Wednesday, March 23, 2022

Earthquake Season 2022

Taiwan has a lot of earthquakes. Most are too small to notice. Some are big enough, but you don't notice them anyway. There was a 5.1 earthquake in the middle of the country last week. It was reportedly felt all over the island. I never knew about it until I read the news.

I was on a train to Taipei a few months ago. When the train started to slow down nowhere near a station, I assumed it was some kind of mechanical issue. Then I got a phone call asking me if I was okay.

“The train will get in late if it doesn't speed up,” I said. “But how did you know?”

There was a large earthquake between where I was and where I was going. The high speed train moved very slowly just in case there was damage to the tracks. I never felt any earthquake. You might think that was because I was on a train, but the high speed train is pretty smooth. Not Japan smooth. If you stand a coin upright, it will probably fall. But the cars were made in Japan. It is not a bumpy ride.

On Tuesday morning there was a 3.4 in Yilan, over 200km from Kaohsiung. That was too far away and too small for me to feel. Two hours later, there was a 4.8 off the coast of Haulien, just south of Yilan. I felt that one. It was like a large truck driving by. It ended before I even realized it was an earthquake.

At 01:06 on Tuesday night/Wednesday morning, there was a 5.4 off the coast of Taitung. I felt that one. The epicenter was just over 100km away, and 5.4 is a lot bigger than 4.8. At 01:41, there was more shaking. At first, I thought it was an aftershock to the 5.4. Only this one felt much larger and lasted far longer. I never timed it, but it just kept going. It was like hearing “American Pie” for the first time. You think it is going to wind down after yet another chorus, but then here comes another verse. In the middle of all the shaking, my phone started screaming. The government sends out automated alert messages as soon as possible to warm people of the larger earthquakes. More often than not, you get the message a second before you feel the ground shake, or as it starts. This time, I got the message right in the middle. That either meant I was close to the epicenter or it was going to be a big one.

What I initially thought was an aftershock turned out to be a 6.6 earthquake in Hualien, 150km north of the 5.4 in Taitung. We get a lot of earthquakes, but a 6.6 thirty five minutes after a 5.4, in two completely different locations, is a little unusual.

The first aftershock to the 6.6 came exactly one minute later. It was a healthy 5.7. Less than a minute after that one, there was a 6.1 aftershock. The experts are still debating if that was an aftershock or its own earthquake. It was certainly large enough, but it was in the same area and came two minutes after the 6.6.

Between 01:44 and 12:26 there were at least 49 aftershocks larger than 4.0. Two of them managed to top 5.8. The tectonic plates are still angry as I type this, though the aftershocks are getting smaller. I can't feel any of them anymore.

So far, there are no reports of any serious damage or death. I have not heard about any freeway damage yet, though something along the east coast must have broken. Haulien and Taitung are the two least populated counties, outside of the smaller island groups. Not coincidentally, they take the brunt of most earthquakes and typhoons.

In the middle of all these aftershocks, there was a tiny 2.7 in Hsinchu, 150km away from all the action. Nobody is going to talk about that one. That was like Farrah Fawcett dying on the same day as Michael Jackson.

Most of this happened today. Some of the numbers above will probably change as the experts make their calculations.

Sunday, March 20, 2022

Lantern Festival 2022



The Lantern Festival, 元宵節, is always on the 15th day of the new year and marks the end of the Spring Festival. This year, New Year's Day was 1 February, so the Lantern Festival was 15 February. Pretty straightforward so far.

But in Taiwan, one city hosts the Lantern Festival every year. On the actual day of the holiday, everyone all over the country can light lanterns, watch lion dances, and set off fireworks. If you want to see the big lantern display, you have to go to whichever city is hosting. To make life easier for everyone, they usually keep it going for about a month.

Last year's was in Taipei. I did not go to that one. This year, it was in Kaohsiung for the first time in ten years. That meant it was always going to be crowded. Some people will travel anywhere in the country to see it, but most are more likely to go when it is in their city. Since Kaohsiung is one of the largest cities in the country, and easy to get to from anywhere on the west coast, and it had been ten years since the last one, they decided to hold the festival in two different locations.

Site 1 was the harbor, which has plenty of room to hold thousands of elaborate displays, but very little parking.

Site 2 was conveniently in the park right outside my office. You would think that might make going to work every day a bit of a chore, what with extra traffic and everyone trying to park in my space. Oddly enough, they did not let anyone who was visiting the Lantern Festival into the parking garage, even though there are hundreds of spaces for visitors.

The parking lot where I work was built less than ten years ago. Unlike a lot of parking in Kaohsiung, they knew a little about traffic when they built this one. No matter which entrance you use, you have to turn one way for employees and another for visitors. Without an employee card, you cannot get into the employee parking. Even if they allowed parking during the Lantern Festival, I would have never been affected. I assume they closed visitor parking since there were far more visitors than spaces every night. I have no idea where everyone parked, but there are more than a few options along the MRT line.


This year's Lantern Festival was in the Fongshan District of Kaohsiung (鳳山區). Fenghuang (鳳凰) is a bird from Chinese mythology that symbolizes the sun, moon, sky, and planets. It embodies the union of yin and yang. Though this is the Year of the Tiger, the central display of this year's Lantern Festsival was the Fenghuang.



There were still plenty of tigers.





Plenty of moon bears.







And Godzilla, for some reason.



Most displays referenced folk tales, modern pop culture, or international travel.







And whatever this is.



Possibly not the most famous skyline in the world, this is supposed to be Kaohsiung.



We all live in one of these. Even monkeys.