We bet the GPS would get us there in twenty minutes, but the road had its own ideas. The asphalt coiled upward, the steering wheel vibrating under my palms as the city air dissolved into a sweet, thick haze of damp cedar.
Dinner at the Butterfly Kitchen was a parade of local treasures. We fought over a mango tart—bright, acidic, and smelling of a June sun—with a desperation that made us forget we were adults, our laughter echoing against the porcelain.
"I told you we should have turned left at the crooked tree!" someone yelled. We spent the next hour roasting the designated navigator, mocking his unwavering faith in a satellite that clearly didn't understand the stubborn mountain topography.
We had a running joke about the 'altitude effect.' The higher we climbed, the more our collective IQ seemed to evaporate into the thin air, culminating in a dead-serious debate over whether a cloud could be too fluffy.
At 6 a.m., the world was a smudge of charcoal and pearl. A sea of clouds swallowed the valley so completely that the silence felt heavy; I felt as if we had sailed off the edge of the map into a white void.
The rooms at Jiu Tong Shan Min Su chill hill cottage Fa Die Chu Fang 、 Zhi Qiu Zhuang Yuan carry a quiet, South French elegance. Light filters through the June haze, settling on the pale floorboards like a physical weight, smelling of old wood and fresh linen.
A June thunderstorm broke without warning, the air suddenly smelling of ozone. The greenery shifted into a vivid, neon emerald, forcing us into a frantic, laughing scramble for cover under the eaves of the veranda.
Looking down at the Taichung city lights from 800 meters, the glow looked like fallen stars. I realized home isn't a fixed point on a map, but the warmth of the people willing to get lost in the mountains with you.
A single wet footprint on the wooden porch.
- You gotta try the mango desserts at Butterfly Kitchen in June.
- Book a room with the city view for the night lights.