HKFP Lens: Cat lovers bring tourism boost to Taiwan village, as feline residents revive once-flourishing mining town
Hong Kong Free Press
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A once-thriving coal mining town in Taiwan has reinvented itself as a tourist attraction and home to over 100 feline residents.
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Houtong, in Ruifang – west of the capital Taipei – was originally called “monkey cave.” During the 20th century, the area led Taiwan’s coal production – with 220,000 tons clawed from the earth each year. It spurred a population boom peaking at around 6,000.
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But young residents emigrated as the industry faded in the 1990s, leaving fewer than 100 villagers as the job market dried up.
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That was until 2008, when a local resident and photographer – Peggy Chien – began to take in abandoned cats. Her efforts, showcased on Flickr, won over cat lovers across the island, according to state-run Taiwan Today. The influx of more furry friends helped rejuvenate the declining village.
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Today, the village is a tourist magnet, and home to cat-themed cafes, shops peddling feline fare, crumbling relics of the village’s industrial past, and places to relax.
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Kitties may be encountered welcoming visitors from Taipei on the railway bridge, sprawled across shelves and steps, or sleeping on roofs, benches and in corners.
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Houtong was listed in CNN’s “Five Places Where Cats Outshine Tourist Attractions” in 2013.
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Words: Tom Grundy.
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