Waves crash against Taiwan’s coasts from all sides.
The Pacific Ocean and the Taiwan Strait sandwich this island nation, carving out countless coves, caves, bays, and other geological formations that create wondrous points of solace and exploration.
The capes ofBitoujiao(鼻頭角)andSandiaojiao(三貂角) are Taiwan’s easternmost points on land in Taiwan whose onyx-colored rock has pushed out from the sea after millennia of tectonic convergence.
Being so unfamiliar with the landscapes lying between the city of Keelung andYilan County, I decided to take a trip toBitoujiaowith a group of hiking enthusiasts lead by the Singaporean dynamo QXandKelly ofQxadventuresRockGuides (越岩戶外運動訓練有限公司).
With years of experience rappelling and trekking this coastline, I knew they’d show the group the ins and outs ofthe area — small if you look at a map – but these paths curve, rise, and fall along with the terrain: prickly, green vegetation on one side, smooth black rock, and ocean on the other.
Heading out of theBitoujiao’sfishing town, it only takes a five–minute uphill walk to reach the scenic trail’s starting point.
It might seem a bit touristy at first, but just beyond the wooden viewing deck lies a much more secluded, thin stretch of dirt path which leads straight to the pearl-white lighthouse at the cape’s northernmost tip — BitoujiaoMountain (鼻頭角山).
The trail wraps around both sides of the cape, with the eastern coast looking out towards the neighboring town ofLongdong(龍洞) — home of the Dragon Caves (龍洞岩場) —the restless Pacific Ocean.
If you are nimble and brave enough, you can take an older, long since abandoned path down to the flat rock formations below, nearly reaching sea leveland providing a unique glance at the lighthouse from below; subterranean water cascading (or trickling) out from the mountain’s bedrock.
The trail’s climax is reachedafter climbingBitoujiaoMountain’s peak, an area where the rock looks strikingly similar and equally smooth to Taiwan’s castella cake (古早味蛋糕), and the 360-degree view of the entire coastline that wraps around the cape is spectacular.
Images of Scotland come to mind when admiring the northern side which leads toBitoujiao’sfishing village, which is precisely the next and final destination of the trek, winding back down through the much thicker brushwith the occasional viewing pavilion.
The trail ends at the backalleys of the village brushing up againstmountain, ceremonial musicand incense burningfrom the Taoist templecan already beperceivedas wewander through the trail’s finalcurve and steps.The orange skyandbrightlightsfrom thelocals’squid-fishingboatsindicate a setting sun, andI’m just in time for a bus toRuifang’sbustlingnight market just20 minutes away…