18.10.10
The harvest.
Then yesterday, at long last, the rice harvest began.
A big machine that deals with strips of rice field a meter and half wide at a time was brought into our neighbouring field. It swept over it in the style of a zamboni, clearing the whole area of rice. The machine cut the rice stocks close to the ground, scooped it inside the machine where it then striped all the rice from the stock and dumped the remains back out onto the ground. As we watched, the machine rid the entire place of rice with incredible efficiency. When I think about watching the rice being harvested in South East Asia, people bent over at the waist, sickle in hand, I can not help but marvel at this very very cool invention.
So they didn't forget about the rice, but we still want answers about the peppers and the corn!
3.9.10
Books in the mail.
Luckily, soon after I had finished the last of my books here that I actually wanted to read, Jer and I went textbook shopping for the new semester. At the textbook shop I picked up a copy of "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows". Perfect for recapping before the movie comes out in November!!!! Unluckily, soon after I started reading "Harry Potter" I made the mistake of reading outloud to Jeremy one evening. He instantly got sucked in (who wouldn't!!) and I lost a book for reading while he is at work. Of course it is nice to read outloud to him, and what a perfect book for the job, but that wasn't exactly the point!
Finally I gave up on waiting for our books to re-arrive and started reading "The Great Gatsby". A classic that I wasn't enthused about reading, but one that it wouldn't hurt to have read. Then, as predicted, as I stepped with two feet into reading this book... our books arrived. Now I have to make a decision. Do I finish "Gatsby" even though I'm not overly excited about it and I'm not that far in, or do I put it down and start to read "Dune" which I have been waiting to read all summer long? Dad would say that that isn't a decision, of course I should just stop and read the book that I want to read. But for some reason quitting a book once I've started it has never been in my reading vocabulary. Perhaps it is a holdover from when I was younger and reading was always a real challenge. Like I always put so much effort and discipline into getting through each page that giving up on a book was like wasting all that I had put in.
I'm not sure what I'm going to do, but I do know that I'm excited about our new books! Three arrived: Dune, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, and The Iron Heel. All of them are really old and it was kind of exciting just to open up the package and see such old things while we are in a country that is big on everything being new new new. The oldest of the three is The Iron Heel. It was published in 1944 and is in great condition. Here are some pictures of it. We both got a good laugh out of Penguin Books advertising cigarettes on the back of one of their books. Not something you would see now for sure. The ad on the inside cover is pretty funny too. It turns out that Horlicks is a malted milk drink. After reading the ad, that is NOT what I would have guessed.
26.8.10
The lights of Seoul.
19.8.10
Halla-san.
But we did it! It took us almost exactly 8 hours and was totally awesome! We were both sore for days afterwards. Funny that your muscles rebel when you climb a mountain after sitting on your butt for a few months straight. We took Seongpanak Trail up, which is 9.6km, and then took Donnaeko Trail down, which is 9.1km. The trail down was much more difficult then the one up, but to make up for its steepness and sketchy paths it was far more beautiful. We were so glad that we decided to see more of the mountain by going down a different route. It was super cloudy when we got to the top, so we didn't get to see the crater lake or appreciate the size of the volcano. In fact, it was so cloudy up on Halla-san that even from the island down below we only saw the top of the mountain 2 times. On the way down the mountain the clouds parted for a short time and the sky and sun was beautiful, we felt so lucky to have the cloud break just as we reached the best views of the hike.
When we were almost at the bottom Jeremy was pooped and grumpy, but I kept thinking “I wonder if we have time to climb it again before we leave?” My muscles would not have approved of such an attempt, but those thoughts show how much I enjoyed the hike.
15.8.10
Stormy weather.
It is fantastic!!!! I can hardly imagine what they are like on the edge of the country where the storms are coming off the ocean. Typhoon warnings across the country. Very fun.
10.8.10
Beaches and craters.
The next day was one we would have liked to forget for the most part, but one we will not for a long time. The reasons for wishing to forget are mostly surrounding issues with buses and going places that turned out not to be anything like what we expected and far from what we wanted. The reason for not being able to forget is singular: sunburn. Between waiting for the bus and walking to where we could catch another bus, we got fried. I didn't even think about the sun because we weren't doing anything in particular, like going to the beach or going on a hike, but the little sun filled moments added up. It is maybe three weeks later and I am finally starting to stop peeling. My arms (and Jeremy's too) are splotchy because I have patches of peel from that first day and patches of fairly dark tan from the rest of the trip. Needless to say, we were very conscious of sunscreen from then on. Two good very good things happened that day however.
One: We climbed up Seongsan Ilchulbong (Sunrise Peak). It is a small volcanic crater. It only took us maybe 20 minutes to get from the base to the ridge, but those 20 minutes were ruthless. The heat was hardly bearable. I sweat a few liters of water out and as we were reaching the top I remember thinking to myself that it felt as though my head would explode. As we climbed those last few steps, however, and stood on the edge of the crater itself a cool breeze off the ocean hit us. It felt like heaven. I'm sure I laughed out loud as I stepped from that heat into that refreshingly cold air. When we had driven past the crater earlier that day it had been completely shrouded by clouds, but when we climbed it it was clear and looking out over the island behind us and over the crater and the ocean in front of us I was pretty darn happy.
Two: We ended up staying that night at Pyoseon beach. At first we couldn't find the camping space there and we were less than impressed as we had been so many times that day, but then Jeremy spotted it. It was a large grassy space with a few trees up a few steps from the beach. It was lovely. We ended up staying there several nights and then even coming back there later in the trip. We laid around and read. We ate, we swam, we watched the ever changing sky. Just relaxed.
5.8.10
Unwanted visitors.
It was morning and I needed to go into the clothes compartment of my backpack to get a new outfit that was at least theoretically more clean then the one I had been wearing the day before. I unzipped the pouch, rustled the clothes slightly and saw something that made my heart skip a beat. It was orange and grey, but it was gone. I thought to myself that it kind of looked like the chords we were using to tie down our tent. I said out loud “Boy am I jumpy!” and thought back to the snake that had wriggled in front of me on the sidewalk a few days early nearly giving me a heart attack. I took a deep breath and stuck my hands back into the mess of clothes. At that moment what I had feared deep down, but had refused even to admit to myself happened. A centipede, about 4 inches long, bright orange, as fast as light, ran out from amongst my clothes, across my hand and into the top compartment of my bag. I screamed. I jumped. I was surprised to not feel tears running down my face. Jeremy thought I was being a big baby and that there was probably a little spider in my pack, but then he kicked my bag and the centipede made its final escape. As we watched it run off with its many legs into the grass, I was redeemed in Jeremy's eyes for being scared of a "scary bug".
Jeremy had never seen a bug like that before, and I had wished that I would never see one again. I can still feel those little legs making their way across my hand and it makes me cringe. It took me days to be able to go into my bag again with giving it a few hard kicks first.
14.7.10
Take me out to the ballgame.
Friday was the last full day for this round of student teachers, so with most of the kids gone, they got the day to play too. They invited Jeremy and me to play games with them. I dreaded the thought of playing dodgeball or something like that, but when we got there they were playing a game of t-ball. After a quick game of rock-paper-scissors (the traditional way to make any decisions in Korea) we were assigned to teams and the game was on. One of the girls explained to me that we had to play hard because the losing team had to buy icecream for the winning team - high stakes. It was super hot and Jeremy and I totally roasted in the sun getting a burnt nose each and a little bit of nausea from the heat, but we had fun anyway. Most of the girls were terrible at t-ball, but everyone was good natured and people who were struggling got second tries and no one made fun. My team had a very big comeback to tie the game and we held them off for the last inning; no one got icecream. Then a third year PE class came out and challenged us to a game. Jeremy and I were both picked to be on the "all-star" team to play them and we both lived up to the responsibility with some good hits to the outfield. All said and done, it was a great day.
13.7.10
You say to-mae-to, I'll say to-ma-to.
9.7.10
Just when you thought you were ripped off.
6.7.10
Summer tastes.
5.7.10
Froggy went a courtin
Way to go Jer. Saving a frog is your good deed for the day.
Mallipo pictures!!!
30.6.10
Long weekend at Mallipo Beach.
When we got up on Saturday it was pissing rain here in Miho and the forecast for the area we were headed called for rain all weekend. We have yet to buy any rain gear despite the oncoming rainy season, so we debated about whether or not it was worth going to the beach if it was going to be raining. Finally the decision was that if we are from the West coast of BC then we are pretty pathetic if we can't handle some ocean rain and we packed some warmer clothes then we originally intended and headed out the door.
What a beautiful place!
The town itself leaves something to be desired, but at least it was unlike any place we had ever been. Along the water is a street lined with seafood restaurants on one side. They eat all the seafood that we don't in Canada, so the tanks to showcase the possible meals were filled with crazy shaped shells, eels, sea cucumbers, rays, weird looking rock fish and flat bottom fish with their faces sideways and skewed. We didn't end up eating any of it, however, because Jeremy isn't the hugest fan of seafood and after we had a bad experience at our first restaurant with just feeling unwanted, we decided to save some money and have some fun and cooked the remainder of our meals in our room. Besides the bustling main street, the town had a kind of deserted ghost-town feel to it. There were lots of empty lots and abandoned buildings with hotels scattered randomly throughout. To add to the ghost-town feel was a small amusement park that was mostly abandoned and broken down. One ride was still running and that was a huge swinging boat that amounted in lots of screams from the few people who rode on it. Even that ride was looking rough though, it's sign that once said "Viking" now had "Viki" lit up in fading red lights. During the day it was all quite amusing, but Jer and I went to check it out at night and it gave me the creeps.
It turns out that there was an oil spill in the area in 2007 and we assume that this is the cause of this state of abandonment in Mallipo. They had pictures of the cleanup. There were so many people there working together to clean up the spill. It made me cry, of course, and Jeremy commented that it is clear that BP was not in charge of this one. Way to go Korea on getting it done so fast and so well!!!
Mallipo beach is really beautiful and because we were there on a semi-rainy weekend and not during peak season, it was not very crowded either. It's over 3km of sand with great rocky areas at either end. There are also some cool pine forests to walk through. The pine trees here are really cool. All the needles point upwards and the branches start high up, making them distinctly Asian compared to what I'm used to. The tide there goes out really far and the beach opens up and feels almost as wide as it is long. When the tide was really far out Jeremy and I walked along the rocks that were exposed and saw some really great rock cliffs with layers upon layers of pink, white and all shades of beige rock. The tidal pools didn't have much life to poke at, but they had plant life that was the most amazing pastel turquoise and lavender. Finally Saturday evening it rained as was promised and we strolled along the beach getting soaked head to toe.
That night Jeremy and I passed out early from a day of traveling and exploring only to be woken up by the distinct sound of the shouts of the Reds!!! Thank goodness the soccer fans are so loud or we would have missed the game. We sprung out bed after missing the first 10 minutes of the soccer game and the first goal against South Korea. The rest of the game was really fun to watch. South Korea dominated the play. They played like the deserved to move on to the top 8, but, unfortunately, they didn't score like the deserved it. I'm not sure if it is better to lose playing the best you could and knowing you were the better team or to lose to a team that outplayed you. Whatever way is the easier way to lose, it was pretty sad to watch Uruguay jumping up and down celebrating a win that they didn't deserve. So much for that soccer season.
Sunday started off cold and shrouded in mist so dense that you couldn't see the other end of the beach. Jeremy and I walked out to an island that was connected to the mainland during low tide. It was really cool and we got to watch people diving for shellfish and listen to them calling to each other across the still sea, their voices echoing against the rocks. When we walked back off the island the tide was moving in faster then we had anticipated and what had been a large bridge of land connecting island to beach was then a thin strip of jagged rocks. We were lucky to have not decided to stay another half hour or so on the island because when we watched fishermen coming back to shore after us, they had to struggle pretty badly to make the gap.
We sat and watched the mist lift and as the sun poked through the clouds the air became instantly hot and what was supposed to be a rainy Sunday turned into a sunny, beautiful day. We spent the better part of the afternoon lounging in the sun, reading, playing frisbee, wading in the ice cold water. By dinner time most of the tourists had headed home and by sunset the beach was almost empty. As the night grew dark the virtually empty streets of Mallipo really did feel like a ghost-town.
I'll post pictures when I get around to going through them. Right now, however, I have to do my homework.
23.6.10
The shouts of the reds!
The Red Devils (Korean soccer fans) take this very seriously!
This is the official song of the World Cup... hard to imagine I'm already sick of it! Go Korea Go!!!
Here it goes!
So here it is, a blog of my time in Korea.