Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Seoul Grand Park

Last week, I went to the first official meeting of SAPA, the Sungkyunkwan Academic Photography Association, and learned a bit about cameras, though not much I didn't already know. Then on Sunday, after doing homework for most of Saturday, I went with my fellow SAPA members to the Seoul Grand Park for a picture-taking adventure. Both the Seoul and Suwon chapters were there, and I met many new people. There were so many of us that we split into two groups. My group was the "global" group. In all, we knew nine languages including Russian, Swedish, Japanese, and Vietnamese.
The Seoul Grand Park includes a zoo and an amusement park, but we only had time to see the zoo. To give you some idea of how large it was, we stayed for three hours and didn't even see half of the exhibits.
Most of the animals had decent enclosures and were in good shape except for the prairie dogs. They were all balding and missing patches of fur. However, they were very lively and even approached the sides of the enclosure seemingly to beg for food from the zoo visitors.
Scruffy prairie dog
Adorable fennec foxes
There were two baboon enclosures, chimps, orangutans, and a lonely gorilla. The ring-tailed lemurs were gamboling about with babies latched onto their stomachs, but the glass was too dirty for any pictures.
Baboons

A baby climbing around

Stoic orangutan chewing away
The greenhouse had more orchids than I'd ever seen before which were quite beautiful. One thing that struck me as unusual was the large styrofoam statues erected in every room. There was a pegasus, a deer, a giraffe, and several others. I couldn't quite decide if they added to or detracted from the beauty of the vegetation.
My "global" group heading up to the greenhouse

Flowering cactus
Spiny flower bush

A backlit grove of orchids, one of many

A cute decorative basket
An exhibit was in place that featured artworks made entirely from dried flowers. Many looked exactly like paintings until you took a closer look.
The triple yin yang symbol of korea

A waterfall of seed down
My favorite part of the trip was the feeding of the lions. A zookeeper tossed whole chickens and large chunks of beef to seven or so male lions. I managed to take a video(sorry for the awful quality and sideways-ness).
Some hungry lions

A mask exhibition offered some relief from the cold while we waited for the other groups at the entrance.
Traditional Korean mask

I think this one was Native American

Spanish golden masks

Leather masks from somewhere in Africa?

Venetian Carnival mask

An acapella group was performing songs from the Lion King and others. They were one of the best I had ever heard. When they sang The Lion Sleeps Tonight, Petra(another exchange student) and I sang along rather loudly. :)

An unknown Korean song

The first half of Jason Mraz' I'm Yours

When all the groups had arrived, we went to Sadang Station for Budaejiggae, army stew. They put all the ingredients in a wok and simmer it right on the table.
With kimchi, rice cakes, ramyeon, and the obligatory hot dog
And as a bonus, some pictures of the sun peeking through clouds and smog.
Which do you like better? This one or the next one?
Leave a comment.


The street to the restaurant

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

St. Patty's Day and the National Bank

I went to Seoul twice this weekend. Once for St. Patrick's Day and once for mass and shopping!
The 12th annual St. Patrick's Day celebration was held on Saturday at the D-Cube, a giant shopping complex. I saw more white people there than I had seen in Korea thus far.
It was quite a crowd
They were serving Irish bread, scones, and stew for donations. I only tried a scone (a bit dry) and the bread, which was delicious.
It must have taken forever to bake all those

They had live entertainment as well. A few groups played what I take to be traditional Irish music. There was also a U2 tribute band and Irish dancers. The interesting thing was that most of the groups, including the dancers, were comprised of ethnic Koreans.
The U2 tribute band was very good

A Korean Irish folk group

There was face painting and Tshirts for sale in the tents

At one point, an announcer called people down to the floor to dance. The people who already knew how to do the dance went first, and then others got to join in on the second round, me included. It was tons of fun, and I got the hang of it pretty quickly. I ended up partners with a random lady who thankfully already knew how to do it, and jigged my way through two songs before they moved on to other aspects of the entertainment.

After a while, I wandered of to the shopping mall. It was a lot fancier than most malls I've seen in the US, which seems to be the general trend here. It had an open center with waterfalls dripping from floor to floor and a pool that doubled as the ceiling of the floor below.
Hanging flowers and clouds

One of the numerous waterfalls

The next day I went back for 9 o'clock mass at the Myeongdong Cathedral and was almost late! I missed the first transfer point that would have been fifteen minutes faster than the later one.
After mass, I wandered around Myeongdong and stumbled upon the Korean National Bank which doubles as a museum. It was a lot more interesting than the Federal Branch Bank in Colorado.
There was a hall for the currencies of pretty much every country in the world, a children's area, a vault replica, and exhibits of gifts from other nations.

Game station

They make benches out of their old money

Romanian currency

Chandelier

To me the most interesting thing was what the Koreans do with their damaged bills; they turn them into construction materials!
There was a fountain with nude statues, something I never thought I'd see here

The bank sandwiched between a skyscraper and a busy street

I then found my way back to Myeongdong and ate lunch at a tiny restaurant in one of the alleys. I ate samgyetang or ginseng chicken soup, with an entire cornish hen in it. Let me tell you, it was very hard to eat with just chopsticks and a spoon even though the flesh was falling off the bones.
The walls were covered in photographs

Mmm

A tiny wishbone


The leftovers
After stuffing my face, I wandered around Myeongdong and actually felt like shopping for once. I went into several stores and bought a few miscellaneous items: lipgloss, green nail polish, a stapler, a plant in a bag, and a foldable shopping bag. I could have gone crazy in  Forever21, but I'll save that for another weekend.

Friday, March 16, 2012

Samgyeopsal

So...
Life in Korea is somewhat falling into a pattern: have fun and do stuff on the weekends, class and homework during the week. Keep in mind that since I don't have class on Friday, every weekend is three days long.
This week I joined a photography club. Evidently they go out on Saturdays and take pictures of random, possibly famous places in Korea. It seems like a good way to meet new people and see more of  Korea.
I also went out with the guys from UT and a few SKKU engineering students. After meeting at the "Bridge of Dorms", aptly named by the exchange student liason for the ECE school, we went to eat Samgyeopsal, fried porkbelly. 'Twas delicious.

Part of our group. We had to sit on the floor. My hips protested.

Waitress adding a special sauce to our onions

Raw porkbelly

Waiter placing the charcoal in the table

We cooked the meat ourselves. This was the end result.
When the meat was cooked through, we either ate it with the onions or wrapped it in lettuce with other banchan. You had to be careful not to make your wrap too big. You're supposed to eat it in one bit since otherwise the juice gets everywhere.

Afterward, we went to a bar specializing in Makkeoli, a Korean rice wine. 'Twas also delicious.

At the Makkeoli bar. I forgot to turn on the flash, so it's a bit blurry.
Jeon, a kind of pancake with seaweed?, eggs, and other ingredients

I also learned a few Korean drinking games:
1. Baskin Robbins 31- Everyone counts up to three numbers and the person who has to say 31 loses.
2. 3-6-9 - You start counting, but for every number that has a 3, 6, or 9 in it you have to clap. It gets tough in the 30s. The one to mess up loses.
3. Lucky Guess - After a chant, everyone points at someone else in the group randomly. The first person says a number, and you follow the pointed hands for the designated number of times. The last person suffers the dire consequences.

The next day, I met with my modern optics group, sort of. Only one other person showed up. We had a good time though and talked a lot about the differences between Korea and America.

AND I FINALLY GOT A SIM CHIP!!!
I went with Justin and Matthias to the KT store. We got there just before closing time but managed to get SIM chips. The phones should be activated on Monday, so I'll know then if it's really going to work.

I must have spent 6 hours in various phone shops before they gave me what I asked for

I also got my student ID card. It has a chip in it and everything.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

National Folk Museum

This weekend I went with Samantha and Victor, two fellow exchange students to apply for our alien registration cards. The process itself involved about three hours of waiting in line and lots of running back and forth for photocopies, postage, etc.
And then there was the slight problem of transportation. The bus ride there took only and hour, but afterwards, we decided to get on a bus that would take us to a nearby subway station that was six stops away. Six stops and about an hour later, we ended up in Seoul. The southeastern part. Suwon is to the southwest of Seoul. So we spent another hour or two making our way back to the university via subway and bus.
The red arrow was where we ended up.
The bottom middle of the picture was where we needed to go.

We were so hungry at that point that we went to a chicken place to eat. They put chicken, cabbage, potatoes, and rice cakes into a large skillet and cooked it for us on our table. The banchan were self-serve and all you can eat. Mmm.
The uncooked barbeque chicken and cabbage

I also went to the National Folk Museum of Korea.
These totems were once placed at the entrance to villages to give protection.
The tall stick has a bird on top and served the same purpose.

Huge mill stone.
There were replicas of buildings from various eras of Korean life, both traditional and from the era after the Korean War.

The inside of a westernized Korean restaurant

A school house

Movie posters

Water wheel

Old toilet. There was likely a stream running underneath.

From the inside of a traditional house

The temple under which the museum is housed


The twelve animals of the zodiac

I was born in the year of the monkey

A tree with paper foliage from inside the museum
Miniature replica of a traditional village

Traditional dress of the high class

Beautiful vases

More totems!

This was on the floor of one of the exhibits

Some puppets recreating a parade

Rolls of fabric

Inside a high class home

These are all different kinds of kimchi

I had to include this fail!pic for the history behind it.
When a child was born, a garland was hung with charcoal
 and for a girl, pine, or for a boy, red chili peppers.

Acupuncture chart

Here they celebrate 60 years instead of 50. It takes 60
years for the zodíac and element under which one is born to realign.

Smallpox exorcism by a female shaman

Funeral beir for a high ranking official

A jessa, or table for the honoring of ancestors

Random rock pile near the exit.
After going to the museum, I wandered around a bit, ending up at the Seoul campus of SKKU, and took the subway to the Seoul forest. It was very underwhelming, but I think I'll come back in spring when it's green and not freezing with sub-zero windchill.

Look what I found!

I climbed the mountain to the SKKU entrance
and had to walk halfway back down to get to the actual buildings.

Seoul sup

They had an "Insect Garden" with a greenhouse and a few dead bugs.

Deer!

A random bridge

There was also a sculpture garden
The Seoul Forest was made up of five or six separate parks. I think I only saw two or three of them. I'm definitely coming back when it gets warmer and exploring some more.