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Hiking in Wantan Old Trail in Pinglin

As the summer heat picks up, hiking in the steep little mountains around Taipei is rapidly becoming a less than tempting proposition, so it's great to discover that rarest of hikes in Taiwan: the long, scenically stunning, yet mostly level walk. Actually, there's not one but a whole network of them to be discovered, hidden in an out-of-the-way corner of Taipei County, northeast of the town of Pinglin (坪林).

The scenically enchanting Beishih Stream Old Trail (北勢溪古道) was an earlier discovery, but returning to the area in search of further similarly beautiful routes, we recently discovered Wantan Old Trail (灣潭古道), another old path following the valley of a picturesque rushing stream, with lots of opportunities for swimming in deep, invitingly blue pools.

Although Pinglin is just a quick zip away from Taipei on the new Ilan-bound freeway, the main part of the trip to the trailhead begins only after leaving the duel carriageway behind, and taking local Route 42, a narrow, constantly winding road commanding fine views over steep, wooded hills, countless neat rows of tea bushes, and the blue-green strip of the Beishih River winding snake-like through the bottom of the valley far below.

Nearly forty minutes after leaving Pinglin the lane passes above Black Dragon Pool, a wide and deep hollow in the Beishih stream which was once a popular camping place, and another 10 minutes later the trailhead is reached, marked by a small temple and a stone Earth God shrine, standing beside the confluence of the Beishi and Wantan streams, which combine at this point to form yet another wide, deep and rather lovely pool known as Sanshui Tan (三水潭). Ignore a track which crosses the river and walk straight ahead along an unsurfaced track, soon climbing above the right bank of the well-named Wantan ('countless pools') Stream.

In about fifteen minutes the route passes a house and camping area called Jiang Jia Jhuang (張家莊, it's also possible to drive as far as this point). Pass through a large, tree-lined parking area near the house, which is home to a large colony of Formosan Blue Magpies. These magnificent birds were probably raising chicks as we passed through in early May: The parents repeatedly dive-bombed our poor golden retriever as he trotted across the car park, in an effort to scare him away from their nest.

On the far side of the car park, a small tin sign points out Wantan Old Trail, which is cut into a steep wooded hillside high above the stream. The scenery is disconcertingly commonplace at first, but after about twenty minutes things become more interesting as a winding arc of deep aquamarine appears through the woods below on the left. This, the first of the Wantan Stream's many fine pools, isn't easy to reach, but continue a few minutes further and the trail emerges into an open, flat meadow next to the finest pool on this stretch of the river: the Dream Lake (夢潭).

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 Hiking in Wantan Old Trail in Pinglin 
A series of beautiful deep pools of clear, blur-green water lie beside the trail as it winds upstream. (By Richard Saunders, Special to The China Post)

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