As you may know, I love traveling and living in different countries and usually when I am abroad, I keep everyone posted through this blog.

My latest adventure is teaching English in South Korea from November 2010-November 2011. Happy reading!

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Cooking Day



Hello Everyone. So every Friday, instead of teaching a normal lesson (right now, it's phonics) we have our classes in the kitchen where the students are able to do some cooking. Our classes start off with introducing the recipe. Usually it's something small and typical Korean, sometimes it's a little more Western and sometimes it's just jam-packed with sugar and chocolate. This past Friday, we made kimbab (김밥, 김 meaning seaweed and 밥 meaning rice). It's very delicious.



So we start off by having a sheet of seaweed and spread some rice on it. Then there are many things to put inside: thin strips of carrots, cucumbers, scrambled egg and pickled radish. You lay it all out on one side and roll it up like an egg roll. It's very delicious and the kids love it.



Here are some pictures of my kids.. It looks really out of control, but Fridays are usually pretty crazy days. The video is of the kids playing an intense game of rock, scissor, paper. There was one kimbab left and by playing rock, scissor, paper is the fairest way to determine the winner. that game works for any small conflicts in the classroom. Who knew?





Sunday, May 15, 2011

Lantern Festival

Hello! The first week in May we had Thursday and Friday off, we had to work for three hours on Saturday, then we had Monday and Tuesday off for Buddha's Birthday. So it would have been six days off in a row, but we had to work for those three hours right in the middle of that break. But I'm not really complaining.



There was a huge parade full of lanterns and huge lantern floats to celebrate Buddha's birthday. I took many pictures, but a lot of them were blurry. I should know how to use that camera by now. I've had it for years.



After the parade finished, we went out in Myeongdong, a part of Seoul with many clubs and bars. There are no bars in the town I live in, so I was excited to get out and do something besides drink -- which is dance and drink.



We just got a hotel before we went out, which sometimes is hard to find because we were in the 'foreigner' part of Seoul and since the lantern festival brought in so many people to Seoul, I was worried that we wouldn't find anything. But we did, so we headed out.

I gave the key to my friend who was staying in the same hotel, because I didn't want to be responsible for it. So when we got off the subway station to head to the clubs, some people put their stuff in the lockers so they didn't have to carry their purses and sweatshirts with them all night. Whatever.

After being out for a while, around 3 o'clock in the morning is when I get bored, need to fall asleep, or need to change bars. I decide I just want to go back to the hotel and fall asleep. I ask my friend for the key and she tells me it's in her bag in the locker at the subway stop. I was a little irritated because you don't have access to those lockers at that time of the morning, because they lock off access to the lockers and the entrances to the subway. So now we paid 80,000 won for this hotel that nobody can sleep in.



So Korea has these saunas called jimjilbangs that are very popular because they are very cheap. They are about 8,000 won per night, but it's everyone just sleeping on mats on the floor; no bed, no blankets, just the mat and the floor. So we found one near our hotel and my other friend and I paid 13,000 won for this one and we got about two hours of sleep. We were crabby the next day.

Now I can look back and laugh at it, but I wasn't laughing too hard at the time. I remember I got back to Inje and slept for six hours, or something like that. It was a fun trip though. It seems like something like this always happens to me when I go to Seoul. So I think I need to plan my trips better...

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Beer Olympics in Chuncheon

So a couple weekends after our trip to Gyeongju, there was a Beer Olympics competition in Chuncheon. Chuncheon is the largest city in Gangwon-do province, and only an hour from Inje, so it's a great escape to a bigger town for the nightlife or a big department store. This time, I was going there to drink beer!

I don't know who organized it, but I think the owner of this bar (Tombstone Bar) was a Westerner, so lots of foreign teachers go there to party. Honestly, I have never spent a night in Chuncheon, so I don't know the 411. Anywho, the rules for this competition were as follows: have a team of four, create a team name and come dressed in costumes. There were to be three games played: beer pong, tippy cup and boat race (if you're not into drinking, I think I leave leave the descriptions out, just so you all think I still have my innocence.



So there was a total of 17 teams, and there were some long pauses between every game, so it turned out that all the teams just kept drinking in between the games. Needless to say, everyone was pretty drunk. Somehow, our team managed to stick together and take 3rd place. First, I think we were pretty good, but other teams left early and others just diminished because of their drunken states, so it wasn't a clean 3rd place, but I'll take it.

It was a fun change of pace. Oh, I should tell you our team name: Waygook Powerhouse 3000. In Korean, waygook means foreigner, so I wanted to stick with something international, since this is the "Olympics." There were three Americans on my team with one South African. It was a great time!



I should mention that as my 'waygook-ness' serves me, I added that I was from Minnesota on the back of my T-shirt. I ended up meeting two girls from Minnesota, so that was very pleasing. Thank goodness for Minnesota nice.

Gyeongju, South Korea

Sorry it has been forever since I have written on my blog. I guess I went on a short hiatus. I'm back anyway and I have a few stories to share from the past month. I finally started doing some things, so now I actually have some stories to tell. I'm hoping I can write a couple a week, so keep watching for little stories being published.



The First Friday in April (April Fool's Day) our boss gave us the day off and she drove us down to Gyeongju, a city about 5 hours by car. She paid for everything, including the one night stay at the Hilton. Gyeongju is a very important city to Korea's history because "Gyeongju was the capital of the ancient kingdom of Silla (57 BC – 935 AD) which ruled most of the Korean Peninsula between the 7th and 9th centuries," cited from wikipedia.org. I have to cite it because a lot of the museums and monuments we visited had most of their signs and information in Korean, so I couldn't get the full understanding of everything. And our tour guide spoke no English.



We saw many important things: Tumuli Park (where lots of important kings, queens and generals are buried ~ one hump means one person is buried and two humps means a king and queen are buried together), Cheomseongdae (which is an astronomical observatory that is the oldest surviving observatory in East Asia), Seokguram Grotto and Bulguksa Temple (which is a Buddha statue next to a traditional Temple) and Anapji Pond. All very important monuments in Gyeongju and Korea. A few are on the UNESCO World Heritage List.



I sat in the front seat so I could help my boss with the directions. She had a GPS, but sometimes she would look to the passenger seat as if I understood what the GPS was saying in Korean. Good thing I looked at a map and knew a little about what direction we were headed in. I also just looked at the map and followed the arrows from the GPS. My Korean isn't that good that I can understand. It was a pretty cool experience. I think we got lost a couple times, but that's what makes those adventures so much fun!



It was just a short trip; we drove down there Friday and arrived in late evening and had dinner and went swimming. Then we woke up the next morning and ate breakfast at the hotel and hooped on the Gyeongju City Bus Tour and saw all the monuments. The weather was great for the time of year and the trip was really educational. Definitely one I will remember.



For all those who don't have Facebook, here is a link to my album where you can see all the pics I took: https://www.facebook.com/media/set/fbx/?set=a.10100728410516420.3194090.13932786&l=154f232f20