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Category: Dog Care Page 5 of 20

Dog jumps on visitors at the door?

When somebody rings our doorbell, this is what happens :)

Are your house guests happy when your dog rushes up or jumps on them at the door?

Mine? Not always.

If your dog jumps at you, take a step back so the dog lands on the floor missing you. This is a no contact, force free method that ensures safety for both the human and the dog.

But what if your house guests are afraid of dogs or just annoyed by what they perceive as a badly behaved dog? They don’t know how to manage the dog appropriately like you, so it makes a better experience for all if you train the dog how to behave in advance.


Posed picture, lol. Eyes on the treat! Claws on human’s tummy, ouch!! 

Want to know what we did to get from having the dog rushing up to family members and friends (who sometimes don’t appreciate it) to dog running to the crate to wait patiently while the human gets the door?

It all starts with Stay

  1. Find a base. 
    The dog’s bed will do fine, especially if the dog loves to chill out on her bed. A towel can also be used.
  2. Lure the dog to the base.
    Example, if you lay a towel on the floor, the dog usually will come to sniff it and lay on it. I was training my dog to like her new bed, so I used her bed for this exercise.
    teaching the dog to stay at a spot when the door bell rings
  3. Say “Stay” and show the dog the hand command for Stay.
  4. Immediately say “Yes”, praise the dog and reward the dog for staying on the base.
  5. The dog is very likely to stay on the bed so say “Stay” and show the dog the hand command for Stay again. Reward the dog again for staying.
  6. Repeat this many times in short sessions so that the dog starts to associate the following:
    • staying on the base will lead to a food reward,
    • staying on the base is called “Stay”
    • When I hear “Stay” or see the hand command for Stay, I should stay because I will get a treat.
    • it is fun when I listen and “Stay” because I get treats
    • I’m so happy, I can’t wait for the next time the human says “Stay”
    • Why is the human going away? Come back and say “Stay”!!
      **Keeping training sessions short prevents the dog from boredom due to the repetitive exercise and makes him look forward to the next session.  
  7. When dog is good at responding to your “Stay”, experiment by slowly putting some distance between you.
    • This is because in real life, “Stay” comes into practical use when we want the dog to remain while we go some distance away. e.g. taking a picture of the dog, leaving a dog outside a pets-not-allowed shop while the human hops in to buy something.
    • Now if the dog is not very good at responding to Stay, he/she may leave the base to follow you because the treats are with the human. And it looks to them that the treats are leaving with the human. So don’t get mad or impatient, because this is a logical response.  
    • This just means that you started distancing yourself too early for the dog. The dog has not clearly associated the concept of stay with being on the base regardless of where the human is yet.
    • Continue to reinforce Stay at a distance the dog is comfortable with and then slowly start to widen the distance again, a bit at a time, depending on how comfortable your dog is the distance you are putting in between him/her and you.
  8. Your dog will start to get real good at Stay after you have been doing this consistently for sometime. :D

    Teach your dog to Go to and Stay

  9. Start teaching your dog the Go to command
    • At first, I just pointed at the bed, said excitedly Go to bed and walked toward it. The dog followed and recognised that usually I want her on it for the Stay command. So it was easy to get her on it. I rewarded her for Going to and Staying on her bed.
    • Again train the Go to command in many short, repeated sessions. This helps the dog start to associate that “Go to” with the intended result of going to the base.
    • Combine it with “Stay” so it helps you to reinforce Stay, while training Go to.
    • You may want to use a different word then Go to, if you anticipate having to tell her to go to and stay at different locations. e.g. you could use Bed for going to bed; and Kennel for going to crate. Keep the commands short and different sounding, so the dog is able to differentiate easily.
    • Like training Stay, you can start to widen the distance you are from the base when you say Go to. If you have been keeping the training session short and fun, you should see the dog bounding ahead of you to get to the base and waiting for you to hurry up to reward him/her.

      Cue the Doorbell!

  10. Set the dog up for success, when the dog is fairly reliable with Go to and Stay, start practising it every time someone rings the doorbell. So every time someone rang the doorbell, I gave Donna the Go to command. When she reached the base, I treated her and told her Stay. And then answer the door.
    • At first it will take a long time for you to answer the door, because the dog may not want to stay when the thing at the door is more exciting. But I’m ok with that because most of the time, it’s sales people whom I don’t really want to entertain anyway :P
    • If you don’t have people ringing on your doorbell every so often, you can still practise everyday, just by having a family member ring the doorbell 2-3 times a day for you. Or you can practise every time somebody comes home, even when nobody rings the doorbell. The key is being consistent so it becomes a habit for your dog to run to her crate and stay when somebody is at the door.
    • Eventually, you may find, just as I did that after a while the doorbell sends the dog briskly to her crate. On auto. When I never even said anything. :D

Additional Notes

  1. Help your dog to generalise “Stay”
    • The reason why I suggest a base for training Stay, is because I found my dog learnt Stay really fast, after days of fruitless training Stay without a base. You can try with and without and see if it makes a difference for you. Every dog and every human is different.
    • But the dog needs to start associating “Stay” to staying in one place, regardless of whether the base is there or no. So once he/she is reliable at responding to Stay, you should definitely start saying “Stay” to him/her and show the dog the hand command for Stay while she is on various other surfaces e.g. floor, stool, grass, etc. Reward the dog when he/she sits and stays.
    • More on training Stay here.
    • More on training Go to here.

Staying for a posed picture taken from a distance.
Staying for a posed picture taken from a distance.

But didn’t your dog come out of the crate to rush up to the door anyway?

She did because she knows my brother well, so we don’t give her any instructions to do otherwise.

And she still isn’t very good at staying in the crate for long periods because she is naturally curious about strangers in the house, which is normal for any dog. So when we know in advance that somebody e.g. repairman is visiting and prefers not to be interfered by a dog, I know to have her crated when she goes to her crate, before I open the door.

To learn more about Crate training, go here.

Comfy in her crate
Comfy in her crate

Late night life of pet dog and street cats

1 Day 1 World Project: Donna at 11:00pm – 12:00am

a photo of pet dog surrounded by street cats
Donna’s community mealtime with street cats

On those days that I boil meat for Donna for her treats, we sometimes take some down to treat our pet dog and the street cats together.

It’s our diabolical plan to brainwash the local kitties into consorting with the pet dog. :P

Please pardon the blurry photos since it’s all taken in low light with my not very amazing camera ;P (Yes! Blame the camera not the human, lol :P)

Anyways, this kitty is rather affectionate and so prime candidate for the easily-swayed-to-like-the-pet-dog club.

pet dog and street cat getting treats together

And the bottom right box in the photo above shows the distance pet dog and street cat can stand to be with each other before one or the other moves away.

The cat didn’t want to take the food from my hand at first, so I had to drop it on the floor and slowly lure the cat closer and closer to the dog.

When I felt that I have glutted them enough with the food, I had Donna practise her stand-stay and “come”. Kitty is not as good as Donna in staying so she is relegated to the role of the cheerleader, which I’m afraid she has zero disinterest in. :P So there she goes, walking away…

pet dog and street cat doing stay

Donna meanwhile, stays… very well… it’s a low distraction environment for her after all.

Moving further away from Donna, so that she is now a small black speck standing and staying.

pet dog is a small speck in the distance

And then the “Come” command.

pet dog running towards camera
pet dog reaches camera

Excellent way of making her run without a treadmill. Of course the human has to walk back and forth too to make her run laps, so all around a good way to get both of us moving in a safe environment (close to midnight after all) and also enjoy the relatively large space right below our flat.

How we trained the dog to not get distracted by the cats

  1. Donna was on the lead when we started our clandestine night time activities :P
  2. Start from a far enough distance where you know the dog will not react. This means there is no need to physically restrain the dog. Treat the dog for not reacting in any way to the cat.
  3. If dog is able to stay focused on you and ignore the cat, slowly close the distance between dog and cat.
  4. If dog is too close and starts paying attention to the cat, you may want to take a step back and slow down on cutting the distance and continue with treating the dog for putting his focus back on you.
  5. I sometimes also tell Donna to “stay” when she appears to want to approach the cat, instead of widening the distance again. Treat the dog if she stays and refocuses on you.
  6. This can take days, but the cat that habitually strays in the area that is its territory will also slowly get used to seeing pet dog and you as well.
  7. By the time you are able to get within about a metre from the cat, start giving both pet dog and stray cat treats. It is normal for the cat not to want to take food from you hands. You can throw it on the floor closest to her feet instead and slowly lure her towards the dog (if dog is comfortable enough with the cat approaching without reacting to her).
  8. I hope that slowly the cat will start associating the appearance of Donna with treats and develop more friendly feelings :D hehehe…
  9. Doesn’t work on all cats of course. The black cat in the photos sitting in the background is curious but wary and refused to approach. It consistently kept about 2metres distance away from us.

Note: Cats are carnivores so I’m feeding plain boiled meat in this case. Please clear the floor of any uneaten bits of food so that it doesn’t encourage the congregation and breeding of cockroaches and rats in the neighbourhood.

For 24 weeks, weliveinaflat will post photos taken for a specific hour in that week.
We will cover 24 hours in 24 weeks. (I’ve no idea how we will do the sleeping hours, lol!)
More about the 1 Day 1 World Project here.

Still working on Donna dog’s mounting behaviour

Eight months ago, I wrote about why my dog humps people/ other dogs. My conclusion was that she was not socialised to behave appropriately in a situation involving a lot of dogs. At the shelter, where there are a lot of dogs, it was normal for her to be over-excited and spinning in circles non-stop.

Subsequently, we’ve only been exposing her to places with less dogs, and hoping to slowly train calm behaviours from there. And then slowly expose her to situations with more dogs. But that’s easier said then done, because it’s really hard to control the number of dogs she is exposed to in a systematic or planned way. And sometimes, the human is not very consistent as well :P

So for a while we sent her to daycare, where she could socialise with other dogs in a supervised environment. The daycare said that Donna did not show any mounting behaviour for that period.

I’m wondering if the dog has learnt that mounting is not preferred but only in specific places like the daycare. That is, she has not generalised that mounting is not preferred in all circumstances.

I’m thinking this because this month, she has been showing mounting behaviour at the new places we went to. Although, I’m thinking there are different reasons for the behaviour as well.

Mounting Behaviour at T.A.Z. Cafe, Saturday

Take for instance at the newly opened T.A.Z. cafe. There were two active dogs there playing with each other. And Donna really wanted to play with them.

DOnna playbows the other dog

But they were totally engrossed with each other, and all Donna could do was follow them around and watch them play.

playing dogs

I suppose eventually, after getting tired of watching from the sidelines, she tried to mount the bigger dog in the pair to get his/her attention.

donna mounts the other dog

Only it got my attention instead, so I started to recall her… and recall her… and recall her every time she tried to mount the dog.

donna looks on as small dogs play

In this picture, Donna is by my side and can only watch the dogs play. I suppose it became more of a negative punishment (called away from other dogs = boring) than a positive reinforcement (called away from other dogs = get food reward for responding to the recall) because she didn’t really like the food for dog we bought for her at T.A.Z cafe … oops. But she got the idea and stopped trying to mount the dog. It helped that other dogs came in later who were happy to play with her.

I have to say, now that I’m looking at the pictures again, I do wonder if the dachshund was totally happy playing with the lighter dog or if the dachshund was trying to get away. I wasn’t paying as much attention to them as I was to Donna, unfortunately. But I do know that the owner examined the dachshund later on and was unhappy to find bite/scratch marks on the dog.

So please do supervise your dog when he/she is playing with strange dogs. :)

 

Mounting Behaviour at Marina Barrage, Sunday

The next day at Marina Barrage, Donna had a great time playing with her new Japanese spitz friend.

donna dog plays with japanese spitz dog

Her friend tried to mount her, but she didn’t try to mount back.

But later on when a male border collie arrived, she got very interested and mounted him within minutes of checking him out. That got the border collie worried.

donna dog checks out border collie

I’m not sure how Donna decides to mount one dog but not the other. I can only guess that perhaps as the morning went by, she got progressively more excited with all the activity going around. I can’t say for sure though, because I was distracted with the activity around as well.

Donna has some experience with border collies at the daycare, and from what I hear, they don’t really play with her. The last border collie we met was on a walk at night. The border collie was barking madly and dragged his owner all the way to meet Donna. That took us by surprise and gave me a bad fright as Donna was screaming… but it turns out from excitement rather than from fear.

I think more exposure and observation is necessary before I can draw any informed guesses as to her motivations.

But needless to say, Donna spent the rest of the birthday party doing time out away from the other dogs.

The border collie’s owner remarked that if the other dog is ok with it, the humping shouldn’t be an issue. And I agree with that.

Gary Landsberg, DVM, a veterinary behaviorist in Ontario, Canada, says mounting is common play behavior in puppies, and is even normal in the play of older dogs if it’s not taken to extremes. “You’ll often see one dog mount another, then a few minutes later they’ll switch off and the other dog will mount the first dog,” Landsberg says. “It’s a common play gesture.”

It’s done by males and females, even by dogs that have been neutered or spayed, he says. “It’s a play behavior that dogs do because no one has told them it’s not acceptable,” Landsberg said. “It can become enjoyable or a normal part of the dog’s day, so it keeps doing it. It’s the same as jumping up or barking at the door.” – pets.webmd.com

But in Donna’s case, time out is necessary for the following reasons: –

  • She was over excited and restless and didn’t try to stop mounting the border collie despite being recalled. Unlike at T.A.Z. cafe, this was an environment with more dogs. I do not want her to stay in that over-excited state.
  • The border collie was worried and I shouldn’t let Donna give him more stress.
  • In situations involving new dogs and owners we are meeting, even if the dog is OK, I do not know if the owner is OK with it.
  • While humping may not be an issue if the dogs are good friends, I’m not sure if it sends Donna a confused message. Why is she allowed to mount some dogs but not others?

So as a rule, Donna is recalled when she starts to show mounting behaviour. And if she shows it repeatedly despite being recalled. She gets to do time right next to the human. :P

It’s a bummer for the human to sit out the action at the party, but I believe in being consistent with the dog. (Note: Mr P informs me that I didn’t really sit out for that long. Haha. )

Anyway, I’m thinking I should probably find something to attach her lead to some body part so I can walk around with her with me unencumbered for next time. That is, once she has calmed down sufficiently using the matwork, rather than just spend the time sitting on the mat the whole time.

I am bendy

dog sniffing butt
dog licking butt

I am comfy in my crate and I smell good. Get over it, human.

Because dogs do that.

Donna on the rock

1 Day 1 World Project: Donna at 7:00pm – 8:00pm (last week)


I’m a good girl!

Got the good girl to run up the slope and pose on the ornamental rock during our evening walk.

That’s great, Donna! Now can you sit?


I dun wanna.

Perhaps because it’s the first time we tried running up a slope to pose at a height higher than street level. Oh well… :P

For 24 weeks, weliveinaflat will post photos taken for a specific hour in that week.
We will cover 24 hours in 24 weeks. (I’ve no idea how we will do the sleeping hours, lol!)
More about the 1 Day 1 World Project here.

This dog models at Shilin Night Market


Dogspotted at a dog accessories stall in Shilin Night Market, Taipei

When we first saw this dog in the Shilin night market, she was busy pawing at the doggles over her eyes. Obviously not too happy with them there. But she was certainly well-decked out to market the stall’s merchandise.

Collars, hats, doggles, chew bones, rings and even the spiny-backpack on her back, this stall sells a range of colourful items to accessorize the small dog.

This dog’s life is not just about modeling the goods, she knows a trick or not too! Like sit pretty! But her version “求求” means to beg, and she does really well with her manicured paws together in praying motion up and down .


please… please…

Pauses…Where’s my treat?

Whoops, guess the shop owner was kind of busy talking to us.


I want my treat… treat!!!!!!


Oh, I see it. Treat!!!!!!

Here’s a video tutorial on teaching your dog to sit pretty.

And this training video explains the trick and also how to make it safe for the dog – http://youtu.be/IQUerO0woqw

We were actually at Shilin for food. Since it is one of the most well-known night markets in Taipei, selling all sorts of street food, clothes and other merchandise, we just had to bring mom along to see it. That said, she didn’t really enjoy the food there. Hah!

How to get there

By MRT: Take the Red Line to Jiantan Station (劍潭), not Shilin Station. After leaving Exit 1, diagonally cross the street to the left to enter the night market.
map | reviews

Other food and dog-spotting blogs about Shilin market
–  A trip to taipei’s Shilin night market, neatorama.com
– Shilin night market, foodjetaime.com
Guidetotaipei.com

This cat has got OCD!

1 Day 1 World Project: Donna at 6:00pm – 7:00pm (last week)

dog and cat sitting on park stools

So we were taking an evening walk in the park, when I saw this cat sitting on the stool.

And I thought- wouldn’t it be cool if I have Donna sit on the other stool for a photo that says: “Hey, Donna is a cat!”

So I led Donna to the empty stool and have her hop on it and do a sit-stay.

By pure luck, that cat just stayed there. She didn’t run away.

Rather, she appeared to be analysing if this was a threatening situation.

As she stared at me, I quickly snapped just two shots. And what luck, I got both of them looking straight ahead in one!

And then I noticed this little paper tray sitting on the table. So I moved to remove it, and that’s when the cat snapped out of its assessing mode.

She hopped off and on to the other stool next to Donna and started to do the strangest thing.

dog and cat sitting on park stools - side view
Why are you leaving me here alone with her, human?

She started to rub against the park table non-stop!

cat rubbing face against table
Rub… rub… rub…

I was surprised by how the cat kept rubbing the table the whole time we were there. In fact, after a while I became concerned because I remember this article floating around about head pressing being a sign of a neurological disorder!

cat rubbing face against table
Pause… Looked at me…wary cat
Looked at Donnacat rubbing head against table
Rub… rub… rub…

It was only when I came home and Googled that I found possible reasons to her behaviour. At first I thought that this cat might have been trying to be assert her territorial rights to the table to us!

 Cats rub their heads (bunting) against prominent objects to leave scent markings as a part of scent communication. – cats.about.com

dog and cat on park stools
This is my table… this is my table… this is my table…. this is my table… this is my table…

But then I found that perhaps the rubbing is the cat’s way of coping with the stress of having the dog and human in its space.

Cats are equipped with glands, located on the forehead, lips, front paws, and on their flanks and rears, that secrete pheromones. Pheromones secreted by glands on the face seem to have a calming effect on cats. When cats rub their faces on various objects they leave their scent, which is reassuring to the cat and non-offensive to humans. – petplace.com

I obviously am clueless about cat behaviour, what do you think?

For 24 weeks, weliveinaflat will post photos taken for a specific hour in that week.
We will cover 24 hours in 24 weeks. (I’ve no idea how we will do the sleeping hours, lol!)
More about the 1 Day 1 World Project here.

Dog trick: Wave left, wave right!

Quite some time back, after I taught Donna the high-five, I started to teach Donna to wave left and wave right.

But I stopped working on that after a while, so she lost the memory for that I think. At least, in this video, it’s either she can’t differentiate left or right anymore so she tries both. Or she’s just too excited to focus. To give her credit, at least one of those paws would be the right one, right? Haha.

How she was Waving Left and Right weekend before last


I can’t tell left or right, human! So I’ll just wave both… sure to get it right, right?????

In any case, she wasn’t in the right frame of mind anyway being too excited and probably close to frustration, so we stopped after this video clip that night. No point pushing it and setting her up for a sense of failure, right?

That video above was from the weekend before the last. Subsequently, we have worked on waving on and off.

This is the result after two weeks. Both videos taken today, during short 1-2 minute sessions that’s maybe an hour or two apart.

Note: In both these videos below, Donna is taking commands at about a metre away from me, so that I can fit as much of her on the camera as possible. One man show here and no tripod! :P Sorry! Anyway, she does much better when she sits right by me. She is responding to my hand gestures more than my words actually. One metre away is a new distance , which is interesting because the hand commands seem to be less clear to her. So her response to the left and right are even more muddled than if she were nearer. 

How Donna did her Wave Left, Wave Right trick today – session 1


Subtitles don’t synch very well, apologies! But I find it cute when she nom nom nom and continue to stare at you with those eyes that scream – treat, treat! 

Since it’s during the daytime, she is sleepier. She typically can sleep the afternoon away. :P But she starts the session with a smile so I think she is anticipating it.

I was throwing the treats for her to catch to make it more exciting for her because I know waving is not her favourite thing compared to other actions that she can do better.

It’s not the first time I notice her shuffling her two paws a lot before lifting one. I’m not sure if:
(1) it’s a habit she has just developed
(2) the floor is slippery so she needs to right herself for balance before lifting a paw
(3) she is hedging while trying to decide which paw to raise :P

Hopefully as she gets better at waving, this shuffling will decrease.

How Donna did her Wave Left, Wave Right trick today – session 2


Not so patient or just bored with wave left, wave right?

Waving is not her favourite thing yet because she needs to decide which paw is left and which is right, so I think that really works her brains! :P She is visibly less patient for this session compared to the previous, I think.

Two things we’ll continue to work on for wave left, wave right:

1) Having the confidence to raise the correct paw to the correct cue
– Right now we can still see her getting it right sometimes, but at other times still unsure. So she tests by lifting one paw then the other, so she may observe which turns out to be the correct one in the end, for which she gets a click and treat.
– In her case, it is important for me not to say “no” or make other sounds or actions that she may perceive as negative. This is because Donna is a really cautious, safety-first type of dog. By this I mean, she’ll rather not try at all than get it wrong. So these sort of reactions from me will impede her progress.

2) Rising the paw higher to imitate a wave
– A few months back when I first tried to teach her to wave, I tried to extend the association of wave to high five so that she may wave high. But somehow, she still ended up with a slight lift of her paw and wriggling it (pictured below 1st picture left).
– So in these videos, she is already waving higher than she used to. But I hope she can lift her paws higher still so it will look like a real wave eventually. :D


A few months back, when I was teaching Donna to wave in response to the cue “Who is a good dog?”

Does your dog know Wave left, wave right? Any tips to share? :)

These dogs own the streets at Pingxi

sleeping dog at pingxiI will sleep wherever I want.

Perhaps because Pingxi appears to be an easy-going small town/village kind of place, the dogs seem to have a free run of the area. At least some of them appear to be pets with collars on their necks.

This dog was sleeping undisturbed by the many humans who walked by to take pictures on the rope bridge.

sleeping dog at pingxi
Maybe he’s the bridge toll keeper asleep on duty?
The bridge leads to the residential, sleepier side of Pingxi. 

You’d think with his kind of lackadaisical attitude to life, Pingxi must be real quiet and idyllic like so.

pingxi
Pingxi is special for its unique architecture and design, as its market area, Pingxi Old Street (平溪老街), is built into a hill with a train track going overhead right through the middle with shops around selling local food and gifts. – Guide to Taipei

Years ago, we came to Pingxi and it was quiet. Nothing much was opened and there weren’t any tourists. Could be because it was winter. We mailed a few wooden postcards home, took a few pictures and left.

Today, a different sight greeted us. The sky lantern trade was alive and booming, despite it being the wrong season.

Every year around Chinese New Year (usually in Jan/Feb) the Sky Lantern Festival (平溪天燈節) draws massive crowds of people together in Pingxi to release their Chinese Lanterns together in a sign of celebration of the new year.

writing tiandeng at pingxiFrames with the paper lanterns pegged to them lined the tracks as tourists write their wishes with black ink. It’s a fun activity for the family or friends traveling in a group. The sky lantern shops lined both sides of the track. 

photo taking with tiandengDifferent colours of the lantern denote different types of wishes. These ladies want to be married soon.

tiandeng ready to lift offThe whole process is very systematic. The shop workers will take your picture with each side of the lantern before they instruct you to raise the lantern for a final picture before releasing.

tiandeng lifts off at pingxiAnd lift off!

sky lanterns

With our sky lantern floating merrily off by it’s lonesome, we decided to walk about this old town.

balcony garden at pingxi balcony garden at pingxi hanging flowershanging flowersThis is what the hanging flower looks like from below. :P

 Hah! Dog spotted!

black female dog at pingxiWhat you looking at? Quit following me. 

black female dog at pingxiThese human pupparazzos…. arf!

two dogs identifiable by their tails at pingxiTwo more I can discern by their tails. Hmmm….

handsome brown dog at pingxiAnd this handsome chap. Guess what he is on the look out for?

begging dogs at pingxiHey stranger, you need to pay if you want to eat in our territory!

begging dogs at pingxiI tried but I don’t think the tall beast is gonna listen to you, bro. 

begging dogs at pingxiMy persistence will win in the end!!

Brings to mind the behaviour of those unruly deer at Nara Park. The tall beast walked here and there and couldn’t shake them off. He only escaped when he finished his food and dump the leftovers and packaging into the trash.

All these happening, while our lantern hangs in the sky.

dusk at pingxi

How to Get There?:

By Train: From Taipei Main Station, take a northbound train (except Keelung-bound trains) towards Ruifang Station. Transfer to the Pingxi Line (平溪線) and purchase a One Day Ticket for the Pingxi Line, NT$52. The line is pretty scenic and you can get off any the stops to explore. Details. Train map.

More about
Pingxi Sky Lantern Festival in 2014
– What not to wear to release a sky lantern
Environmentalists say number of lanterns should be limited at Pingxi
– Other attractions along the Pingxi line


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