ
so many people. Maybe that point-and-order restaurant
buys its ingredients here. One street off the main road,
it turns into a stylish neighborhood. Why do the windows have bars?
Whatâs the reason? To prevent falls, maybe? They chose spotless bananas, but I passed
and picked speckled ones. By the way, 99.9% of bananas sold
in Japan are imported. Taiwan bananas are small,
but tasty. Found a cool spot on Google Maps
while eating bananas! A place where planes fly by really close. With approach lightsâplanes land
right over your head. A bit scaryâapparently,
venomous snakes come out here. Fruit must taste extra good
while plane-spotting. So, time to try
this mystery fruit. Niceâlooks like I can eat it
without a knife. It breaks off into little
bite-size pieces. Oh, I see. So thatâs the flavor⌠Sticky, creamy texture. It has seeds like a watermelon. First time trying it, but itâs goodâ
I keep popping pieces. Not sure Iâm eating it the right way,
but somehow my hands stay clean. Yepâcreamy, almost like custard. A little tangy. It also tastes like mangoâ
or maybe pineapple? First time in Taiwanâ
so glad I found this great fruit. Finallyâhere comes a plane. LOL After 10 a.m., the sky got busy. Taiwanâs birdsong is so clearâ
itâs beautiful. So many birds Iâve never seen. A fountain called
âFountain of Hope.â Supposed to blast 70 meters highâ
or so they say. But today it wonât even spray
a millimeter. âNo hope.â Skipping the fountainâ
Iâm riding a shared bike by the river Tried bike share in Kyoto recentlyâ
first time. It was fun while traveling, so Iâm testing it
in Taipei too. Taipeiâs breeze feels great. Whoa! Another venomous-snake warning sign!
Taipei is kinda scary⌠The path is so flat you donât need an e-bike If Iâm not careful, I drift into
the left lane. Gotta watch it. Told youâno close-ups of your
dirty feet! So many shirtless older guys passing by. LOL Practicing music under bridgesâ
thatâs universal. I want to hydrate,
but I’m eating bananas instead. For some reason, my bag
is packed with bananas. LOL First three were great, but honestly,
Iâm getting tired of them⌠Not brave enough for roads yetâ
ending here. Thanks, banana-yellow bike. Grapefruit in green teaâ
wait, what? I like trying unusual drinks like this. Yikesâthis oneâs a no. Grapefruitâs sourness fights the green teaâs
bitterness. That âTry itâ sign tricked me⌠Lu Rou Fan shows up in every
Taiwan video. Had to try itâso here I am. Look at this! Doesnât it look amazing? Taiwanâs classic: braised pork in a sweet-savory
sauce over rice. Soup with pork and daikon radishâ
I don’t know the dish’s name. Golden broth. Insanely good! Whoaâthis is crazy
delicious! A hundred times better
than I imagined. This is unfairly good. Daikon radish stewed until itâs silkyâ
so, so good. A pointed finger is my âdeliciousâ sign. Is lifting dishes considered bad manners
in Taiwan? This guyâs holding his bowl highâ
hope thatâs okay. LOL Do people here eat food this good
every day? Look at me riding this trainâ
not bad. I think Iâm finally fitting in. LOL I keep using this IC card, but
the balance wonât drop. Oh! Thereâs a stamp counter! Good news, stamp collectors! They have station stamps
here in Taiwan, too. Like in Japan, I wonder
if every station has one. Stamp collectingâ
this might keep me busy… Back at street level,
and wowâwhat a place… Is this Tokyo? Never been to Harajuku,
but I bet it’s like this. Feels like the ultimate
youth hangout. Hmm… I feel like
what I want isn’t here. Yep, regular black tea tastes best. Tea tastes best
right outside a coffee shop. After a bit of rain,
it cools right down. Nice. Okay, I’m getting hungry. Last night’s bento was amazing,
so I’m getting it again. Popular as expectedâ
there’s already a line. To order smoothly,
I choose while waiting in line. The side dishes seem
a bit different from yesterday. Watching the person aheadâ
looks like you can add a main. I’ll copy them and add
Pai Gu (fried pork chop). And here’s my finished bento! How good does this bento look?! All this for 110 TWD
(about $3.60). Cheers to Taipei nights! Beer with my prize IC cardâ
free beer tastes extra good. LOL Some greens with scrambled eggs. Flash-fried Chinese cabbage. Stir-fried chicken and onions. My favorite eggplant. This pai-ku (pork chop) is crazy good. Crispy fried pork,
packed with flavor. Perfect with beer. Even this simply blanched cabbage
is super tasty. The veggies themselves
must be really fresh. So many side dishes to choose from. I could eat this bentoâ
morning, noon, night, all year. Another happy dinner tonight. On the way to the station,
found a cool spot. Looks like the Continental Hotel
from John Wick. Feels like a movie sceneâ
so striking. Heading to New Taipeiâ
thereâs someone I must visit. Her name is
Teresa Teng (Deng Lijun) As a kid, her songs always played
in my dadâs car. Hits: âToki no Nagare ni Mi o Makase,â
âTsugunai,â and âAijin.â Dad and I used to sing them,
but theyâre mostly about cheating song. LOL Not really songs a kindergartner
should be singing. LOL Luzhou, the town where Teresa
spent her childhood. At the station squareâ
found her statue. For such an Asian superstar,
isnât it a bit small? I expected something bigger. Plaques in English, Chinese,
and Japanese. The elementary school
Teresa attended. Her portraits are painted
on the walls. In Japan she performed not as Deng Lijun,
but as Teresa Teng. Wowâeven as a kid,
she posed like a star. A sweets shop Teresaâs family
used to visit. Do they sell treats related
to Teresa Teng? Ah, this must be it. Must be popularâ
they stock tons. I asked, âDeng Lijun?â
My accent was so badâthey didnât get it. The kind owner used phone translate
to figure me out. Once he got it,
the owner⌠said, âThis singer, right?â and even
sang for me. LOL Thanks to his lovely voice, I found
the sweets I wanted. Thank you! Came for Luzhouâs specialtyâ
Qie-zai noodles. This place opened in 1931. So maybe Teresa ate here
as a child! Couldnât say it right,
so I pointed to order. Yellow noodles with loads of chivesâ
looks delicious. A light, clean-tasting broth. Perfect for a morning stomach. Oops, I slurped loudly again. LOL Noodles are soft and thin. Just chives and bean sproutsâ
simple, yet tasty! I saw something familiar in the kitchen
and ordered it. Probably what we call
âatsuageâ (fried tofu). See? Just like in Japan! Oh! This brown sauceâthought it was soy,
but itâs totally different! What is this sweet sauce?
Itâs so good! Portion looked big, but the sauce
keeps me going. LOL That was delicious. Do cities all over Taiwan have
morning markets like this? Just watching makes me excited. Oh…ducks is taking a bath⌠In Japan mandarins mean winter,
but here, is it now? A bit firm⌠Yepâ sour! Yep. This oneâs sour too. LOL Maybe I picked the wrong season⌠Someone tell me the best season
for Taiwan mandarins. I need stamps for my postcards. I could write the stamps I want
on a note and hand it to the clerk⌠But that would take
the fun out of travel. I memorized in Taiwanese:
âTwo 10-yuan stamps, please.â Practicing until it rolls off
my tongue. LOL Arrived at the post office. So nervous my heart might
jump out. Alrightâhere I go. âTwo 10-yuan stamps, please.â Wait, thatâs not rightâ
She gave me two 7-yuan stamps. Suddenly, a mini Taiwanese lesson
started right in the post office. Turns out âsevenâ and âtenâ
sound super similar. Typical Japanese meâ
I apologized right away. A Taiwanese lady cheered me up
in Japanese. LOL After all that, I finally got
two 10-yuan stamps. Mission complete!
Relief hitsânow Iâm starving. Dinner? Of courseâ
the point-and-order restaurant. Taking a different route
for a change. Oh! New dishes on the menu. After three days in a row,
they remember my face now. LOL Grab a bento, buy beer at the convenience store, then head to the hotel loungeâ
my three-day routine. Cheers to my last night
in Taiwan! Three nights in a rowâTaiwan beer
still tastes great. Everything is brown. LOL Got this againâ
loved it at lunch. Spicy mapo tofuâ
insanely good. Shouldâve grabbed a spoon⌠Think Iâve eaten the most eggplant in all Taipei
these three days. LOL Does this dish even have a proper name? So glad I found a great place nearby. Once I’m back in Japan tomorrowâ
no more of this bento for a while⌠That makes me kinda sad. Wish that shop would open in Japan. Itâd be a hit for sureâ
no doubt! Look closerâthere are ears and
a record on the package. This one has a mic and an eye? First time trying this kind
of pastry. Outside is flakyâ
like pie crust? Ohâthis is
good! Are there mixed nuts
in here? Ah, I seeâthis goes
great with milk. This one has white dough. Waitâthe skin slipped off
in the bag. LOL This one has mochi
(chewy rice cake) inside. I like this one better. Did Teresa Teng eat these too? Taiwan has way too much good foodâ
itâs almost a problem. Feels like I gained about
5 kg in four days. Alright, time to write some postcards. To stamp collectors:
The Postal Museum has lots of stamps! No friendsâso Iâm mailing one
to myself. LOL âTaiwanese food is crazy good.â Sticking on the stamps
I worked so hard to get. Good morning, Taipei. Heading out to grab breakfast. I canât mess up
my last breakfast. So Iâm going back to a place
I know is good. Saying goodbye to this cool building
I saw every day. Stabbing a straw into this cute
cupâs head! Soy milkâ
so good! Shuijianbaoâ
insanely good. But why am I eating
standing up?! Does Taipei have so few benches? Thought the same in Tokyoâ
big cities lack benches. Honestly, I just want to sit down
and enjoy my meal. Haha. Isnât this sign design cool? Normally youâd make this letter
this size, right? Making âĺşâ (Exit) hugeâinstant to read,
and stylish too. If you get what I mean,
please hit the Like button. LOL Do people post letters while riding the escalator? Iâm not that skilledâ
Iâll mail it the normal way. Hope it reaches Japan safely. Hopping on the MRTâ
off to the airport. I jumped on the train that cameâ
was this the right one? Itâs nothing like the train
I took on the way in. Feels like I got on an express. I think I need to pay an extra fare.
I’ll pay when the conductor comes. Taiwan was seriously funâ
even if I gained 5 kg⌠Iâll be back soon for sure,
because⌠thereâs still 3,964 TWD left
on my IC card! I hate to waste money.
I want to use it all. LOL Alright, heading back to Japan. Thank you, Taiwan!
A 5-day solo trip in Taipei. My base was the budget-friendly Fun Inn Taipei Hostel. With the MRT and YouBike, I visited Longshan Temple, a local morning market, Taipei Main Station, Luzhou (Teresa Tengârelated spots), an airplane-viewing area near Songshan Airport, and the Postal Museum.
I ate Lu Rou Fan, Qie Zai Mian, Shui Jian Bao, tried a âpoint-and-orderâ diner, drank Taiwan Beerâand even took on a âmystery fruit.â
This Vlog packs the real feel of Taiwan travel / Taipei sightseeing / temple visits / local markets / street food / hostel life.
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âąď¸ Timetable
00:00 Opening
02:48 Taoyuan International Airport
06:21 Taipei Main Station
08:23 Fun Inn Taipei Hostel (çĺ°ĺéć
)
14:25 [Day 2] Shui Jian Bao / Tea Eggs
16:26 228 Peace Memorial Park
20:33 Longshan Temple (Mengjia Longshan Temple)
25:44 A-Shun Pai Gu (point-and-order style)
30:05 Local bus â Binjiang Market
33:57 Songshan Airport (Aircraft Viewing Alley)
36:43 Fountain of Hope â Riverside YouBike ride
37:03 YouBike bike share
39:24 Lu Rou Fan
42:06 Ximen
45:09 Luzhou / Teresa Tengârelated spots
48:02 Qie Zai Mian
50:56 Bought stamps at the post office
57:08 [Day 5] Ending
ââââââââââ
đ Places Visited
Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport (TPE)
https://maps.app.goo.gl/bwFv2cJ3JrPx6jAd7
Taipei Main Station
https://maps.app.goo.gl/5vg5GuBrVdSABTmi8
Longshan Temple
https://maps.app.goo.gl/8Z4GXWHCPDsbbxaJ8
228 Peace Memorial Park
https://maps.app.goo.gl/duhEnhUvJ2uBLAUAA
Luzhou Station
https://maps.app.goo.gl/9UGaai59pX6uP9gg8
Binjiang Market
https://maps.app.goo.gl/e2k5ZdwXuJnsXTYu8
Songshan Airport â Aircraft Viewing Alley
https://maps.app.goo.gl/r1XP7HNsFZw4VS2PA
Fountain of Hope
https://maps.app.goo.gl/CLpKCkZxH3nk7UsK6
Postal Museum
https://maps.app.goo.gl/7DArNqrydY8Jufck8
ââââââââââ
đ´ Food
A-Shun Pai Gu
https://maps.app.goo.gl/eZ1LBDdQ8q3zAHBPA
Luzhou Da Miao Kou Qie Zai Mian
https://maps.app.goo.gl/39FoMQUdqfQRYYmG9
Lao Cai Shui Jian Bao
https://maps.app.goo.gl/QWX95xd3opceTcSW8
Long Feng Tang (Teresa Tengârelated sweets)
https://maps.app.goo.gl/64akbGtG5WXVnpcn6
Hang Lu Rou Fan
https://maps.app.goo.gl/TNUsi2iz1ScPQDe76
ââââââââââ
đ¨ Lodging
Fun Inn Taipei Hostel / çĺ°ĺéć
(sometimes listed as Fun Inn Taipei Hotel)
https://maps.app.goo.gl/EnADzxGHE68xroTt6
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ăDisclaimer / Notesă
ăťThe original language of this channelâs content is Japanese. Translations may contain errors.
ăťThis channel is for entertainment, travel inspiration, and educational purposes only.
ăťVideo information is based on personal experiences and may not be fully accurate.
ăťPrices and details are current as of September 2025 and may change.
ăťInappropriate comments may be removed.
ăťWe strive for accuracy but do not guarantee it.
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1 Comment
I forgot to have Xiao Long Bao and bubble tea.đ