Saturday, June 22, 2013

Little Problems




I took these pictures to work and had Elder Tang tell me what each meant.  We wrote on the picture and keep it by the air conditioner remotes.  The washer, I only use one cycle 99% of the time anyway, so when I got that figured out, I was in business!

Back on line

I'm back - June 23 - my toolbar for blogger is in Chinese and I can't get it to speak English.  That has been part of my problem with this blog.  This morning, I decided to do what I've seen my 7th grade students do.  I just pushed buttons until the log-in menu popped up.  I still don't recognize the symbols, but I know now where it is on the page!   Hoo Hoo!



Rain - I tried to get a picture of the torrents coming down.

This is where we cross the street to go to work.  We call it the 2 minute light

These are ducks for sale.

Since there are no yards, people have pots everywhere.  This is a typical doorstep outside of a gift shop.



We walk by this shop every day.  The clothes are expensive designer clothes.  Can't afford them.

This is one of my favorite gift shops.  I haven't been inside yet, but look at all the fun stuff.

Pizza place outside the office.  This man has a pet parrot.

This is mango shaved ice.  There is mango on the bottom, shaved snow (ice and frozen milk) mango on top and orbet on top of that.  This is yummy beyond belief.



This is amazing.  This wall has a rack that holds 6" square plastic flower pots (the kind you get at the nursery)  We've seen several of these.  This one is on our block.  

Sunday, May 26, 2013

TheTaiwan Taipei Temple and Service Center

 
The Taiwan Taipei Temple
I think it is one of the smallest temples - surely the smallest one I have been in.

The Spire with Moroni is free-standing and faces west.

These pictures were taken from the roof of the office building.  The view is pretty spectacular.  The skyline is modern.  The clouds are a fixture.  It rains all the time.

President and Sister Day took us up on the roof where there is a modest garden.

This is the courtyard between the Temple and the Service Center.  The Service Center has 3 basements and four floors.  It is possible to add 6 more floors without worrying about the foundation.  The Service Center has offices for finances, visas, humanitarian/welfare, family history, translation and other stuff.  It is all on the 3rd and 4th floors.  The first and second floors are chapels, classrooms, cultural halls.  The foyer on the first floor doubles as a visitors center and sisters are assigned there to lead tours and answer questions.  

The Mission home and office

 
 
This is the Mission Home and Office.  The Mission President lives on the 7th and 6th floors.  The 7th floor is more of a reception area.  The 6th floor is his private quarters.  The Temple President lives on the 5th floor.  Our office is on the 4th floor and temple patron apartments are on the 3rd, 2nd and 1st floors.
 

 
This is the office door.  You need a key to unlock the heavy metal door or push an intercom button to have someone open it for you.  Our apartment building works the same way.

Street Scenes










We arrived on Saturday night.  Monday is Costco day.  A driver takes the senior missionaries to Costco.  We have one hour to shop.  Wayne took these pictures out the front window.  Traffic is heavy and drivers don't always follow the rules, but we found it to be no worse than San Francisco.





At most intersections, there is a large square marked off in front of the cars and before the white go line.  This is for scooters.  There are millions of scooters.  It is fun to watch the light change.  They take off like they are in a motocross race. 
To the right the street has narrowed to two lanes.  Most of the streets are like this.  The Boulevards are 4 - 6 lanes.  The Lanes are narrow one lane (we live on a lane) and the alleys are only wide enough for pedestrians or scooters.






 Recently, the government built a double decker freeway.  It was the easiest way to ease traffic.  Land is very valuable.  We live close together.  Wayne and I are enjoying our evenings.  We don't have TV so we hear what is going on in the neighborhood - dog barking, violin practice, clarinet practice, people talking.




Here we are at Costco.  There is an underground parking garage.  A moving ramp takes you and your basket upstairs to shop.  There are lots of samples to try, mostly Chinese health foods.  There is some American food, but like any other Costco, you have to buy a year's supply.  On our first trip we needed so many things we were lucky to get out.  Our driver (the temple president) drove us clear home so that we could unload.




Saturday, May 25, 2013

Meanwhile - back at the ranch!

 
Christine Langford and Christian Smith announced their engagement.  They will be married in Ripon on January 3.

 
Dallin Edwards and Angela Hall announced their engagment.  They will be married in the Newport Beach Temple August 10.
 
 
Jonathan Sterling returned from serving in the Bahia Blanca Mission.  He did that while we were flying over the Pacific.  Does he have a happy mother or what????
 
 
Jonathan and Nolan Edwards, first cousins and best friends.  Their missions overlapped so they hadn't seen each other for over three years.  It was a fun family reunion.  We are there in spirit.  Senior missionaries miss a lot, but loving family members provide pictures which help.
 
 

Arrival Taipei Taiwan

 
We arrived in Taipei Saturday night at 8:30 and were met by President and Sister Day.  Traveling with us was Elder Jacob Chow from Hong Kong.  He missed coming with his group because of a Visa problem.  He was a good companion to have, especially when we wanted to find where to wait for the Days to pick us up and the security guard spoke only Chinese.

 
We wanted to look our best when we arrived and mostly made it.  We had to get up at 2 am, Friday, in order to get ready for a 3am pickup from the MTC to SLC airport.  Our flight was about 17 hours, but we lost a whole day crossing the international date line.  We suffered from jet lag for a good week.  We spent the first two nights at the Day's mission home.  We expected to be transferred to the temple patron housing, but our apartment was ready, so we moved in.