HualienPlay Recommendations
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Hou-Dian-Tian Café hides in an alley between Cheng-Gong and Fu-Jian streets in Hualien City. The plain white façade opens into a wood-and-warm-light interior with a literary, laid-back feel. The concise menu covers pour-over coffee, tea and a rotating dessert case (canelés are the signature), and a small seat count means reservations are wise for an unhurried afternoon. As a pet-friendly café that keeps two dachshunds and a resident cat, it welcomes visitors with their own pets and is a favourite among the city's animal lovers.
Chong-De Ying Farm in Xiu-Lin Township sits where the Central Range meets the Pacific, with grasslands, lakes and salt breeze all in one frame. Activities run from alpaca and pony feeding to horseback riding, canoeing, all-terrain-vehicle rides and even paragliding, so there is plenty for every age. Visitors buy their own hay and carrots to feed alpacas, cows and horses, and supervised photo sessions let children hold lambs or sample goat milk. The site also offers RV sites and glamping at Chong-Lin Mi-Jing for an overnight under the stars. Admission is about NT$100 (children under 15 free) and is deductible against in-park spending.
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Seven Star Lake (Qi-Xing-Tan) in Xin-Cheng Township is a crescent of polished pebbles that arcs for several kilometres along the Pacific. Locals and travellers come to cycle the coastal path, stack balancing stones, catch sunrise behind the Central Mountain Range or simply let the surf wash over their feet. Seasonal art installations, a do-it-yourself fishing experience hall and a flat bike trail keep the barrier low, and almost everything here is free, which is why families and slow travellers keep coming back.
The Hui-De Lookout Trail skirts the foot of the famous Qingshui Cliff along a 750-metre section of the old Su-Hua Highway. Wide, flat and shaded by broadleaf forest, the path is gentle enough for small children and grandparents alike, and takes about ten minutes to reach a two-tiered viewing deck. From there the Pacific stretches out beneath the nearly vertical marble cliffs, and trains on the North-Link line slip in and out of the tunnels far below. The stone marker here names Qingshui Cliff one of the Ten Famous Scenes of Taiwan.
Nan'an Waterfall sits inside Yushan National Park in Zhuo-Xi Township and drops about fifty metres down a mossy cliff into two translucent pools. A 1-to-2-minute flat walk from the car park makes it one of the most accessible waterfalls in eastern Taiwan, popular in summer with families, seniors and dog-owners escaping the heat. Restrooms are available, and the trailhead of the Walami Path sits nearby for anyone wanting a longer forest walk or wildlife spotting.
You-Yi-Cun Creative Park in downtown Hualien revives a cluster of military-village dormitories once run by the Taiwan Tobacco and Wine Monopoly Bureau. Old brick facades now house cafés, dessert bars, craft studios and small boutiques with a strong design eye, making it a favourite for couples, families and culture-loving travellers who like to browse at a slow pace. The site is about seven minutes by car from Hualien Station, has its own parking lot, stays open until 9 p.m., and sits a short walk from the Hualien Cultural and Creative Industries Park.
TFC Deep Ocean Water Park at 15 Hua-Dong in Hualien City is the largest park of its kind in Asia and the only one in Taiwan dedicated to deep-sea water. Admission is free and the grounds include a foot-soak trail using 10-degree deep-sea water, fish-feeding ponds, a restored Japanese Shinto shrine and garden, and a marine-mineral discovery hall. With plenty of parking and year-round opening, it is a cool, educational and family-friendly stop right inside the city.
Tai-Kai Heart Farm spreads across 45 hectares of meadow in Ji-An Township and is completely free to enter. Open grasslands are home to sika deer, peacocks, horses and the occasional flamingo, and visitors can rent electric carts or bicycles to loop the perimeter where the Hualien River meets the coast. Animal feeding has paused, but strolling and photography remain popular, and there is space dedicated to kite flying and pony rides. With room to run and pets welcome, it is one of Hualien's most beloved family photo spots.