I think the bathhouses in Taiwan are mostly Japanese style, so yeah naked only.
Is there any other way...?
Sorry I can't help as fortunately for us we didn't need to use a laundromat in Taiwan. Almost all of our hotels had either a coin-operated or free washers and dryers on one of the floors. We take laundry detergent sheets with us.Sorry to hijack your excellent TR, but wondering if you had any experiences or recommendations for laundromats in Taipei. Thanks
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We have just had a short trip to Taiwan. The main reason was the wedding of my son to his Taiwanese born, now Australian citizen, partner but that particular event will be pretty much off-limits for this report. My new daughter-in-law planned the trip to try and show us as much of possible of her native land. Being inexperienced she tried to fit too much in our limited time there but we certainly saw lots of things. We travelled in a van with a driver/guide. Apparently pretty normal in Taiwan but very strange to us. The hotels we were booked in never got above 3 star but the were clean and comfortable. Almost all had self laundry facilities that were pretty cheap and one was free.
A couple of things to mention at the outset. The public toilets in Taiwan that we used were uniformly very clean and not at all smelly plus they were all free. Europe could certainly learn from them. The only shortage was toilet paper. There was always at least one 'sitting' toilet as well as squat ones.
Smoking was very rare and looked to be about the same rate as in Australia. After our experiences in Germany last year it was nice not to be enveloped in smelly second hand smoke. In fact a quick check on the internet shows that the rate is about 14%. Something else Europe could learn from Taiwan.
My son, his wife to be and their 15 month son used points from his business expenses to fly on SQ in J. We have very few points left and SQ wanted around $5,500 each for a paid trip in J. So we fell back on our old standby of Scootplus to Singapore and then booked J on China Airlines Singapore to Taiwan. It cost around $1,000 each for Scootplus and China Airlines was around $2050 each.
A little.Did you "tear" up @OZDUCK ??
With Mr Flyfrequently's Chinese family weddings, the bride dresses in traditional style for the tea ceremony then comes out in her white wedding dress with the groom in formal attire.
Though interestingly now that they are 4th++ generation and Australian born, many traditions are not followed (we didn't 47 years ago!)
Thank you for sharing.