Showing posts with label Buses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buses. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Bits and Pieces

Digging through my camera's memory card in search of blogging material, of which there is plenty to come, I came upon some interesting photos that don't quite deserve a space of their own, but might be interesting to you nonetheless.

What are you eating?


Yes, this might not look too appetising, but I promise you it's good. This is Doenjang Jiggae. This is one of the most traditional Korean dishes. You can put almost anything in it (I used vegetables and tofu here) and then just add soy bean paste, garlic and an anchovy and you're more or less good to go. Serve with rice, and a selection of kimchi (four types above, all provided by my co-teacher).

The real beauty of this dish is the dish (sigh). The ceramic pot that this is in goes on the stove, and you cook the stew in it. Once it's ready you just pop it on a wooden block and carry it to the table. Your food stays hot for longer, and it halves the amount of washing up you have to do. Beauty.

What are you up to with your kids?







These are my kids in grades 1 to 4 of one of my elementary schools. I realise there aren't many of them, but there are only 30 kids in the entire school. We spent a couple of after school classes translating their Korean names into the Roman alphabet, and then making them into masks. I took these photos to help me remember their names. Not my greatest brainwave, given that none of their faces are visible.

How's the weather?


Right now the temperature is plummeting, as we head towards the bitter mountain winter. Apparently last year it got down to -27C here. Chilly. I bought a pair of tights the other day to wear under my trousers when it gets really cold. I somehow feel like less of a man, though probably still more of a man than I would if I didn't have the tights and certain important parts of my anatomy froze off on the ride to school.

The phot's above were from a couple of months back, when a few days of biblical deluges turned the trickle that passes through Jinbu into a raging torrent. This is maybe 6 times the size it normally is.

How about Korean aesthetics?


Bewildering. My friend Stacy and I went for a walk in the buckwheat fields, and came upon a gaudy bench and a plastic pillar box. Beats me who put them there, and why.

Probably about to throw in some awesome fall scenery then?





Yup.

What were you saying about Korean aesthetics?




That they're mental. Feature this London bus sitting in the grounds of the Kensington Stars Hotel in Seoraksan. Complete with all original signage. Almost made me pine for Willesden, but not quite. Quite why a country with such a beautiful natural landscape has stuff like this dotted about is still beyond me.

Get to Seoul much?


Not if I can help it, but with a girlfriend living just the other side of it it's getting more difficult to avoid. This sunset almost makes it look nice though, and I did feel good at this point. Mostly because I was going home.

Adios,

A

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Chuseok Diary Part 3

We left the Jjimjilbang just before 9 on Friday morning, on the second and final leg of our cycling mini-odyssey. As you'll see from the photos, we could barely have chosen a better day for it. The sun was out and there was barely a cloud in the sky, and fall had drained most of the humidity out of the days by now. We immediately headed South down the coast from Gyeongpo beach, past Anmok. We went slowly, looking for somewhere to have a bit of breakfast, but found most of the towns to consist solely of closed raw fish restaurants. Finally, as we headed over the quite spectacular bridge below Anmok and towards the military base, we finally found a restaurant open, and headed in.

As far as I can tell, Korean breakfast doesn't vary greatly from any other meal in Korea. I always get slightly strange looks from people when I tell them that I just had toast for breakfast. The idea of having what is really just a light snack to most Koreans seems to be alien, and people struggle to believe I can get through a whole morning on just bread and a bit of fruit. In the restaurant we go to, there's certainly no breakfast menu, so we opt for Seaweed soup (Emily, definitely not me) and Galbi Tang (Tom and I), which is pretty much beef stew. As usual, this is accompanied by an array of spicy side dishes. I'm actually pretty good with stomaching kimchi in the mornings these days, but really I don't think I'd want to do it every day.

With appetites satiated we set off once more, turning away from the coast to work our way around Gangneung's Fighter Wing base. The jets are flying, so we're treated to almost constant flypasts of jets coming and going from the base. Without really knowing where we're going, we actually manage to work our way out of Gangneung with not too much fuss and even work our way back onto the coast road to escape the major highways. Today's journey is a lot more up and down that yesterday's, which was simply just up and then down. Still, before too long we've sailed past the warship and submarine anf arrived in Jeongdongjin, where we brake for Powerade, shade and cereal bars.

Getting to the beach can sometimes be tricky here.

After Jeongdongjin we make our first mistake. Looking to follow the coast road we instead take a turn into the hills. We realise this after it's too late to turn back, and so face a gruelling climb up a steep hillside in the hottest part of the day. Still, at least going up hills qualifies you to come back down them again, which is always fun. We detour briefly to the beach to see if there's a quiet coast road to follow, but find our path blocked by the large cement factory below. Getting back on the road does eventually afford us a nice view of Korea's sandy shores though.



By this time we're getting more than a little saddle sore, having been at it for 4 or 5 hours already. We power on for one more hour and reach the outskirts of Donghae, the next major city down the coast. We grab some lunch, Manduguk, which is basically dumpling stew and is very, very good. Then we make another big mistake (due to none of us having anything more than a tourist map) and proceed to take the main highway out of Donghae down to Samcheok. This proves to be a terrifying experience, with huge intersections to negotiate, including one expressway interchange, and enormous earth-moving trucks flying past us about every 30 seconds. Not really what you need after spending a full day in the saddle. It's mercifully short, though seemed longer at the time, and we soon pass a sign that tells us 4km to Samcheok. It's at this point we pick up a proper pavement, and so can get ourselves out of the road finally (Korean cycling laws being somewhat more lax).

We get to Samcheok and are treated to an excellent beach barbecue by our host Huy. His Vietnamese chicken recipe is a superb end to a very, very long day. Everyone's pleased to have made it, and made it in one piece. We stay Friday night, and then haul our bikes onto the bus a head back to Jinbu the easy way.



Saturday, June 5, 2010

Jinbu AFC Debut or The Never-ending Mealtime

Everywhere you go, you find people talking about food. It's only natural. Everyone eats, and it's sensible and understandable to take an interest in what you put into your body. However, until last year I had no idea how much the average American talks about food. Empirical evidence suggests that a sentence uttered by an American in a social situation has roughly a 75% chance of being about food. This increases to around 95% if the social situation is a meal. When I got back to England for Christmas last year, I knew I wanted a curry and some roast lamb (preferably on separate days for the good of anyone in my immediate vicinity) but wasn't too bothered when that happened. Friends from across the Atlantic Ocean had their eating schedules planned out almost to the minute. Food is definitely more of an obsession for our cousins over there than it is in England. In fact, our lack of a national cuisine was often used by them as a stick to beat me with, which seems strange to me coming from a nation which, despite it's feverish commitment to artery clogging, still can´t cook a decent breakfast, thinks it invented the bagel and spends a fair amount of it's time wolfing down burritos.

The Korean attitude to food is even more obsessive. Hanshik is a real source of national pride. One of the first questions any Westerner gets asked here is "Do you like Korean food?". People can actually get quite offended if you say no. Whenever I return from a weekend away my co-teacher will ask me what I ate, and is always ready with a recommendation for whichever place I am going to. Almost everywhere in Korea is famous for some kind of food or another. I remember being taken to Icheon on my orientation course. We were taken to a restaurant which served "excellent rice". Yep, this restaurant prided itself on serving some of the best white rice in the country. Quite honestly, I couldn't tell the difference.

The social role that food plays here is also hugely, hugely important. In my town at least, restaurants outnumber bars by about 10 to 1. Eating out is fairly cheap here, so people do it far more often than in England. Every single occasion is, begins with or ends with a meal. I wonder (without wishing to be flippant about people in poverty) if anyone is ever really hungry here. One meal seems to follow immediately on from another. Sometimes this is fine. Everyone likes to load up on food once in a while, but when all this eating takes place over the course of a football tournament, you wonder how sensible it really is.

I was very much looking forward to making my début for the town football team. Despite having to get up at 6.30am on a Sunday morning (it was never like this for the Brecknock) I was really pleased to get to play some proper football. On the sounding of my alarm ,I jumped out of bed, ate a breakfast of scrambled eggs and a banana milk for energy, and headed out. The tournament was being played in Ansan, and featured four other teams. Ansan is over the other side of the country to us, a good three hour bus ride away. Understandably then, an hour down the road the bus pulled off the road and stopped at a diner, where breakfast was laid out. I was still pretty full from my own breakfast, and so just picked at a few things. This was immediately interpreted as me not being able to eat spicy Korean breakfast due to my delicate western palate, and the captain's son Phil was despatched to take me to the convenience store instead. Incidentally, my delicate Western palate would have it's revenge later. After failed attempts to persuade Phil that I was OK, I consented to him buying me some kind of chocolate bar. We got back on the bus, and continued on the way to Ansan.

When the bus next came to a halt, I looked out of the window to see this:

The impressively modern "Wa" stadium stood in front of me. "We play here" said one of my team mates. I was doubtful, and proven right when the bus then drove around the stadium to a training pitch at the back. Still, it was a very nice facility, and probably one of the better pitches I have ever played on. Having the stadium in the background lent it a bit of a professional air too. Take a look at the photos below.



And so the time comes for me to make my debut for Jinbu AFC. It's a good debut too, as we twice sweep through the opposition to go 2-0 up inside the first ten minutes. I score the second, as the opposition goalkeeper somehow manages to fail to stop my completely mishit lob. We continue to play all of the football, but show a worrying tendency to concede goals, as the opposition score twice on what are almost their only two forays into our half. Fortunately, we grab a late winner and sit down the victors, 3-2.

Just as I have grabbed a drink of the horribly named Pocari Sweat (Gatorade, basically) and sat down, the captain grabs my arm. "Alex, lunch" he says. It's 11am. Behind the stand we're sitting in, a picnic of fruit, kimbap and kimchi pancakes has been laid out. I sit down, and pick at a couple of pieces of fruit. The captain hands me a cup of beer, followed by a cup of makoli. Again, it's 11am. We have three more games of football to play. This kind of behaviour would barely be acceptable in a cricket tournament. Once again, my reticence in eating and drinking meets with a mixture of confusion and suspicion, but I am determined that I'm going to enjoy my football, and not run around trying not to be sick.

We run almost straight from the picnic area to the pitch for game number two. The lunch has had predictable effects and the pace of the game is incredibly slow. The Jinbu tactic of spreading the ball to the wings is effective in as far as it gets the ball to our wingers. Worryingly they have more than a little of the Theo Walcott about them, in that their delivery is sometimes erratic, and sometimes just plain rubbish. And the only person not too laden down with beer and pancake to get in the area is me. Our build up play doesn't reap any rewards and our defensive frailties re-appear. We eventually lose the second game 2-1.

I sit out the third game, which is probably a good thing as the sun is now blazing down, and the possibility of sunstroke is now very real. On the whole, I prefer playing football in the rainy British winter. Two almost completely immobile sides knock the ball around in midfield. Failure to pick up the one player on the opposition who even looks like a footballer leads to another defeat, 1-0.

After that, unbelievably, I am dragged off for lunch number two. This is a hearty bowl of ddak gae jang, a particularly good chicken stew made with red pepper paste. It's actually a favourite dish of mine, but not in the middle of a football tournament in 85 degree sunshine. My teammates once again assume I'm a wimp, so I have a small bowl just to reassure them that I do in fact like hot food. They look dubious, and fill their bowls to the brim with the stew. Of course, more beer and makoli are needed to kill the spice, and my team is starting to look a little drunk.

We play the final game, which has stopped looking like any kind of competitive match and is now looking like a game of keepy-uppy after a particularly good barbecue. Occasionally a player makes a run, but I think it's almost seen as bad form at this point. I start to want to go home. Travelling halfway across the country to play in this doesn't really seem to have been worthwhile.

The tournament ends, and we get changed and get back on the bus. I'm tired, sore and sunburnt, so the opportunity to sit quietly on the bus for a few hours is very welcome. I think I might even have a little snooze. It's been a long day already. Of course, just as I close my eyes, the bus stops back in Ansan. Surely, surely, no one could possibly want to eat more. Apparently they do, as we all pile into a seafood restaurant and sit down. On the floor. This is exactly, exactly what I wanted to do at this moment. A giant plate of tentacles is placed in front of us, along with a beansprout soup with ice in it, and a bowl of rice. Obviously, there are also about 30 bottles of soju on the table as well. The tentacles turn out to be really good though, mostly by virtue of being comfortably the hottest thing that I have eaten in Korea. Much is made (mostly by Koreans) of how hot the food is here, but up to this point I hadn't really been that impressed. This however, has a lot of punch. It's probably about the same level of spice of a not too lethal vindaloo. I get through it OK, which is more than can be said for a lot of my team-mates. I look around to see iced soup being poured into bowls of rice and squid, and people desperately fanning air over their burning tongues. I sit, smile and keep chewing. Not such a delicate palate after all. Then an old man from one of the other teams comes and sits next to me. As he tries to talk to me in English, he runs his hand up and down my thigh. I'm pretty sure this is just how old men treat their juniors here, rather than an advance. I don't know though, maybe he finds my creamy white skin exotic. Anyway, probably not what I really wanted at this point.

Team-mates


We leave the restaurant around 3pm. The Jinbu AFC record reads: Played: 4, Won: 1, Lost: 3, Breakfasts: 1, Lunches: 3, Beer: quite a lot, Makoli: 1 kettleful, Bottles of soju: too many to count. Finally though, we are on our way home, and doubtless everyone will simply sit down and go to sleep. This is OK. Though I am now a bit drunk, I can have a nap and I'll still be fine to face school in the morning. Then, this happens:



Yes. What you can see above is people moving through the bus, forcing everyone to drink beer mixed with soju, and also forcefeeding them rice cakes wrapped in seaweed, all accompanied by the absolute worst pounding dance music I have ever encountered. The ghost of 2unlimited is clearly turning in it's grave. How far things have fallen since the glorious mid 90s. The real nadir comes with a hideous techno remix of the YMCA, which goes down surprisingly well with my (probably homophobic) compadres. All of this reminds me of a time I went on a charity fundraiser travelling from Exeter to Liverpool and back. A lot of stuff like this went on. That's excusable, as I was 18 and an idiot. Most of the people on this bus are in their 30's or older.

On our return to Jinbu, there is still one more meal of cold noodles to eat and yet more soju to drink. I am by now drunk and fed up. I have been out since 6.30am and it's now getting on for 8pm. I am also forced to make my second ever speech in Korean (consisting of me mainly saying hello, and I like Jinbu). I finish my noodles and join some of the guys outside. I am definitely not going to be well tomorrow, as you can probably see.

And so it proves. I get in at 8.30, and pass out, waking again at 4.30am. I spend the following day at school in a daze, and at one point get the shakes during my third class. I really, really hate working with a hangover. It's just about OK if you're sat in front of a computer all day, but when faced with a class of Korean teachers it's definitely not cool.

In conclusion I should say that I did actually have a pretty good day. The above makes it sound pretty awful, but I've focused on the uncomfortable and awkward parts as they are generally the funnier ones. It was great fun to meet everyone involved with Jinbu AFC. They are a very funny and generous bunch, and I look forward to playing for them in the future. It also inspires me to keep going with learning Korean so I can communicate with them a bit better; while football may be the universal language, it's not a lot of use for telling a Korean that you've already eaten breakfast.

OK, until next time.

A

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Stuff that doesn't really merit a blog post to itself.

New Bike

When I moved here I inherited a bike from the previous incumbent. It sat out all winter in the snow and I didn't think to move it until the weather cheered up. When I did I found that what I'd inherited was a heap of junk. It couldn't me taken higher than the third cog on the rear gear shift without the chain slipping almost constantly, and even then I had to be fairly careful of putting too much pressure on the pedals. The front cog was also stuck on the lowest cog, so I ended up cycling around the town with my legs going much faster than I was.

I decided that I'd shell out and get something decent. I live in a beautiful part of the world here and there a plenty of wonderful (if mountainous) cycling opportunities. So here she is, my as yet unnamed new machine. Isn't she beautiful? If you have any name suggestions please feel free to leave them in the comments section.

New camera

You may notice a slight increase in both the quality (as in megapixels rather than the skill of the photographer) and quantity of photos on here. That's because I also bought a new camera to go with my new bike, the plan being to cycle off into the Korean wilderness and bring back lots of lovely digital images for you. Here are some to start with.

Further up the valley.


Field in the hills to the East of Jinbu

Korean chickens. Hope you like them Mum.

Trees on Trucks

This is a curious phenomenon in my part of Korea. Most days I see at least one lorry carrying a decent sized pine tree to one place or another. I'm not quite sure what's happening, but it can be rather dangerous. The trees swing out from the back of the lorries when they corner, and the drivers seem to be oblivious to this fact. Following a caravan of four tree lorries along a twisty road I saw more than one car almost wiped out my a fast moving cloud of pine needles. Korea: mental.

Gyeongpo beach and the Dome House

On Saturday I took my first proper trip to the beach. I put my feet in the East Sea / Sea of Japan for the first time, and found it to be almost unbearably cold. Still, the sand and the sunshine was nice. I also ate lunch at The Dome House, which turned out to be rather disappointing from a food point of view, and the fact that they didn't have a basil plant for sale. Still, an interesting setting. Here be the photos:

Looking North from Gyeongpo

Out to sea.

Pine tree on the beach.

The Dome House from the road.

The dome house interior.

Korean Lesson

It's late, and I don't have time to delve into the phrasebook, so here's a useful Korean word for you:

자전고
Ja-jeon-go
Bicyle

Toodle-oo,

A
A

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

What's drinking in Korea like?


This weekend I finally spent my first night away from my little safe haven of a town, where I now know pretty much every shop on every street, and headed for the bright lights of the big city. I went to visit an ex-student of mine from Guatemala, who has been awarded a scholarship to study for his masters here. This was a friend who I thought I may never see again, so it was nice to be reunited after just a few months. Such a reunion, combined with a couple of birthdays, inevitably led to drink being taken, and led me to today's topic.

On Sunday morning, around 5am, I woke up fully clothed on top of my bed in a "love-motel" in Suwon. This perhaps is not as bad as it sounds. I had chosen to stay there, as they are cheaper than normal hotels, and this one was less seedy and more smart. There was even a guy staying there with his kids; at least I sincerely, sincerely hope they were his kids. Anyway, the reason for my unbecoming state is named soju (소주).

Soju is almost the only Korean spirit. At least it is all I see drunk out here in the country. Just as almost every meal that you eat is served with kimchi in some form or another, so no group of Koreans in a bar or restaurant is without a, or more usually several, bottles of soju. It is a strong rice wine, usually about 20% alcohol by volume and sold by the half litre.

The price is the first indicator that what you're getting into may not be the best for you. A half litre bottle in a grocery store retails for just less than a dollar, which means you're buying more or less a bottle of wine in terms of units for around 60 pence. Go to your nearest store and try to buy a bottle of wine for that. You can't, of course, so buy the cheapest one you can find. Taste it and you'll begin to see what we're dealing with here, and you're drinking wine which costs about four times the price.

In terms of taste, soju is not really too bad. The closest thing I can relate it to is when in one of my much, much younger days I mixed vodka with water. It's not unpleasant, but it is entirely unremarkable. Where it really kicks, or at least it really kicks me, is the following morning. I have hardly drunk the stuff since I have been here, but each time I have it has left me with a disproportionately large hangover. The Sunday morning in question was no different. It left with me with a bastard behind the eyes and a general sense of confusion. Almost exactly what you don't want faced with a four hour bus journey in a country where you lack the ability to construct all but the most basic sentences. I blame soju for the fact that I read my seat number as the platform number at Suwon bus station, thus missing my bus and adding another hour on to an already near unbearable journey.

So, as you may have guessed, I am not the biggest soju fan. I am definitely in the minority here. Soju is everywhere you go. There is even a bottle in the fridge in the teachers' room at my school. Korean socialising simply would not happen without soju. Koreans can be a little awkward (hence the reason I feel fairly at home here) and so it seems to help them a lot if they get drunk. Binge drinking is definitely acceptable here. At the beginning of work dinners that I have been to a huge amount of bottles will be placed on the table and the men start furiously gulping down shots. People are drunk within half an hour, but seemingly having a wonderful time. I get more English spoken to me at teacher dinners than I ever do at the school, so I guess in this way it's a positive thing that everyone's hammered. Anyway, it's quite an interesting cultural difference between here and the UK. Most of the professional events I have been to at least try to seem as if it's not just an excuse for everyone to get shitfaced.

At a personal level I haven't really done that much drinking in Korea. Being out in a quiet town and surrounded by people who don't drink has mostly killed my desire to drink anything. Hence there's been a bottle of wine in my cupboard for almost a month and a bottle of soju in the door of the fridge for just about the whole time I have been here. Previously, this would have been unheard of in one of my residences. Still, I think it does me good - once again weight seems to be dropping off me quite nicely and I feel pretty energetic all week for not boozing the whole time. Could it be I'm growing up? Not if last Saturday is anything to go by.

I think that's about it from me for now. I'll leave you with a few photos courtesy of Quique's Facebook, as my camera is out of action. Until next time...

A