We had a doozy of a typhoon last weekend, the worst flooding in 50 years. Last Friday was declared a Typhoon Day, which means people were highly encouraged to stay home from the dangerously strong winds and pouring rain, eat ramen and play mahjong (although I heard all the cool kids went to the movies or KTV - that's karaoke in private rooms for the uninitiated).
Taipei experiences the fewest clear sunny days and the greatest seasonal temperature variation compared with the rest of the country. The trade-off for crappy weather is that Taipei doesn't flood often (although when it does, it's bad, like really bad), whereas many small towns in central and southern Taiwan are frequently reported to flood during even moderate typhoons. Morakot seemed to have an axe to grind with the mountainous central regions and the south, but Taipei was back up and running by Sunday with little trace of the nastiness that just swept past us.
It wasn't until I watched the news that I saw for the first time the devastation, and realized that those of us in Taipei were extremely lucky. I checked in with my aunt who lives in the southern city of Tainan, and she reports that other than experiencing a water shortage, there was no flooding in her city, and that she and the family are all doing well. The severe rains resulted in sedimentation of Tainan's clean water supplies, so they've been forced to shut off the water every other day in order to carry out with the cleaning effort. My aunt and her family have been living off bottled water for the past week, and while they still manage to take showers, they've been hand-washing all their clothes instead of using the washing machine in an effort to conserve water.
I want to thank everyone for your concerns, and assure you that my relatives and I are all doing well.
I should think this has made the rounds by now, but if you STILL haven't seen it, here's the famous footage of the hotel that collapsed into the river (not to be confused with the apartment building that collapsed in China, pre-Morakot mind you).
Village Buried by Mudslide
Treacherous Rescue Effort
Google Morakot Map -- my sister loves the little dancing bananas in places where people have been rescued
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
I am happy you are safe and sound jeannylinny! Now stay that way :)
Post a Comment