Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Day 39 - Laundry and Sogang University

Today was another tedious Monday! I made it through class and went with my roommate to eat lunch at one of the cafes on the Yonsei campus called Crazy Brown. I had bibimbap for lunch (typical me!).

After lunch I had to do laundry, which is always a couple hour long ordeal because the dryers in the laundry room at my dorm do not work very well so you have to do two or three cycles for the clothes to actually get dry.

At first I decided I would just hang up my clothes and not use the dryer at all. I put them on a rack my room but they didn't get dry because the room was so humid. Since I didn't have enough room on the rack, I mistakenly thought it would be a good idea to spread them out on my bed since there was so much empty space. I was wrong. When I went to go to bed, I realized that my blanket and sheets were wet from the clothes so I had to go dry all of my clothes and bed stuff and it was all a big fiasco!

The entrance to Sogang University

After two of my friends got out of class at 6:00 pm, the three of us went to Sogang University to run on their track and kick a soccer ball around. Sogang is about a 20 minute walk from our dorm. The campus is quite nice! It reminded me a lot of the Busan National University campus that I visited over the weekend.

The K-Pop dance group holding a pose

There was a K-Pop dance group practicing on the field while we were there, which was interesting to watch. They would strike a pose and hold it for five minutes straight!

Another angle of the field at night

After a few hours we were hungry so we went to a place that we frequently visit (although the name eludes me) that serves big meals of spicy fried rice with meat.

After dinner, I came back to Yonsei University to do my homework and struggle with my laundry before finally going to bed.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Day 37, 38 - Busan and Soccer Game

Sinchon Station totally empty at 7:30 am on a Saturday

I woke up early Saturday morning so I could make it to Seoul Station in time for me to catch my 8:50 am train to Busan, Korea! Busan is the second biggest city in Korea and is located on the southeastern coast of the Korean peninsula.

The inside of Seoul Station

It took me longer than I expected to get to Seoul Station from Yonsei University so once I got to the train I only had 10 minutes before the train departed. When I tried to board the train, I couldn't get on because I actually only had my order confirmation and the train employee told me I had to go use the confirmation to my ticket, so I sprinted to the ticketing booth to get my tickets. I managed to get on the train 3 minutes before it departed! Phew!

Getting on my train at Seoul Station

While I was on the train I sat next to a very nice halmoni (할머니) which is the Korean word for grandmother. She didn't speak English but I spoke enough Korean to be able to tell her that I'm a student at Yonsei University and that I'm traveling to Busan to see the city and visit my friend who lives there. She did a video chat with her grandchild and showed the baby to me so I waved to the camera and said, "안녕하세요!" (annyeong haseyo) which means "Hello" in Korean. Later on, she tried to buy me a waffle from the snack cart that came by and I kept saying "아니요! 아니요!" (aniyo! aniyo!) which means "No! No!" in Korean. However, she would not take no for an answer and kept insisting so I had to quickly using my phone to translate and figure out how to tell her I was allergic and couldn't eat it!

The inside and outside of Busan Station

I arrived in Busan at 11:30 am and called my Korean friend, 지원 (Jiwon) which is pronounced like "gee-wahn", who lives in Busan. I met her at the Boryeong Mud Festival through our mutual friend 호근 (Hogeun, pronounced like "hoe-goon"). I waited for her at Busan Station and then we headed out to go get lunch.

Eating lunch!

We ate at a Korean restaurant very close to Busan Station and had beef soup. It was very delicious! We also had pork wrapped in lettuce with spicy stuff inside. I don't actually know the Korean names of any of this, but it was all very tasty.

Jiwon and me in Nampo-dong

After lunch, we walked to the subway station and rode it to Nampo-dong, which is famous for its street markets. It reminded me a lot of the Namdaemun shopping district in Seoul. We browsed through the various vendors and walked through BIFF Square. BIFF Square is where they host the Busan International Film Festival every year which is a very popular Asian film festival.

At Bosu-dong Book Alley

From BIFF Square we walked further north to the Bosu-dong Book Alley, which is a tiny street famous for all of the bookstores on it which are all packed to the brim with books (mainly in Korean language, but some in other languages).

So many books!

It was pretty hot and we were tired so we decided to stop at a little cafe in the Book Alley and have patbingsu, the Korean shaved ice dessert. We had perfect timing because as soon as we went in the cafe it started raining and it stopped by the time we finished the dessert!

Patbingsu in the cafe. The little pitcher had condensed milk in it to pour on top.

After we finished the patbingsu, we walked to this staircase with big paintings on all the walls that tells a story in Korean. It was cool but very steep and tiring! After we reached the top, there was actually nothing to do up there so we turned around and headed back down.

The colorful staircase story

We decided to walk back south toward Jagalchi Market, which is a fish market on the harbor. There were a lot of exotic fish being sold and some vendors selling other cool things, like traditional Korean knives.

(Left) Jagalchi fish market. (Right) Standing by the harbor.

Posing at the harbor!

After we saw the harbor we hopped on the subway and rode to Gwangan Station to go see the beach. Busan is very famous for its beaches, especially Haeundae beach. However, it was really far to get to Haeundae beach so we changed our plans and went to Gwangalli beach instead.

Seeing the sights at Gwangalli beach.

Gwangalli beach was very nice but also very crowded. We walked around and tested the water (it was very cold!). We decided to walk over to one end of the beach and rest on some chairs that were set up for a Battle of the Bands/Fashion Competition to benefit a local university.

Panoramic photo of Gwangalli beach!

At that point Jiwon's friend, Alexis, came and met us at Gwangalli beach. We decided to eat raw fish for dinner (kind of like sushi without the rice) and the place we chose to eat at was really cool! You walk in on the bottom floor and they have all kinds of fresh fish in tanks and we chose which fish we wanted. The woman working there fished them out of the tanks and put them in a bucket and we all got on the elevator and went up to the 10th floor where they prepared the fish and we ate. The meal was good and it was the freshest fish I think I have ever had!

Choosing our fish and taking it up the elevator in the bucket

The restaurant we ate in and the view from the window

Posing for a photo at dinner with Jiwon and Alexis


After dinner we went back down to the beach and walked around a bit. By chance, there happened to be a Korean pop concert happening right on the beach, so we ended up seeing some Korean pop musicians perform. It was extremely crowded but really exciting, too. The most famous group that we saw perform is called Shinee (샤이니).

Standing on Gwangalli beach at night with the bridge lit up in the background!

After Shinee finished performing, we decided to continue walking down the street, which had turned into a pedestrian street by this time of night. I'm not sure if it was actually blocked off or if there were so many people that it just became a pedestrian street by force.

Video of the concert on the beach

We found some traditional Korean games set up in the street that we played. One of the games, called tuho, involved throwing large plastic arrows into a bucket and another game, called jegichagi, was similar to hacky sack. I was decent at tuho but terrible at jegichagi!

A video of me playing jegichagi

After playing the games, we decided to head out so we could make it home before the trains closed. We walked back to Gwangan Station and then headed to Busan National University, which is the school that Jiwon goes to. Jiwon was kind enough to let me stay in her apartment while she stayed with her neighbor. I thanked her profusely and gave her gifts that I brought from America in an attempt to show my gratitude!

Going down the escalator in the subway

The next day we bought a small breakfast at a convenience store and then walked to Busan National University where Jiwon showed me the practice room that she used to rehearse with her band. It was really impressive! They had a drum set, huge amplifiers, and countless guitars. We ate breakfast in the practice room and then eventually walked through campus and into the nearby area.

Busan National University campus

Playing drums in the practice room!

We ate lunch at a place called Pumpkins which unsurprisingly served pumpkins! We had a pumpkin covered with beef and cheese. It was really unusual but actually tasted really good! It was kind of like a pumpkin beef pizza.

Beef and cheese pumpkin

After lunch we went across the street to a place that is essentially a petting zoo combined with a cafe. The bottom floor is a cafe and if you pay 10,000 won you can go upstairs to the petting zoo. They had all kinds of animals there like guinea pigs, rabbits, lizards, snakes, hedgehogs, and even raccoons (which I thought was particularly strange).

At the petting zoo! The picture on the right accurately portrays my emotions while handling that snake.

After we spent a while at the petting zoo place, we decided that I needed to start heading toward Busan Station so I could catch my train at 3:30 pm. We walked back to the Busan National University Station and then parted ways. Luckily, I got to Busan Station much earlier than I had arrived at Seoul Station the day before so I had a much more leisurely experience.

A picture out of the window of the subway on the way to Busan Station.

The train ride back was pretty uneventful. It takes about two hours to get from Busan to Seoul on the fast train which can go near 190 miles per hour!

The train schedule at Busan Station. Mine is on the bottom!

Once I got back to Seoul Station, I hopped on the subway and headed straight for the Seoul Olympic Stadium because I was meeting my friends there to go to a soccer game. The game was Korea vs. Japan (the biggest rivalry) in the semifinals for the East Asian Cup. It was so much fun! People were waving huge flags and gigantic banners. The Japanese fans had brought a large drum and were constantly beating the drum and chanting for the entire game. On the Korean fan side we were chanting and cheering. One of the things we were chanting was, "대한민국!" (dae han min gook) which means "Republic of Korea!".

Giant Korean flag at the soccer game

The game was actually really close and we thought it would go into overtime but sadly, Japan score a goal in the last few minutes of the game, with the final score being Japan 2 - 1 Korea.

Video: Cheering for a near goal at the game

Video: People chanting and waving big Korean flags

After the game we were all pretty tired so I headed back to Yonsei University and called it a night!

Gwangalli beach at night

That's all for now~

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Day 36 - Field Trip and Lotte World

(I'm posting this a day early because I will be in Busan this weekend. I normally make each post the day after the actual events happen but since I won't have a computer with me this weekend I figured I would go ahead and post this. Expect the next post in two or three days!)

The main atrium at the National Museum of Korea as seen from the top floor

Although I didn't have class today, I still had to wake up early because I had a mandatory field trip to the National Museum of Korea for my Premodern Korean History class. Although it wasn't too bad of a trip, it was my third time seeing the museum in less than two months, so it was a little bland the third time around. Luckily, it was only 3-hours long including travel time.

A fountain in Jamsil subway station

After I got back from the field trip, I headed back to the dorms and met one of my friends and we went out to eat lunch at a Mexican restaurant that was recommended to me as the best one nearby and the recommendation was true! The restaurant was called Latina Grill and the woman who ran it was from Mexico. I talked with her in Spanish and she gave us free nachos and free dessert! I got tacos for lunch and they were very good. It was a satisfying experience compared to the other restaurant we tried.

A picture of the inside of Lotte World. It doesn't quite do it justice.

After lunch I headed back to the dorm to meet up with a group of friends who were going to Lotte World, which is like the Disney World of Korea. Lotte is a mega-corporation that owns everything in South Korea (an exaggeration of course but they sell/own "candy, beverages, hotels, fast food, convenience stores, retail, financial services, heavy chemicals, electronics, publishing, IT, construction, and entertainment". They even own two baseball teams). I guess in America it would be like Walmart World or something, haha. I went with about 10 other people and it took us about an hour to get there on the subway. Lotte World is actually an indoor amusement park connected to the subway station so we didn't have to bear any of the awful heat!

A view in the other direction in Lotte World.

Admission into Lotte World was only 12,000 won with a discount that we had, which was very nice. There were a ton of rides and attractions crammed into a fairly tiny indoor space (tiny for a theme park, I mean) with an additional outside area.

 
(Left) Ice skating rink on the bottom floor of Lotte World. (Right) Indoor roller coaster.

The one problem that we ran into was that the lines for all of the rides were extremely long! We had to wait an hour and a half to get onto a roller coaster and once we finally got to the front we realized were in the wrong line! Luckily that ride was still fun but it was a little bit annoying.

Flying on a magic carpet in the hall of optical illusions!

Optical illusions at Lotte World!

I spent about 4 hours there and then I left the group separately because I wanted to get home early because I have to wake up early tomorrow to catch my train to Busan.

This castle looks slightly familiar...

That's all!

Friday, July 26, 2013

Day 35 - Socializing in Sinchon

Today was the last day of class for the week and luckily it went by painlessly! After class, I went with two girls from my World History class to go get 팥빙수 (pronounced like "paht bing soo"), which is a Korean desert made of shaved ice usually including 팥 ("paht") which is sweetened azuki beans. We got coffee chocolate bingsu and regular patbingsu. Both of them were really tasty!

 
A picture I found online of coffee chocolate bingsu and another picture of regular patbingsu.

One of the girls had to leave early so I went with the other girl to Daiso, which is a dollar store, to buy some stuff I needed. After Daiso we parted ways and I headed back to the university.

After I got back to the dorm, I went and ate lunch with my roommate because bingsu is not very filling (it's just made of shaved ice!). We went to one of the school restaurants and I had jeyook bokkeum, one of my favorite Korean foods (spicy pork with rice).

I headed back to the dorm and took a nap because the afternoon sun was exhausting! After I got up from my nap I spent some time planning for my trip that I am taking to Busan this weekend.

Around 7:30, I went with a friend to a restaurant that we frequently visit and I've mentioned in a post before. We call it The Barracks and now I understand why: the restaurant is called 내무반 식당 (pronounced nay-moo-bawn sheek-tong), which means Barracks Restaurant in English. The Barracks is a Korean barbecue place that has a bunch of Korean flags hanging outside and plays nationalist music on loud speakers. We got samgyeopsal, which is like giant pieces of bacon. It was delicious, as usual!

A picture of The Barracks that I found on Google.

After dinner, we went and met up with two other friends from Yonsei and played games in an arcade together until it closed and we went home for the night.

That's all!