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the-scent-of

We bet on who would forget the most essential item, and in a stroke of collective brilliance, we all arrived at Soulmap Hostel without a single toothbrush. The walk from the station was a slow sequence of realizing we were utterly unprepared, the humid March air clinging to our skin like a damp sheet. As we climbed to the second floor, the lobby greeted us with a stillness that felt like a deliberate pause in a loud song, smelling faintly of old wood and anticipation.



The taste of A-San Meatballs is a memory I still carry—the outer skin fried to a precise, shattering crispness that gives way to a tender, savory center. We stood in the Sanmin Market breeze, the scent of hot oil and garlic swirling around us, sauce dripping onto our shirts. We ignored the queue, the immediate pleasure of the searing heat and salt the only thing that mattered in that golden, chaotic moment.


"Who in their right mind puts the power socket in the furthest corner of the room?" someone groaned, their voice echoing in the bright ensuite bathroom. We spent twenty minutes negotiating a charging schedule for four phones, our voices tight with mock desperation. The 110V struggle became our primary conversation, a petty war of attrition fought with tangled white cables and a shared sense of absurdity.


We spent a good hour hunting for the trash can in our room, only to realize the space was designed for a level of minimalism we weren't equipped for. "Maybe it's a conceptual piece," I joked, staring at the empty corners. It became our private joke—the quest for the invisible bin—a mission that felt far more urgent than any of the actual sightseeing we had planned for Changhua.


At six in the morning, the light in the room is a pale, thin wash of watercolor, filtering through the curtains in a way that makes the world feel temporary. I lay there, listening to the distant hum of the city waking up, thinking that the most honest part of a trip is this specific silence. It's the fragile gap before the banter resumes and we remember we are supposed to be explorers.


The guest kitchen at Soulmap Hostel has a certain gravity, the shrill whistle of a kettle competing with our arguments over who gets the last drop of coffee. There is a rhythm to the space—the clink of ceramic mugs, the smell of toasted bread—a shared domesticity that happens when you are forced into a small square of tiles with people who know exactly how to annoy you.


We ended up at Bagua Mountain, staring at giant Rody horses during the lantern festival, an image so surreal it felt like a glitch in the landscape. The cool night air nipped at our noses as we stood under the warm, amber glow of the lanterns. We didn't talk about the art or the meaning; we just stood there, four adults feeling entirely ridiculous and strangely connected.


I suppose home is not a place but a portable arrangement of people who are willing to be lost with you. The stillness we found in those bright rooms wasn't an escape, but a refueling station. It was a place to sit still, to let the dust of the road settle, before diving back into the neon noise of the world.

One small, blue slipper left by the door.

  • Grab a plate of A-San Meatballs while they're still burning.
  • Hike Bagua Mountain at dusk to see the lights flicker on.

Nearby Food & Attractions

ABees

ABees (formerly Jia-Feng-Mi) is a creative cafe at 215 Zhang-Shui Road in Changhua City, where the menu tilts toward coffee, savoury galettes and dessert crepes. Signature plates include pollen-topped coffee, spiced tomato-zucchini crepes, kale-and-yam crepes, and cinnamon-apple-honey crepes, with most orders landing around NT$400 per person. Although opening hours are not posted, the high ratings and ever-rotating specials make it a popular queue spot for locals seeking something beyond the usual street food.

55 Eat

Chris Cafe

Chris Cafe is a tucked-away Hong Kong-style coffee shop in Taichung's Qi-Qi district, serving homestyle Cantonese comfort food. The star dishes are a deeply savoury 'sorrow-defying rice' — a char-siu egg rice made famous by Stephen Chow — and the indulgent peanut butter French toast that locals love. The dining room is calm and unhurried, ideal for a quiet break while shopping at Da-Yuan-Bai or exploring the Qi-Qi business district. Reservations are recommended so you don't miss the most popular plates.

75 Eat

Buer Fang

Bu-Er-Fang is the only bakery in Changhua County dedicated almost entirely to the classic yolk pastry, with nearly fifty years of history behind it. Each pastry is baked with buttery shortening into a deep golden flake, wrapped around a glistening salted duck egg yolk and a smooth red bean filling.每逢中秋或年节, queues of devotees snake around the block, making it the must-buy souvenir of Changhua. Beyond yolk pastries, the counter also offers mung-bean pastries and wife cakes — all old-school baked goods. Online orders are not accepted; the only way to taste them is to show up and queue in person.

59 Eat

Wuxianji Hotpot Lukang Flagship

Wu-Xian-Ji Hot Pot's Lukang flagship is a 496 Zhong-Zheng Road hotpot destination in Changhua County's Lukang Township, beloved for its stylish interior and comfortable lighting. Diners pick from a wide range of soup bases and order a la carte, with the main draws being the oversized meat platters and unlimited rice and drinks. Hours run from 11 AM to 2 AM, so even late-night cravings can be answered with a steaming pot. At NT$250-300 per person, the value is excellent and it regularly lands on lists of Changhua's must-eat hot pots.

121 Eat