


Manyueyuan National Forest – Private Day Tour from Taipei
Summary
Manyueyuan National Forest is located about ninety minutes south of Taipei and follows the Dabao River through dense subtropical forest. The park is linear, with accessible trails leading to two main waterfalls—Manyueyuan and Virgin Waterfalls—each with viewing platforms. Wildlife is commonly observed, including Formosan Rock Macaques, Crested Serpent Eagles, and several butterfly species. Trails range from flat, stroller-friendly paths to steeper sections near the waterfalls. The visitor centre offers bilingual exhibits on local ecology and conservation. Private, door-to-door transport from Taipei is included, with flexible departure times.
Highlights
- Watching Crested Serpent Eagles perched above the Dabao River in the morning.
- Walking the Self-Guided Trail through quiet interior forest to reach the waterfalls.
- Resting at the viewing platforms at Manyueyuan and Virgin Waterfalls, suitable for a picnic or quiet break.
- Spotting Formosan Rock Macaques and Red-bellied Squirrels along upper trails, especially early in the day.
- Exploring interactive, bilingual exhibits at the Manyueyuan National Forest Visitor Centre.
- Door-to-door private transport from Taipei, with timing adjusted to guest preference.
What is included in this tour?
Items that are included in the cost of tour price.- Bilingual (Chinese/English) & experienced mountain guide services
- Private round-trip transportation from Taipei with drop-off/pick-up at either end of the trail (Alternate pick up locations can be arranged. Additional costs may apply.)
- Passenger Vehicle & TWD$3,000,000 Travel Agency Liability Insurance
- Private LINE group with guide/Taiwan Outdoors’ staff
What is not included in this tour?
Items that are not included in the cost of tour price.- Flights
- Airport transfers (Available upon request. Additional costs may apply)
- Drinks and meals
- Additional stops at attractions or souvenir shops
- Additional Personal Travel Insurance
Day by day Itinerary
Day 1
Taipei to Manyueyuan National ForestDepart Taipei Main Station at 07:30 by private vehicle. Arrive at Manyueyuan National Forest around 09:00. Enter from the lower parking area and walk 400m to the ticketing centre. Begin on the main river trail (about 2.5km), which follows the Dabao River and offers wildlife viewing opportunities. Visit the bilingual visitor centre for ecological exhibits. Continue to the small restaurant 500m beyond the visitor centre for a snack or rest. For those interested, take the Virgin Waterfall Trail or Manyueyuan Waterfall Trail (each about 1km, with elevation gain) to reach the viewing platforms. The Self-Guided Trail offers a quieter route through the forest to the waterfalls. Depart the park at 15:30 and return to Taipei Main Station by 17:00. Departure and return times can be adjusted as needed.

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This twelve-day, fully supported cycling journey traces the full perimeter of Taiwan, covering 810 kilometres through terrain that shifts from Pacific sea cliffs and marble gorges to rice valley flatlands and the warm southern shore. A dedicated support vehicle accompanies the group throughout, managing luggage and providing mechanical assistance so that each day's riding remains unencumbered. Transfers are used sparingly and only where the road network or safety warrants it. The route is structured to distribute the most demanding elevation across the days when riders are best acclimatized, with a scheduled rest day at the midpoint. This is a journey that rewards those who prefer to understand a place at road level, over time, rather than through a series of arranged viewpoints.

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After dark, the forests above Taipei reveal a different order of life. This private guided walk takes small groups into the hills on a well-maintained trail, where a bilingual herpetologist interprets what most visitors never pause to notice: the reptiles, amphibians, and invertebrates that define Taiwan's nocturnal ecology. Private transportation departs from Taipei Main Station and returns guests by ten in the evening. No prior hiking experience is required. The guide manages every logistical detail; guests need only arrive prepared to move slowly and observe carefully.

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The Deep East: Culture, Culinary & Ancient Trails
A ten-day private itinerary focused on Taiwan's eastern interior — historic coastal trails, indigenous culinary instruction, and community visits that the standard Taiwan itinerary does not reach. The route covers remote areas of the east coast, ancient trails with waterfalls, and hands-on workshops with local communities. All logistics and accommodation arranged.

Taiwan: Ancient Trails, Wild Rivers & Indigenous Highlands
Eleven days across Taiwan's eastern interior and southern coast, moving through landscapes that shift from subtropical jungle to open rice plains to raw Pacific shoreline. The route connects three of the island's most significant historic trails, each with its own character and cultural weight. Indigenous guides and community visits provide context that no guidebook supplies. Remote hot springs, river gorges, and mountain passes sit alongside quiet evenings in towns where the food is serious and the pace is unhurried. This is Taiwan beyond the itineraries that stop at Taipei.

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This twelve-day, fully supported cycling journey traces the full perimeter of Taiwan, covering 810 kilometres through terrain that shifts from Pacific sea cliffs and marble gorges to rice valley flatlands and the warm southern shore. A dedicated support vehicle accompanies the group throughout, managing luggage and providing mechanical assistance so that each day's riding remains unencumbered. Transfers are used sparingly and only where the road network or safety warrants it. The route is structured to distribute the most demanding elevation across the days when riders are best acclimatized, with a scheduled rest day at the midpoint. This is a journey that rewards those who prefer to understand a place at road level, over time, rather than through a series of arranged viewpoints.

Taipingshan National Forest – Private Day Tour
Taipingshan National Forest sits at elevation in the mountains of Yilan County, roughly two hours from central Taipei. The road in is winding and the logistics of an independent visit are considerable. This private day tour removes those obstacles entirely, collecting guests directly from Taipei Main Station and returning them the same evening. At the forest, six distinct trails cross terrain shaped by high rainfall, Pacific-facing ridgelines, and a logging history that ended decades ago but left its mark on the landscape. Ancient cypress and hemlock stands, decomposing fallen timber, and a canopy dense enough to filter most daylight give the park a character that changes with the weather. On clear days the mountain views are unobstructed. On overcast days the forest fills with low cloud, producing conditions more closely associated with the temperate rainforests of the Pacific Northwest than with a subtropical island. The Bong Bong Train, a narrow-gauge heritage railway originally built to move timber, now carries visitors to sections of the park that are not accessible on foot from the main area. Its schedule is fixed, so purchasing tickets in the morning allows the rest of the day to be arranged around it. All three primary trails in the main park area require no permit and are graded for a range of physical abilities.

Taipei Night Safari – Night Tour (Guided)
After dark, the forests above Taipei reveal a different order of life. This private guided walk takes small groups into the hills on a well-maintained trail, where a bilingual herpetologist interprets what most visitors never pause to notice: the reptiles, amphibians, and invertebrates that define Taiwan's nocturnal ecology. Private transportation departs from Taipei Main Station and returns guests by ten in the evening. No prior hiking experience is required. The guide manages every logistical detail; guests need only arrive prepared to move slowly and observe carefully.

Wheels Around Taipei | 3 days guided
A 3-stage, 3-day cycling tour covering the most notable cycling routes around Taipei. Riders stay in a central hotel, eliminating the need for daily check-outs, and enjoy guided rides each day. The itinerary includes urban riverside paths, a national park circuit, and a mountain loop through tea country. Evenings are free for exploring Taipei's restaurants, night markets, and cultural sites. The tour is designed for experienced cyclists seeking structured rides with city access.

Taipei City Stopovers 3 Days
This three-day, two-night Taipei stopover uses the city as a base for guided outdoor excursions in northern Taiwan. Guests select accommodation from a range of city hotels and choose from a set of full-day hiking and cultural outings, each led by a bilingual guide. The itinerary is structured for efficient use of limited time, with private transport and logistics managed throughout.

Cross-Mountain Spine Cycling Tour
This eight-day guided cycling tour covers 555km and 8,400m of elevation, traversing Taiwan’s central mountain spine from Taipei to Kenting. The route includes sustained climbs, long descents, and quiet rural roads. Riders experience wild hot springs, the Taiwan KOM Challenge route, Sun Moon Lake, and the tea fields of Alishan. The journey concludes at Kenting’s southern beaches, with regional cuisine and cultural sites along the way.

Top Taiwan: Lakes, Trains & Temples – 9 Day Hiking Journey
A 9-day guided hiking tour through Taiwan, combining historic trails, lakeside cycling, and city walks. The itinerary includes Taipei, Sun Moon Lake, Tainan, and Kaohsiung, with a focus on concrete hiking experiences and local cultural encounters.

Coast & Valley Cycling Tour
This nine-day guided cycling tour covers Taiwan’s east coast from Taipei to Kenting. Riders traverse mountain roads, river valleys, and coastal stretches, with daily support and accommodation arranged for convenience. The itinerary includes historic towns, challenging climbs, and opportunities to experience local markets and hot springs. The route is designed for cyclists seeking sustained, varied terrain and a clear progression from the city to the southern tip of the island.

The Deep East: Culture, Culinary & Ancient Trails
A ten-day private itinerary focused on Taiwan's eastern interior — historic coastal trails, indigenous culinary instruction, and community visits that the standard Taiwan itinerary does not reach. The route covers remote areas of the east coast, ancient trails with waterfalls, and hands-on workshops with local communities. All logistics and accommodation arranged.

Taiwan: Ancient Trails, Wild Rivers & Indigenous Highlands
Eleven days across Taiwan's eastern interior and southern coast, moving through landscapes that shift from subtropical jungle to open rice plains to raw Pacific shoreline. The route connects three of the island's most significant historic trails, each with its own character and cultural weight. Indigenous guides and community visits provide context that no guidebook supplies. Remote hot springs, river gorges, and mountain passes sit alongside quiet evenings in towns where the food is serious and the pace is unhurried. This is Taiwan beyond the itineraries that stop at Taipei.

Round Island Ride – Taiwan on 2-Wheels (Guided)
This twelve-day, fully supported cycling journey traces the full perimeter of Taiwan, covering 810 kilometres through terrain that shifts from Pacific sea cliffs and marble gorges to rice valley flatlands and the warm southern shore. A dedicated support vehicle accompanies the group throughout, managing luggage and providing mechanical assistance so that each day's riding remains unencumbered. Transfers are used sparingly and only where the road network or safety warrants it. The route is structured to distribute the most demanding elevation across the days when riders are best acclimatized, with a scheduled rest day at the midpoint. This is a journey that rewards those who prefer to understand a place at road level, over time, rather than through a series of arranged viewpoints.

Taipingshan National Forest – Private Day Tour
Taipingshan National Forest sits at elevation in the mountains of Yilan County, roughly two hours from central Taipei. The road in is winding and the logistics of an independent visit are considerable. This private day tour removes those obstacles entirely, collecting guests directly from Taipei Main Station and returning them the same evening. At the forest, six distinct trails cross terrain shaped by high rainfall, Pacific-facing ridgelines, and a logging history that ended decades ago but left its mark on the landscape. Ancient cypress and hemlock stands, decomposing fallen timber, and a canopy dense enough to filter most daylight give the park a character that changes with the weather. On clear days the mountain views are unobstructed. On overcast days the forest fills with low cloud, producing conditions more closely associated with the temperate rainforests of the Pacific Northwest than with a subtropical island. The Bong Bong Train, a narrow-gauge heritage railway originally built to move timber, now carries visitors to sections of the park that are not accessible on foot from the main area. Its schedule is fixed, so purchasing tickets in the morning allows the rest of the day to be arranged around it. All three primary trails in the main park area require no permit and are graded for a range of physical abilities.

Taipei Night Safari – Night Tour (Guided)
After dark, the forests above Taipei reveal a different order of life. This private guided walk takes small groups into the hills on a well-maintained trail, where a bilingual herpetologist interprets what most visitors never pause to notice: the reptiles, amphibians, and invertebrates that define Taiwan's nocturnal ecology. Private transportation departs from Taipei Main Station and returns guests by ten in the evening. No prior hiking experience is required. The guide manages every logistical detail; guests need only arrive prepared to move slowly and observe carefully.

Dongyanshan National Forest – Private Day Tour
Dongyanshan National Forest sits in the mountains of Taoyuan District, approximately ninety minutes from central Taipei. The forest was systematically replanted over several decades and is now dominated by Japanese Cedar and Chinese Cedar, with stands of Beech, Oak, and Formosan Rhododendron filling the mid-story. Beneath the canopy, Giant Elephant Ear and native fern species thrive in the shade and humidity. The reserve supports a documented population of Formosan Rock Macaques, Red-bellied Squirrels, Formosan Hares, and the seldom-seen Taiwanese Pangolin. Birdlife is consistent throughout the year, and amphibians including multiple frog and toad species are active along the wetter trail sections. A private vehicle collects guests from Taipei in the morning and returns them by early evening, leaving the middle of the day entirely unstructured. The visitor center provides trail maps and basic orientation. The renovated forest restaurant offers set lunches, hot drinks, and local fruit — a reasonable place to rest before the afternoon walk. There are no fixed activities and no group schedule to follow.

Manyueyuan National Forest – Private Day Tour from Taipei
Manyueyuan National Forest is located about ninety minutes south of Taipei and follows the Dabao River through dense subtropical forest. The park is linear, with accessible trails leading to two main waterfalls—Manyueyuan and Virgin Waterfalls—each with viewing platforms. Wildlife is commonly observed, including Formosan Rock Macaques, Crested Serpent Eagles, and several butterfly species. Trails range from flat, stroller-friendly paths to steeper sections near the waterfalls. The visitor centre offers bilingual exhibits on local ecology and conservation. Private, door-to-door transport from Taipei is included, with flexible departure times.

Pingxi Historic Trail – Private Day Hike
The Pingxi Historic Trail covers ten kilometres of varied terrain, moving steadily eastward from the inland campgrounds at Wushan to the coastal settlement of Wai'ao. The route passes through dense subtropical forest, crosses a succession of small streams, and gains enough elevation at its central ridge to offer unobstructed views over the northeast coastline. On clear days, Turtle Island sits on the horizon beyond the open Pacific. The final kilometres descend to a working beach town where guests may swim, rest, or eat before the private vehicle returns them to Taipei. A licensed, bilingual guide accompanies the group throughout. The hike is appropriate for intermediate walkers and for families whose children are comfortable covering ten kilometers on foot.

Caoling Historic Trail – Private Day Tour
The Caoling Historic Trail follows a route first cut through the mountains of northeast Taiwan during the Qing Dynasty, connecting the settlements of New Taipei and Yilan across a ridge that separates the island's interior from its rugged eastern coast. This private day tour begins at Yuanwangkeng Riverside Park, where the trail head sits beside a clean-running stream, and moves eastward through dense secondary forest before opening onto exposed grasslands above the sea. The path gains elevation gradually, making it appropriate for guests who walk regularly but do not require technical hiking experience. A licensed, bilingual guide accompanies the group throughout, providing historical context at key points along the route and adjusting pace to suit the party. Lunch is taken at a carefully chosen vantage point above the Yilan coastline, where the ocean and the outline of Turtle Island are visible on clear days. Groups with time and energy may extend the walk onto the Taoyuan Valley Trail, a side route that broadens the coastal panorama considerably. The tour concludes at Dali Visitor Center, where a local temple and food vendors offer a quiet close to the day before the return transfer to Taipei.

Snow Mountain Taiwan private hiking tour
Summit Taiwan's second-highest peak on a three-day, two-night trek. Hike through the black forest, reach Snow Mountain at sunrise, stay in high-altitude camps, and finish with a private hot spring bath before returning to Taipei.

Dabajianshan 3-day Trek Guided
Enjoy a 3-day, 2-night trek to Dabajianshan in Shei-Pa National Park. This guided hike includes two nights at 99 Cabin with meal service and sleeping bag rentals. The route covers over 40km, summiting up to three of Taiwan's Top 100 Mountains, and does not require specialist mountaineering equipment.

Taiwan: National Parks, Historic Trails and River Gorges — 9 Days
A nine-day private tour moving through Taiwan's national parks, highland trails, and indigenous communities. The route connects four Top 100 mountain summits, river gorge tracing in Taroko National Park, and one evening in a working night market district — a byproduct of the routing, not a focal point. Fully guided, private transport throughout.

Wuling Sixiu Adventure Hike – 3-Days / 2-Nights (Guided)
The Wuling Sixiu route links four distinct summits along a shared ridgeline deep inside Shei-Pa National Park, each peak presenting its own character of terrain, flora, and exposure. The circuit begins and ends at Wuling Farm, where the Tachia River harbors one of Taiwan's last populations of endemic landlocked salmon. Over three days, the route moves through shaded pine forest, open arrow bamboo fields, and exposed ridgeline trail, with two nights spent at staffed mountain lodges. Fixed-rope sections on the approach to Mt. Pintian require genuine upper-body strength and composure on steep rock. The logistics of this route are considerable: national park permits, lodge reservations, private transportation from Taipei, equipment checks, and meals at both cabins are arranged in full before departure. Guests carry personal clothing and gear; everything else is in place on arrival. The route is equally rewarding in autumn, when maples along the lower forest road turn, and in spring, when cherry blossom marks the start of the climb.

Guanwu National Forest – Private Day Journey
Guanwu sits at roughly 2,000 metres in the northern reaches of Shei-Pa National Park, a protected landscape of cypress groves, layered temperate forest, and mountain ridgelines that receive few visitors by Taiwanese standards. A private vehicle collects guests from Taipei in the early morning, arriving at the Guanwu Visitor Center in time for a full day on the trail network. Six maintained routes cover a combined distance of more than ten kilometres, ranging from a quiet 450-metre walk through hemlock and fir to a looped ascent of Zhenshan with 290 metres of elevation gain and an open summit platform. The Kuaishan Big Trees Trail leads through a grove of ancient Hinoki cypress, some estimated at 2,500 years of age. Adjacent to the visitor center, a small ecological center documents the Guanwu Mountain Salamander, a critically endangered amphibian discovered here in 1996 and found nowhere else in this concentration. Two modest cafes operate through the afternoon. The return to Taipei is by private vehicle, arriving by early evening.

Hehuanshan Five Peaks - Hiking
This two-day itinerary places guests on the high ridgelines of Hehuanshan National Scenic Area, where five of Taiwan's celebrated Top 100 Mountains sit within reach of well-maintained trails above 3,000 metres. No high-mountain permits are required. The terrain is exposed and the elevation is genuine, yet the paths are among the most navigable in Taiwan's alpine landscape. A licensed English-speaking guide accompanies the group throughout. Private transportation connects Taichung to the mountains and back, with an overnight at a mountain property in Cingjing at 2,500 metres between the two hiking days.

Walami Trail Adventure
The Walami Trail follows the Batongguan Traversing Trail through Yushan National Park, crossing six suspension bridges and passing Japanese-era ruins before reaching Walami mountain cabin at the overnight point. The route covers approximately 13 kilometres each way across high-altitude terrain. All permits, logistics, and guide services are arranged.

Jade Mountain 3-Day Trekking
Climb to the top of Taiwan on a 3-day, 2-night experience that includes overnight stays in an indigenous village and a mountain lodge at over 3,400m. Watch the sunrise atop Jade Mountain and traverse forested areas within Yushan National Park.

Jiaming Lake Trekking 4-day Guided
A 4-day / 3-night trek to Jiaming Lake, Taiwan's second highest mountain lake, including two nights in mountain cabins and summiting two of Taiwan's Top 100 peaks. The route covers high-altitude terrain in Yushan National Park and is designed for hikers seeking a structured, guided experience.

Mt. Nanhuda 5-Day Trek
Mt. Nanhuda stands at 3,742 meters in Shei-Pa National Park, reached by four days of sustained ridge walking through glacier-carved terrain. The route connects two high-altitude cabins by way of a five-peak traverse and a descent into the Nanhu Valley cirque. Meals are prepared at each cabin and sleeping equipment is provided. The itinerary is designed for fit travelers with hiking experience who want genuine alpine exposure in Taiwan without technical climbing.

Tonghou Traversing Trail – Private Day Hike
The Tonghou Traversing Trail connects two distinct landscapes in a single day's walk. Beginning at the western terminus in Wulai District, the route follows the Tonghou River upstream for roughly six kilometres through dense subtropical forest on compact soil paths, before climbing a short ridge cloaked in silver grass and descending to the Lanyang Plains of Yilan County. The trail ends with a view across open farmland toward the Pacific, with Turtle Island visible on clear days. Private transportation with access permits for the restricted forest road delivers guests to the trailhead and collects them at the eastern exit. The full crossing covers nine kilometres and suits hikers who are steady on uneven ground. No technical experience is required. Several stream crossings add a quiet sense of occasion to the middle section of the route.

Jinshuiying National Trail & Tjuvecekadan
The Jinshuiying National Trail descends sixteen kilometres from an elevation of 1,450 metres to the eastern foothills of Pingtung County, passing through the Paiwan village of Tjuvecekadan — listed as a potential UNESCO World Heritage Site by Taiwan's Bureau of Cultural Heritage. This two-day private tour combines a guided community visit with a full traverse of one of Taiwan's most significant cross-mountain routes. Permits, transport, and indigenous guide included.

Alangyi Historic Trail
Southern Taiwan holds two places that most visitors never reach. The Alangyi Historic Trail follows one of the island's last undeveloped stretches of Pacific coastline, a route that predates modern roads and remains permit-controlled to this day. Inland, the Paiwan village of Tjuvecekadan sits in the mountains of Pingtung County, its terraced slate architecture largely unchanged across generations. This two-day private journey connects both, with a night at a hot spring property in Mudan positioned between them. The itinerary is unhurried and the group sizes deliberately small.

Syakaro Historic Trail & Smangus Giant Trees
The Syakaro Historic Trail follows a path the Atayal people have walked for generations, threading through cedar forest and bamboo groves along the northern ridgelines of Hsinchu County. This two-day private itinerary covers the trail in full before settling for the night in Smangus, an Atayal community that remained without road access until 1979 and continues to operate as a collective to this day. The second morning is spent beneath the canopy of a cypress grove where individual trees predate the Tang Dynasty. Private transportation handles all transfers, allowing guests to give their full attention to the terrain and the people who have shaped it.

Mian Yue Line – Guided Day Hike
The Mian Yue Line traces the course of a decommissioned logging railway through the interior of Alishan National Forest, in the mountains of central Taiwan. The route passes through old-growth and secondary forest, crossing original timber trestle bridges and threading through unlit tunnels that date to the Japanese colonial period. The full out-and-back distance exceeds twenty kilometres, with the return leg demanding the same attention as the approach. Access to the trail requires an entry permit for the Alishan Taiwan Pleione Nature Preserve, a protected zone established to safeguard a native perennial orchid from continued illegal collection. Permit numbers are capped at three hundred hikers per day. Your guide manages the permit application in full and remains with your party throughout the day. Transportation is arranged from Chiayi, the nearest rail hub, with departure timed to allow a measured pace on the trail.

Alishan Indigenous Culture and Tea Experiential Private Tour
The drive from Chiayi climbs into the Alishan mountain range, reaching Tsou indigenous communities at elevations above 1,000 meters where tea cultivation and community-managed forest occupy the same terrain. The first two days are spent immersed in Alishan indigenous culture and experiencing Indigenous life as it was yesterday and is today. We first arrive in Chashan, the southernmost Indigenous community in the Alishan National Scenic Area. It is home to Indigenous Tsou, Indigenous Bunun, and Han Chinese (Hakka) peoples. This community is unique in that many of its young people have returned in recent years to serve as local guides or to start their own businesses, such as guesthouses and coffee shops. These young people have energized this community’s tourism efforts, while reconnecting with their roots and learning from their elders. On Day 1, you become quickly acclimated to Indigenous Tsou culture with an exploration of Chashan Community’s culture park. Gain an understanding of the traditional uses of plants, view a traditional watchtower, and experience the sounds of a traditional air whistle (a device used by the elders to signal the start of a meeting). Then, enjoy a meal of fusion cuisine (traditional Indigenous and locally grown ingredients made using modern cooking methods). This is followed by time spent with a local guide in a natural swimming pool, cooling off or simply relaxing in a beautiful natural setting. After changing clothes and enjoying another dinner of fusion cuisine, our local guide leads us in a torch lighting ceremony and tells us stories and legends. On Day 2, we head into the mountains above Chashan to experience more of traditional Alishan indigenous life, such as making a bird call from shellflower stalks and archery. From there, we head to the Danayigu Ecological Park. This nature reserve, located within the Indigenous Tsou community of Shanmei, is famed for its success in restoring its river and Taiwan shoveljaw carp population. There are several areas along the river for viewing these fish, including from above, along the Danayigu Suspension Bridge. Lunch is at one of Taiwan’s few “floating restaurants,” meaning that food is served in the river on trays that float. This is followed by a guided cultural tour. To end the day, we head to Shizhuo, a “hub” along the Alishan Highway with convenience stores and snack shops. On Day 3, there will be a major shift in our cultural exploration of Alishan as we visit a tea plantation and learn about and experience traditional tea processing methods. We wrap up this journey by sampling locally produced teas, followed by a Chinese cuisine lunch in a nearby restaurant. This 3-day, 2-night adventure includes round-trip transport from the Chiayi High-Speed Rail Station. Alternative pickup locations are available upon request (additional charges may apply).

Birds of Central Taiwan 3 Days
This three-day private itinerary moves through three of central Taiwan's most productive birding areas — Daxueshan National Forest, Xitou, and Sun-Link Sea Nature Education Area. The route is structured around resident endemic species, including the Mikado Pheasant and Taiwan Blue Magpie, with a private bilingual ornithologist guide throughout. All transport and accommodation arranged.

Ancient Trails & Hot Springs
A five-day private itinerary through the indigenous territory and coastline of southern Taiwan — a Paiwan stone-slate village, two national trails, and hot spring accommodation across Pingtung and Taitung. The route covers the Jinshuiying National Trail and the permit-controlled Alangyi Historic Trail, with overnight stays at hot spring hotels. Private transport throughout.

Daxueshan National Forest – Private Day Tour
Daxueshan National Forest sits at over 2,000 metres in the mountains of central Taiwan, roughly two hours from Taichung. Because the reserve has no public transit connection and the Xiaoxueshan National Trail is logistically demanding as a thru-hike, the route is seldom completed in a single, linear direction. This itinerary resolves that problem through a private drop-off at the upper trailhead and a vehicle waiting at the Daxueshan Visitor Centre on completion. The trail covers approximately 15 kilometres through well-maintained, clearly signed forest terrain and takes between five and six hours to walk at a measured pace. The elevation and distance make a reasonable level of physical fitness advisable, though the route is accessible to hikers without technical experience. Daxueshan is one of Taiwan's most respected destinations for forest birds, and the trail passes through habitat where deer, wild boar, and various butterfly species are regularly observed. The tour includes return transport from Taichung High Speed Rail Station, travel insurance, and the option of a bilingual guide.

East Coast Cruiser Cycling Tour
Taiwan's east coast occupies a narrow corridor between the Central Mountain Range and the Pacific Ocean. This eight-day private cycling journey covers 440 kilometres of that corridor, moving south from the beach town of Fulong through the East Rift Valley to Taitung before looping back north through Chishang and Ruisui to the coast. The riding is structured around low-traffic rural roads, two hot spring hotels, and a rotating sequence of landscapes that shift daily — volcanic coastline, flooded rice paddies, tectonic fault lines, river estuaries. A dedicated support vehicle and local guide manage the logistics throughout. Guests carry nothing beyond what they choose to have with them on the bike

Southern Explorer Cycling Tour
This eight-day tour covers four hundred and forty kilometres of southern and eastern Taiwan by bicycle — the southern peninsula on Route 199, the East Rift Valley floor, and two indigenous community visits in Paiwan territory. A support vehicle accompanies the group. Two overnight stays at hot spring hotels are included in the route. All guiding, logistics, and accommodation arranged.

Alangyi Historic Trail & Tjuvecekadan Village Tour
This two-day journey moves through two of southern Taiwan's most carefully protected landscapes. The first day is spent on the Alangyi Historic Trail, an eight-kilometre coastal path that follows Taiwan's last undeveloped Pacific shoreline between Taitung and Pingtung County. The trail has been in continuous use for over a thousand years, walked by Paiwan and Amis peoples, Qing Dynasty officials, Japanese survey parties, and traders who had no other route through this stretch of coast. Access is controlled; no more than three hundred people may enter each day. The evening is spent at a hot spring hotel in Mudan, a quiet village in the hills of Pingtung. The second day is given to Tjuvecekadan, a living Paiwan settlement of more than fifty traditional slate-stone houses set deep in a mountain river valley. Few itineraries in Taiwan reach this far. Entry is arranged through community hosts, and the programme — welcoming ceremony, village tour, shared meals, and a hands-on craft activity — is led entirely by local Paiwan residents. A private guide accompanies the group throughout both days, handling logistics, translation, and context. Private transport operates from Zuoying High Speed Rail Station at the start and returns there at the close of the second afternoon.

Wheels Around Taipei | 3 days guided
A 3-stage, 3-day cycling tour covering the most notable cycling routes around Taipei. Riders stay in a central hotel, eliminating the need for daily check-outs, and enjoy guided rides each day. The itinerary includes urban riverside paths, a national park circuit, and a mountain loop through tea country. Evenings are free for exploring Taipei's restaurants, night markets, and cultural sites. The tour is designed for experienced cyclists seeking structured rides with city access.

Taipei City Stopovers 3 Days
This three-day, two-night Taipei stopover uses the city as a base for guided outdoor excursions in northern Taiwan. Guests select accommodation from a range of city hotels and choose from a set of full-day hiking and cultural outings, each led by a bilingual guide. The itinerary is structured for efficient use of limited time, with private transport and logistics managed throughout.

Cross-Mountain Spine Cycling Tour
This eight-day guided cycling tour covers 555km and 8,400m of elevation, traversing Taiwan’s central mountain spine from Taipei to Kenting. The route includes sustained climbs, long descents, and quiet rural roads. Riders experience wild hot springs, the Taiwan KOM Challenge route, Sun Moon Lake, and the tea fields of Alishan. The journey concludes at Kenting’s southern beaches, with regional cuisine and cultural sites along the way.

Top Taiwan: Lakes, Trains & Temples – 9 Day Hiking Journey
A 9-day guided hiking tour through Taiwan, combining historic trails, lakeside cycling, and city walks. The itinerary includes Taipei, Sun Moon Lake, Tainan, and Kaohsiung, with a focus on concrete hiking experiences and local cultural encounters.

Coast & Valley Cycling Tour
This nine-day guided cycling tour covers Taiwan’s east coast from Taipei to Kenting. Riders traverse mountain roads, river valleys, and coastal stretches, with daily support and accommodation arranged for convenience. The itinerary includes historic towns, challenging climbs, and opportunities to experience local markets and hot springs. The route is designed for cyclists seeking sustained, varied terrain and a clear progression from the city to the southern tip of the island.

The Deep East: Culture, Culinary & Ancient Trails
A ten-day private itinerary focused on Taiwan's eastern interior — historic coastal trails, indigenous culinary instruction, and community visits that the standard Taiwan itinerary does not reach. The route covers remote areas of the east coast, ancient trails with waterfalls, and hands-on workshops with local communities. All logistics and accommodation arranged.

Taiwan: Ancient Trails, Wild Rivers & Indigenous Highlands
Eleven days across Taiwan's eastern interior and southern coast, moving through landscapes that shift from subtropical jungle to open rice plains to raw Pacific shoreline. The route connects three of the island's most significant historic trails, each with its own character and cultural weight. Indigenous guides and community visits provide context that no guidebook supplies. Remote hot springs, river gorges, and mountain passes sit alongside quiet evenings in towns where the food is serious and the pace is unhurried. This is Taiwan beyond the itineraries that stop at Taipei.

Round Island Ride – Taiwan on 2-Wheels (Guided)
This twelve-day, fully supported cycling journey traces the full perimeter of Taiwan, covering 810 kilometres through terrain that shifts from Pacific sea cliffs and marble gorges to rice valley flatlands and the warm southern shore. A dedicated support vehicle accompanies the group throughout, managing luggage and providing mechanical assistance so that each day's riding remains unencumbered. Transfers are used sparingly and only where the road network or safety warrants it. The route is structured to distribute the most demanding elevation across the days when riders are best acclimatized, with a scheduled rest day at the midpoint. This is a journey that rewards those who prefer to understand a place at road level, over time, rather than through a series of arranged viewpoints.

Taipingshan National Forest – Private Day Tour
Taipingshan National Forest sits at elevation in the mountains of Yilan County, roughly two hours from central Taipei. The road in is winding and the logistics of an independent visit are considerable. This private day tour removes those obstacles entirely, collecting guests directly from Taipei Main Station and returning them the same evening. At the forest, six distinct trails cross terrain shaped by high rainfall, Pacific-facing ridgelines, and a logging history that ended decades ago but left its mark on the landscape. Ancient cypress and hemlock stands, decomposing fallen timber, and a canopy dense enough to filter most daylight give the park a character that changes with the weather. On clear days the mountain views are unobstructed. On overcast days the forest fills with low cloud, producing conditions more closely associated with the temperate rainforests of the Pacific Northwest than with a subtropical island. The Bong Bong Train, a narrow-gauge heritage railway originally built to move timber, now carries visitors to sections of the park that are not accessible on foot from the main area. Its schedule is fixed, so purchasing tickets in the morning allows the rest of the day to be arranged around it. All three primary trails in the main park area require no permit and are graded for a range of physical abilities.

Taipei Night Safari – Night Tour (Guided)
After dark, the forests above Taipei reveal a different order of life. This private guided walk takes small groups into the hills on a well-maintained trail, where a bilingual herpetologist interprets what most visitors never pause to notice: the reptiles, amphibians, and invertebrates that define Taiwan's nocturnal ecology. Private transportation departs from Taipei Main Station and returns guests by ten in the evening. No prior hiking experience is required. The guide manages every logistical detail; guests need only arrive prepared to move slowly and observe carefully.

Dongyanshan National Forest – Private Day Tour
Dongyanshan National Forest sits in the mountains of Taoyuan District, approximately ninety minutes from central Taipei. The forest was systematically replanted over several decades and is now dominated by Japanese Cedar and Chinese Cedar, with stands of Beech, Oak, and Formosan Rhododendron filling the mid-story. Beneath the canopy, Giant Elephant Ear and native fern species thrive in the shade and humidity. The reserve supports a documented population of Formosan Rock Macaques, Red-bellied Squirrels, Formosan Hares, and the seldom-seen Taiwanese Pangolin. Birdlife is consistent throughout the year, and amphibians including multiple frog and toad species are active along the wetter trail sections. A private vehicle collects guests from Taipei in the morning and returns them by early evening, leaving the middle of the day entirely unstructured. The visitor center provides trail maps and basic orientation. The renovated forest restaurant offers set lunches, hot drinks, and local fruit — a reasonable place to rest before the afternoon walk. There are no fixed activities and no group schedule to follow.

Manyueyuan National Forest – Private Day Tour from Taipei
Manyueyuan National Forest is located about ninety minutes south of Taipei and follows the Dabao River through dense subtropical forest. The park is linear, with accessible trails leading to two main waterfalls—Manyueyuan and Virgin Waterfalls—each with viewing platforms. Wildlife is commonly observed, including Formosan Rock Macaques, Crested Serpent Eagles, and several butterfly species. Trails range from flat, stroller-friendly paths to steeper sections near the waterfalls. The visitor centre offers bilingual exhibits on local ecology and conservation. Private, door-to-door transport from Taipei is included, with flexible departure times.

Pingxi Historic Trail – Private Day Hike
The Pingxi Historic Trail covers ten kilometres of varied terrain, moving steadily eastward from the inland campgrounds at Wushan to the coastal settlement of Wai'ao. The route passes through dense subtropical forest, crosses a succession of small streams, and gains enough elevation at its central ridge to offer unobstructed views over the northeast coastline. On clear days, Turtle Island sits on the horizon beyond the open Pacific. The final kilometres descend to a working beach town where guests may swim, rest, or eat before the private vehicle returns them to Taipei. A licensed, bilingual guide accompanies the group throughout. The hike is appropriate for intermediate walkers and for families whose children are comfortable covering ten kilometers on foot.

Caoling Historic Trail – Private Day Tour
The Caoling Historic Trail follows a route first cut through the mountains of northeast Taiwan during the Qing Dynasty, connecting the settlements of New Taipei and Yilan across a ridge that separates the island's interior from its rugged eastern coast. This private day tour begins at Yuanwangkeng Riverside Park, where the trail head sits beside a clean-running stream, and moves eastward through dense secondary forest before opening onto exposed grasslands above the sea. The path gains elevation gradually, making it appropriate for guests who walk regularly but do not require technical hiking experience. A licensed, bilingual guide accompanies the group throughout, providing historical context at key points along the route and adjusting pace to suit the party. Lunch is taken at a carefully chosen vantage point above the Yilan coastline, where the ocean and the outline of Turtle Island are visible on clear days. Groups with time and energy may extend the walk onto the Taoyuan Valley Trail, a side route that broadens the coastal panorama considerably. The tour concludes at Dali Visitor Center, where a local temple and food vendors offer a quiet close to the day before the return transfer to Taipei.

Snow Mountain Taiwan private hiking tour
Summit Taiwan's second-highest peak on a three-day, two-night trek. Hike through the black forest, reach Snow Mountain at sunrise, stay in high-altitude camps, and finish with a private hot spring bath before returning to Taipei.

Dabajianshan 3-day Trek Guided
Enjoy a 3-day, 2-night trek to Dabajianshan in Shei-Pa National Park. This guided hike includes two nights at 99 Cabin with meal service and sleeping bag rentals. The route covers over 40km, summiting up to three of Taiwan's Top 100 Mountains, and does not require specialist mountaineering equipment.

Taiwan: National Parks, Historic Trails and River Gorges — 9 Days
A nine-day private tour moving through Taiwan's national parks, highland trails, and indigenous communities. The route connects four Top 100 mountain summits, river gorge tracing in Taroko National Park, and one evening in a working night market district — a byproduct of the routing, not a focal point. Fully guided, private transport throughout.

Wuling Sixiu Adventure Hike – 3-Days / 2-Nights (Guided)
The Wuling Sixiu route links four distinct summits along a shared ridgeline deep inside Shei-Pa National Park, each peak presenting its own character of terrain, flora, and exposure. The circuit begins and ends at Wuling Farm, where the Tachia River harbors one of Taiwan's last populations of endemic landlocked salmon. Over three days, the route moves through shaded pine forest, open arrow bamboo fields, and exposed ridgeline trail, with two nights spent at staffed mountain lodges. Fixed-rope sections on the approach to Mt. Pintian require genuine upper-body strength and composure on steep rock. The logistics of this route are considerable: national park permits, lodge reservations, private transportation from Taipei, equipment checks, and meals at both cabins are arranged in full before departure. Guests carry personal clothing and gear; everything else is in place on arrival. The route is equally rewarding in autumn, when maples along the lower forest road turn, and in spring, when cherry blossom marks the start of the climb.

Guanwu National Forest – Private Day Journey
Guanwu sits at roughly 2,000 metres in the northern reaches of Shei-Pa National Park, a protected landscape of cypress groves, layered temperate forest, and mountain ridgelines that receive few visitors by Taiwanese standards. A private vehicle collects guests from Taipei in the early morning, arriving at the Guanwu Visitor Center in time for a full day on the trail network. Six maintained routes cover a combined distance of more than ten kilometres, ranging from a quiet 450-metre walk through hemlock and fir to a looped ascent of Zhenshan with 290 metres of elevation gain and an open summit platform. The Kuaishan Big Trees Trail leads through a grove of ancient Hinoki cypress, some estimated at 2,500 years of age. Adjacent to the visitor center, a small ecological center documents the Guanwu Mountain Salamander, a critically endangered amphibian discovered here in 1996 and found nowhere else in this concentration. Two modest cafes operate through the afternoon. The return to Taipei is by private vehicle, arriving by early evening.

Hehuanshan Five Peaks - Hiking
This two-day itinerary places guests on the high ridgelines of Hehuanshan National Scenic Area, where five of Taiwan's celebrated Top 100 Mountains sit within reach of well-maintained trails above 3,000 metres. No high-mountain permits are required. The terrain is exposed and the elevation is genuine, yet the paths are among the most navigable in Taiwan's alpine landscape. A licensed English-speaking guide accompanies the group throughout. Private transportation connects Taichung to the mountains and back, with an overnight at a mountain property in Cingjing at 2,500 metres between the two hiking days.

Walami Trail Adventure
The Walami Trail follows the Batongguan Traversing Trail through Yushan National Park, crossing six suspension bridges and passing Japanese-era ruins before reaching Walami mountain cabin at the overnight point. The route covers approximately 13 kilometres each way across high-altitude terrain. All permits, logistics, and guide services are arranged.

Jade Mountain 3-Day Trekking
Climb to the top of Taiwan on a 3-day, 2-night experience that includes overnight stays in an indigenous village and a mountain lodge at over 3,400m. Watch the sunrise atop Jade Mountain and traverse forested areas within Yushan National Park.

Jiaming Lake Trekking 4-day Guided
A 4-day / 3-night trek to Jiaming Lake, Taiwan's second highest mountain lake, including two nights in mountain cabins and summiting two of Taiwan's Top 100 peaks. The route covers high-altitude terrain in Yushan National Park and is designed for hikers seeking a structured, guided experience.

Mt. Nanhuda 5-Day Trek
Mt. Nanhuda stands at 3,742 meters in Shei-Pa National Park, reached by four days of sustained ridge walking through glacier-carved terrain. The route connects two high-altitude cabins by way of a five-peak traverse and a descent into the Nanhu Valley cirque. Meals are prepared at each cabin and sleeping equipment is provided. The itinerary is designed for fit travelers with hiking experience who want genuine alpine exposure in Taiwan without technical climbing.

Tonghou Traversing Trail – Private Day Hike
The Tonghou Traversing Trail connects two distinct landscapes in a single day's walk. Beginning at the western terminus in Wulai District, the route follows the Tonghou River upstream for roughly six kilometres through dense subtropical forest on compact soil paths, before climbing a short ridge cloaked in silver grass and descending to the Lanyang Plains of Yilan County. The trail ends with a view across open farmland toward the Pacific, with Turtle Island visible on clear days. Private transportation with access permits for the restricted forest road delivers guests to the trailhead and collects them at the eastern exit. The full crossing covers nine kilometres and suits hikers who are steady on uneven ground. No technical experience is required. Several stream crossings add a quiet sense of occasion to the middle section of the route.

Jinshuiying National Trail & Tjuvecekadan
The Jinshuiying National Trail descends sixteen kilometres from an elevation of 1,450 metres to the eastern foothills of Pingtung County, passing through the Paiwan village of Tjuvecekadan — listed as a potential UNESCO World Heritage Site by Taiwan's Bureau of Cultural Heritage. This two-day private tour combines a guided community visit with a full traverse of one of Taiwan's most significant cross-mountain routes. Permits, transport, and indigenous guide included.

Alangyi Historic Trail
Southern Taiwan holds two places that most visitors never reach. The Alangyi Historic Trail follows one of the island's last undeveloped stretches of Pacific coastline, a route that predates modern roads and remains permit-controlled to this day. Inland, the Paiwan village of Tjuvecekadan sits in the mountains of Pingtung County, its terraced slate architecture largely unchanged across generations. This two-day private journey connects both, with a night at a hot spring property in Mudan positioned between them. The itinerary is unhurried and the group sizes deliberately small.

Syakaro Historic Trail & Smangus Giant Trees
The Syakaro Historic Trail follows a path the Atayal people have walked for generations, threading through cedar forest and bamboo groves along the northern ridgelines of Hsinchu County. This two-day private itinerary covers the trail in full before settling for the night in Smangus, an Atayal community that remained without road access until 1979 and continues to operate as a collective to this day. The second morning is spent beneath the canopy of a cypress grove where individual trees predate the Tang Dynasty. Private transportation handles all transfers, allowing guests to give their full attention to the terrain and the people who have shaped it.

Mian Yue Line – Guided Day Hike
The Mian Yue Line traces the course of a decommissioned logging railway through the interior of Alishan National Forest, in the mountains of central Taiwan. The route passes through old-growth and secondary forest, crossing original timber trestle bridges and threading through unlit tunnels that date to the Japanese colonial period. The full out-and-back distance exceeds twenty kilometres, with the return leg demanding the same attention as the approach. Access to the trail requires an entry permit for the Alishan Taiwan Pleione Nature Preserve, a protected zone established to safeguard a native perennial orchid from continued illegal collection. Permit numbers are capped at three hundred hikers per day. Your guide manages the permit application in full and remains with your party throughout the day. Transportation is arranged from Chiayi, the nearest rail hub, with departure timed to allow a measured pace on the trail.

Alishan Indigenous Culture and Tea Experiential Private Tour
The drive from Chiayi climbs into the Alishan mountain range, reaching Tsou indigenous communities at elevations above 1,000 meters where tea cultivation and community-managed forest occupy the same terrain. The first two days are spent immersed in Alishan indigenous culture and experiencing Indigenous life as it was yesterday and is today. We first arrive in Chashan, the southernmost Indigenous community in the Alishan National Scenic Area. It is home to Indigenous Tsou, Indigenous Bunun, and Han Chinese (Hakka) peoples. This community is unique in that many of its young people have returned in recent years to serve as local guides or to start their own businesses, such as guesthouses and coffee shops. These young people have energized this community’s tourism efforts, while reconnecting with their roots and learning from their elders. On Day 1, you become quickly acclimated to Indigenous Tsou culture with an exploration of Chashan Community’s culture park. Gain an understanding of the traditional uses of plants, view a traditional watchtower, and experience the sounds of a traditional air whistle (a device used by the elders to signal the start of a meeting). Then, enjoy a meal of fusion cuisine (traditional Indigenous and locally grown ingredients made using modern cooking methods). This is followed by time spent with a local guide in a natural swimming pool, cooling off or simply relaxing in a beautiful natural setting. After changing clothes and enjoying another dinner of fusion cuisine, our local guide leads us in a torch lighting ceremony and tells us stories and legends. On Day 2, we head into the mountains above Chashan to experience more of traditional Alishan indigenous life, such as making a bird call from shellflower stalks and archery. From there, we head to the Danayigu Ecological Park. This nature reserve, located within the Indigenous Tsou community of Shanmei, is famed for its success in restoring its river and Taiwan shoveljaw carp population. There are several areas along the river for viewing these fish, including from above, along the Danayigu Suspension Bridge. Lunch is at one of Taiwan’s few “floating restaurants,” meaning that food is served in the river on trays that float. This is followed by a guided cultural tour. To end the day, we head to Shizhuo, a “hub” along the Alishan Highway with convenience stores and snack shops. On Day 3, there will be a major shift in our cultural exploration of Alishan as we visit a tea plantation and learn about and experience traditional tea processing methods. We wrap up this journey by sampling locally produced teas, followed by a Chinese cuisine lunch in a nearby restaurant. This 3-day, 2-night adventure includes round-trip transport from the Chiayi High-Speed Rail Station. Alternative pickup locations are available upon request (additional charges may apply).

Birds of Central Taiwan 3 Days
This three-day private itinerary moves through three of central Taiwan's most productive birding areas — Daxueshan National Forest, Xitou, and Sun-Link Sea Nature Education Area. The route is structured around resident endemic species, including the Mikado Pheasant and Taiwan Blue Magpie, with a private bilingual ornithologist guide throughout. All transport and accommodation arranged.

Ancient Trails & Hot Springs
A five-day private itinerary through the indigenous territory and coastline of southern Taiwan — a Paiwan stone-slate village, two national trails, and hot spring accommodation across Pingtung and Taitung. The route covers the Jinshuiying National Trail and the permit-controlled Alangyi Historic Trail, with overnight stays at hot spring hotels. Private transport throughout.

Daxueshan National Forest – Private Day Tour
Daxueshan National Forest sits at over 2,000 metres in the mountains of central Taiwan, roughly two hours from Taichung. Because the reserve has no public transit connection and the Xiaoxueshan National Trail is logistically demanding as a thru-hike, the route is seldom completed in a single, linear direction. This itinerary resolves that problem through a private drop-off at the upper trailhead and a vehicle waiting at the Daxueshan Visitor Centre on completion. The trail covers approximately 15 kilometres through well-maintained, clearly signed forest terrain and takes between five and six hours to walk at a measured pace. The elevation and distance make a reasonable level of physical fitness advisable, though the route is accessible to hikers without technical experience. Daxueshan is one of Taiwan's most respected destinations for forest birds, and the trail passes through habitat where deer, wild boar, and various butterfly species are regularly observed. The tour includes return transport from Taichung High Speed Rail Station, travel insurance, and the option of a bilingual guide.

East Coast Cruiser Cycling Tour
Taiwan's east coast occupies a narrow corridor between the Central Mountain Range and the Pacific Ocean. This eight-day private cycling journey covers 440 kilometres of that corridor, moving south from the beach town of Fulong through the East Rift Valley to Taitung before looping back north through Chishang and Ruisui to the coast. The riding is structured around low-traffic rural roads, two hot spring hotels, and a rotating sequence of landscapes that shift daily — volcanic coastline, flooded rice paddies, tectonic fault lines, river estuaries. A dedicated support vehicle and local guide manage the logistics throughout. Guests carry nothing beyond what they choose to have with them on the bike

Southern Explorer Cycling Tour
This eight-day tour covers four hundred and forty kilometres of southern and eastern Taiwan by bicycle — the southern peninsula on Route 199, the East Rift Valley floor, and two indigenous community visits in Paiwan territory. A support vehicle accompanies the group. Two overnight stays at hot spring hotels are included in the route. All guiding, logistics, and accommodation arranged.

Alangyi Historic Trail & Tjuvecekadan Village Tour
This two-day journey moves through two of southern Taiwan's most carefully protected landscapes. The first day is spent on the Alangyi Historic Trail, an eight-kilometre coastal path that follows Taiwan's last undeveloped Pacific shoreline between Taitung and Pingtung County. The trail has been in continuous use for over a thousand years, walked by Paiwan and Amis peoples, Qing Dynasty officials, Japanese survey parties, and traders who had no other route through this stretch of coast. Access is controlled; no more than three hundred people may enter each day. The evening is spent at a hot spring hotel in Mudan, a quiet village in the hills of Pingtung. The second day is given to Tjuvecekadan, a living Paiwan settlement of more than fifty traditional slate-stone houses set deep in a mountain river valley. Few itineraries in Taiwan reach this far. Entry is arranged through community hosts, and the programme — welcoming ceremony, village tour, shared meals, and a hands-on craft activity — is led entirely by local Paiwan residents. A private guide accompanies the group throughout both days, handling logistics, translation, and context. Private transport operates from Zuoying High Speed Rail Station at the start and returns there at the close of the second afternoon.

Taipei City Stopovers 3 Days
This three-day, two-night Taipei stopover uses the city as a base for guided outdoor excursions in northern Taiwan. Guests select accommodation from a range of city hotels and choose from a set of full-day hiking and cultural outings, each led by a bilingual guide. The itinerary is structured for efficient use of limited time, with private transport and logistics managed throughout.

Taipei City Stopovers 3 Days
This three-day, two-night Taipei stopover uses the city as a base for guided outdoor excursions in northern Taiwan. Guests select accommodation from a range of city hotels and choose from a set of full-day hiking and cultural outings, each led by a bilingual guide. The itinerary is structured for efficient use of limited time, with private transport and logistics managed throughout.



















