2025/10/20

Taiwan Today

Taiwan Review

Taiwan's rising new tourist attraction

June 01, 1982
The lush green range rises against cloud-spotted azure skies in Taiwan’s Ilan County.
Mt. Taiping in northeastern Taiwan is one of the three biggest logging sta­tions on the island. But for tourists, it is better known for its luxuriant and primi­tive forests and unusual transportation, and will soon earn the status of a forestry recreation area.

Rising to 1,950 meters above sea level, Mt. Taiping is located in Ilan County. It comes under the administration of the Taiwan Forestry Bureau. To reach the area from Taipei, one must catch a bus or train to Lotung and then take a bus to Tuchang at the base of the mountain. In the past, it was necessary to wait for logs to be sent down to act as bal­last for the ascent by cable car. Now, the 40-year-old system is power-operated. In between three separate cable car lines, there is a section of narrow gauge railway along which run diminutive, yellow peng-peng trains - so called because of the way they sway from side to side on their jour­ney through the mountains. Now, a high­way has been constructed to augment these older systems.

From the top of Mt. Taiping, there is an unparalleled vista of forest and mountain scenery. On the way up, the traveler passes first through an area of camphor and maple trees at the 200 to 500 meter level. From 500 to 1,800 meters is the temperate zone, with mixed coniferous and broad-leafed trees such as fir, juniper and maple, while the area above 1,800 meters is known for its lush growth of coniferous trees, including cypress and juniper, whose wood is commercially valuable.

An ancient tree; the infinite sky (top left); The twisted old trees create a mystic world in the forest of Mt.Taiping (bottom left); Route of the pengpeng train (right)

Among the many attractions at Mt. Taiping is the Jentse spa, where a hostel has been constructed to hold between two to three hundred tourists who want to take advantage of the hot spring waters which abound in the area. Nearby, a geothermal gradient well is being drilled by the Industrial and Technical Research Institute (ITRI). Another attraction is the Lantai floral nursery, famed for its large variety of or­chids. Enthusiasts are welcome to take wild varieties, which can be found on the mountain, back to the city to hang in courtyards and window boxes. In the early spring, cherry blossoms turn the slopes of the mountain into a blaze of color.

At the end of the railway and cable run is a small town with a hostel and simple restaurant, where one can enjoy starry nights and the sun rising in the morning. In the afternoon, it usually clouds over.

Above the village is a small forestry park, which with its tall cypresses, quaint paths and lingering mists resembles a fantasy land. At the top of the park a temple has been built in memory of the Ming Dynasty patriot, Koxinga. The lookout tower at Mt. Tuli provides a view of the lofty Mt. Nanhu, snow-capped during the winter season, the for­ests at the foot of the mountain, and beyond that the Lanyang Plain and the Pacific Ocean.

There are between two and three hundred workers at the Mt. Taiping lumber mill, organized into 10-man units to fell trees and collect the lumber. After the trees are reduced to logs of con­venient size, they are transported to the rail head or the newly built road which runs to the top of the mountain, for transfer to Lotung. To prevent cracking and damage from pests, the timber is kept in special logging ponds. The use of modern equipment and scientific tech­niques has made the operation more effi­cient than before.

The exploitation of Mt. Taiping can be traced back to the time of the Japanese occupation. With annual production up to 80,000 square meters a year, the period from 1937 to 1960 was the prime era for the lumbering industry on the mountain. Though the production volume has been reduced since then, the Forestry Bureau has been actively reforesting the area with cypress, fir, cam­phor and pine trees, up to an area of 1,000 hectares, so as to boost production again some time in the future. Recently, the Forestry Bureau has been cooperating with the Tourism Bureau to develop Mt. Taiping into a forestry recreation park. Using the new road, it takes only two hours to get to the top. The cable car and pengpeng railway have been renovat­ed as a further tourist attraction in the de­velopment plan, which was augmented before the end of 1981. Mt. Taiping has been converted into one of Taiwan's major tourist resorts.

Lumber moves along the rails (top left); - And also, suspended on cable systems (top center); A textured pattern of log-ends is an image of density and strength (top right); Bright wildflowers and ink-blue waters almost startle with their message of man's natural heritage, still alive and well in an increasingly polluted world (bottom).

Down from Mt. Taiping,
I rove across vales and hills
To look for a legendary lake in a tranquil world.
When all at once, List!
A voice is near:
"May there be a Mirror for Narcissus to appreciate his beauty."
Then, Lo! There appears Lake Tsuifeng
Set on high amid towering peaks.
Lightly I walk toward the shore,
Hesitating to waken the slumbering world.
A mysterious gossamer drapes the lake surface
Like an unremembered pastoral lyric.
As I draw nearer,
The newborn sun is creeping up.
The lake bares her bosom unto the fields and to the sky.
Then the beauteous evening came,
Calm and free,
The broad sun is sinking down in its tranquility.
These waters,
Stilled by breezeless air to smoothest polish,
Yield a vivid repetition of the stars.
Never saw I, never felt,
A calm so deep!

Branches silhouetted in misty mountains tell of peace

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