Monday, March 23, 2009

Seoul, South Korea and the DMZ!


I took a trip to South Korea!! I was there from March 18-21. It was a really good time and I really like Seoul! All of the Korean people I encountered were pretty nice and Korea is much cheaper than Japan. We stayed in a hostel in the Hongdae district which is where all the college students hang out. Honestly, the streets were really dirty... a lot of trash, but I still like Seoul. There are SO MANY American food places - Outback Steakhouse, Quiznos, Subway, Burger King, Dunken Donuts, Pizza Hut, TGI Fridays, Coldstone, etc etc etc. Not just 1 or 2... but every couple of blocks. The only non-Korean food that I ate while I was there was Mexican food. I'm pretty sure all of those food places mentioned above can be found in at least Tokyo - but I actually haven't spent much time in Tokyo outside of various inbound and outbound orientations. I'm actually going to Tokyo this coming weekend, so it'll be interesting to compare.


Anyway, I'm not sure if I liked Seoul because I'm just not used to being in a large city... or because it was actually really awesome. I think if I were visitng from America I'd still like it, though. Korean food is REALLY good. I actually had no idea what Korean food was before I came to Japan. It's really spicy... and delicious! Besides eating Korean food, I managed to see quite a bit of Seoul including Itaewon, Namdaemun Market, Gyeongbokgung - the main and largest palace of the Joseon Dynasty, Insadong Market, a tradition Korean performance at a theater, and I even made it to the Ice Bar! Namdaemun Market was really cool - it's HUGE and you can find a lot of cheap knock off name brand things. I don't really care about name brands... at all... so it didn't really bother me that the bag I purchased had a hilarious name trying to imitate some well known name brand... actually, I kind of like it more that way... but anyway. Check out these pictures from SEOUL!!!!!


Created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR.


Besides Seoul, we also took a tour to the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). This was REALLY interesting and really made the trip I think. If you ever go to Korea - this is something worth going to. You can only go if you're with a tour. It is the most heavily armored border in the world. I actually learned quite a bit on this tour. At some points along the border, North Korean and South Korean soldiers stand pretty much face to face. The South Korean soldiers have to wear sunglasses. This is mandatory. They don't want the soldiers to make eye contact with the North Korean soldiers because they don't want them to have any kind of connection what-so-ever. There used to be an American presence on the border as well, but that was taken away because conflicts kept arising due to American and North Korean conflicts. Now the United Nations has stepped in and there is a United Nations presence. There is still an American military base in Seoul. Our tour guide was really cool. She was probably in her late 20s and was dating an American English teacher who teaches in Seoul. She was telling us about how there are a lot of American soldiers and even more American English teachers living in Seoul and that the American teachers and soldiers always get into fights - especially at bars. The way she put is was something like this "there are a lot of American soldiers there who haven't gone to college and aren't educated yet and the American English teachers who have degrees have a lot of disagreements with the way the American soldiers act and they end up fighting."

But anyway, back to the DMZ. We also stopped at Imjingak Park which is home to the Freedom Bridge. You can also buy North Korean beer there - the only place you can buy North Korean beer outside of North Korea... so of course I purchased some. We got to go into the Third Tunnel - which is 1 of 4 tunnels the South Koreans have discovered - the last being in 1990. They believe there are about 20 tunnels total. Our tour guide was telling us how she remembered when they found the 4th tunnel in 1990. She was a little girl and said that she remembered everyone had to be in early and at night they had to keep their lights off... she said it was creepy. The tunnels were dug by the North Koreans and run from North Korea into South Korea for the purpose of moving troops during the war. The North Koreans tried covering up that they were the ones who dug the tunnels. One tunnel was coated in coal because they wanted it to look like they were mining for coal - there is no coal in that area to mine for. They tried saying the South Koreans were the ones who dug the tunnels - but the direction of the explosives are in the direction from North Korea to South Korea. There are other clues which prove that the North Koreans were the ones who dug those tunnels. They are still looking for more.

Another intersting stop was Dorasan Station. They hope to make it a regular passenger stop once North and South Korea reunite... I have a feeling that won't be anytime soon... but what do I know? It's just an empty station now. I think the tracks are used for supplies. We also went up to Dora Observatory. You are supposed to be able to see North Korea from there... but the day we went it was so foggy you seriously couldn't see 10 feet in front of you. Stupid fog. It was still pretty cool though.

Check out these pictures from the DMZ tour!


Created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR.



Monday, March 16, 2009

Ohori Park, Fukuoka


Sunday I spent the day in Fukuoka city with Meng, Richard, and Jimmy. We ate at a famous ramen shop... with the best spicy ramen I've ever had! After that we went around to all the big, foreign name brand stores. I thought those stores were expensive in America... but they are even more expensive in Japan. We went to Ohori Koen (park), too. The weather was awesome and the park was really pretty. I even spotted a few Cherry Blossoms (Sakura)! It was a nice afternoon. We ended up meeting up with one of Jimmy's co-workers who lives in Fukuoka and we ate burgers and fries at this little restaurant. The burgers were fantastic! We finished out the day at an Irish pub in order to somewhat celebrate St. Patrick's Day. We caught the very last possible train back to Ube and got back at 11:30pm. It was a nice day. Check out these pictures from the park! ***Jimmy took the picture of us on the right... so photo credit goes to him... it's a nice shot -> -> ->


Created with Admarket's flickrSLiDR.

We also took "purikura!" Purikura is short for "print club"... you take your picture in these photo booths and they have all kinds of fun backgrounds to chose from. After you take the pictures you use a machine to draw things on the pictures and add on all sorts of different things. It's a lot of fun and everyone always looks good in purikura!


*We accidentally put the wrong date on the purikura... supposed to be 3/15/09... oops!*

Monday, March 9, 2009

New Bike!

One day last week I was riding my bike to work and the back wheel went completely flat... and the rim did something rims shouldn't do. It might have had something to do with the fact that I'd been riding it with flat tires for a good 3+ months... but it was also a really old bike. The seat was wobbly - really wobbly, the basket was majorly dented, the kick stand barely worked, and the lock was tricky. I ended up pushing my bike the rest of the way to work that day... it also happened to be raining. My supervisor told me that the guy before the guy that I replaced rode around on my (now old) bike for 3 years and he weighed over 100kg (over 200 pounds). It was a pretty old bike that served its purpose. The school said they would buy me a new bike, but they had to temporarily fix the wheel until the next day. It got me home that day, but by morning the tire was flat again and I had to walk to work - making me late for the 2nd day in a row. I'd never been late before those 2 days - and it was fine because it wasn't my fault. I went to the store with my supervisor and this is the bike we ended up with:






Besides getting a new bike, nothing too exciting has happened. Work is beyond boring. Last week was exam week for the 1st and 2nd years, so I had nothing to do. Beginning this week is spring vacation - for students, not teachers. It's kind of stupid. Nobody has anything to do - I swear everyone is just pretending to be busy... some people flat out sleep at their desks. The new school year begins April 8th. Until then, I will go to work everyday and try to keep myself busy - mostly with some self study books that I have. This Friday there's a prefectural seminar for Yamaguchi JETs in Yamaguchi city. It's the last one. I guess people who are finishing out their contract and not renewing get information about departure. I'm glad I get a day off from doing nothing! Self study gets boring after the first 4 hours.

This past weekend was really nice. My friend Saranne had a nabe party at her house. Nabe is cooked in this big pan on the table and there's a base soup and you put in veggies and meat and eat it - it was delicious! It was a really nice time. Sunday night I went to dinner with my new friend Jimmy. We met randomly at YouMe Town the same day I had my party - Feb 27th. He's actually in the 1st picture I posted from my March 2nd post - the white guy in the middle. He lives closer to me than any of the other foreigners in my area which is really nice. Anyway, we went to this yakiniku place. It was good. Good food, good time.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Hey, it's March!

I had a small party on Friday... about 10 people came... it was really fun!



Sunday was graduation... it was pretty boring. I skipped the teachers' party that night because I just didn't feel like going... and I was being lame. Oh well - there will be others.


The entire school had to attend graduation and teachers had to be there for an entire working day (although, my supervisor let me leave around 1pm... before I told him I wasn't going to the party at night because he thought that I was... ha...). Since Sunday was a working day, all schools that had graduation yesterday now have a "substitute holiday" today - Monday. All I've done today is sleep in, go to the grocery store, watch movies and tv online, and eat cookies and pizza. I might do laundry later, but that's about all I have planned.


One last thing before I get back to my tv shows and cookies:
HAPPY BIRTHDAY MOM!