All solo jaunts.
I've not been that busy in recent months with exploring, but I still remain active in the shadows, doing continual research and finding new sites as they continue to appear at alarming rates. If you're familiar with my previous work then you'd know why these sites continue to appear so I won't repeat myself, however what I will say is that as I continue to get deeper and deeper into the scene in Taiwan, I'm making new contacts who can share new information with me. The trouble at present is that I am finding a lot of educational institutions, however they have closed less than a year ago at time of writing which means they are often in a kind of transition period where they are not truly abandoned or derelict, and are extremely well protected because of the contents that have been left inside. If by absolute luck they are accessible then they are often in full working condition with lights and water, or in one particular case as referenced in an earlier report... alarmed.
Nevertheless, I still have a LOT of things to look at, so when I get a free weekend I will try the best I can to provide fresh meat for you and myself to enjoy! These sites again don't really warrant individual reports, so once again they are posted as a compilation to warrant posting.
新泰宜婦幼醫院/Xintaiyi Maternity and Children's Hospital
If you look at one of my earlier reports, this one is referenced as the place in the lights are on, but nobody's home.... Once again I turned up to see that the place was likely to have people inside, but things indeed had moved around since then. I was alone again, and I just walked in like before... I just walked around the place, but I was absolutely certain somebody was there on the third floor, and I just wasn't brave enough to stay inside with a camera. Childish as it sounds, I walked in and out, upstairs and downstairs several times, never truly picking up the courage to get my camera out. So I had a plan... wait outside until somebody walked outside. And it worked...
10 minutes later a young teenage boy walks out, and I ask if I can go in and take photos. He tells me to go up to the 3rd floor where his dad is doing some work, and there he is in a ward room doing some work. In a way he was quite perplexed about why I'd come here, but makes jokes with me and tells me that there might me ghosts around. Having had a good laugh with him for a few minutes I was free to roam the hospital at leisure with no fear of being caught by someone who didn't want me there.
To give you a basic idea of history, the place was opened in 1989 as a maternity and pediatric hospital but closed in 2019 because it had a severe lack of funding to keep it open. There is talk of converting it to an elderly care home, but this is not a firm plan according to media reports. That's all I can tell you about the place.
Being a local hospital there was never going to be that much to see left inside, but because I had the luxury of being left alone without fear of reprimands I took the time to find any interesting details the place had to offer.
The only equipment left in the hospital.
Now this is an interesting superstition in Taiwan. On the top of this machine is a packet of 乖乖 crisps. Translated, 乖乖 means be good, so given that Chinese humour much like English relies on homophones and similar sounds, it is a superstition to tape a pack of these crisps to a machine to stop it breaking. We do the same at work with our printers!
So not really worthy of a standalone report, but a good side mission completed for a day. Two more reports to follow.
I've not been that busy in recent months with exploring, but I still remain active in the shadows, doing continual research and finding new sites as they continue to appear at alarming rates. If you're familiar with my previous work then you'd know why these sites continue to appear so I won't repeat myself, however what I will say is that as I continue to get deeper and deeper into the scene in Taiwan, I'm making new contacts who can share new information with me. The trouble at present is that I am finding a lot of educational institutions, however they have closed less than a year ago at time of writing which means they are often in a kind of transition period where they are not truly abandoned or derelict, and are extremely well protected because of the contents that have been left inside. If by absolute luck they are accessible then they are often in full working condition with lights and water, or in one particular case as referenced in an earlier report... alarmed.
Nevertheless, I still have a LOT of things to look at, so when I get a free weekend I will try the best I can to provide fresh meat for you and myself to enjoy! These sites again don't really warrant individual reports, so once again they are posted as a compilation to warrant posting.
新泰宜婦幼醫院/Xintaiyi Maternity and Children's Hospital
If you look at one of my earlier reports, this one is referenced as the place in the lights are on, but nobody's home.... Once again I turned up to see that the place was likely to have people inside, but things indeed had moved around since then. I was alone again, and I just walked in like before... I just walked around the place, but I was absolutely certain somebody was there on the third floor, and I just wasn't brave enough to stay inside with a camera. Childish as it sounds, I walked in and out, upstairs and downstairs several times, never truly picking up the courage to get my camera out. So I had a plan... wait outside until somebody walked outside. And it worked...
10 minutes later a young teenage boy walks out, and I ask if I can go in and take photos. He tells me to go up to the 3rd floor where his dad is doing some work, and there he is in a ward room doing some work. In a way he was quite perplexed about why I'd come here, but makes jokes with me and tells me that there might me ghosts around. Having had a good laugh with him for a few minutes I was free to roam the hospital at leisure with no fear of being caught by someone who didn't want me there.
To give you a basic idea of history, the place was opened in 1989 as a maternity and pediatric hospital but closed in 2019 because it had a severe lack of funding to keep it open. There is talk of converting it to an elderly care home, but this is not a firm plan according to media reports. That's all I can tell you about the place.
Being a local hospital there was never going to be that much to see left inside, but because I had the luxury of being left alone without fear of reprimands I took the time to find any interesting details the place had to offer.
The only equipment left in the hospital.
Now this is an interesting superstition in Taiwan. On the top of this machine is a packet of 乖乖 crisps. Translated, 乖乖 means be good, so given that Chinese humour much like English relies on homophones and similar sounds, it is a superstition to tape a pack of these crisps to a machine to stop it breaking. We do the same at work with our printers!
So not really worthy of a standalone report, but a good side mission completed for a day. Two more reports to follow.
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