Jul 24, 2008

Update and Photos

Outside the casino in Sabuk, with Jason's cousins David and Joy


We have spent two weeks sleeping at a co worker's house but that is finally over!  We move into our new apartment tonight! ....and then head to Japan tomorrow.  

We found a new place last weekend that we really liked.  It took a little persuading and some negotiating, but we finally got our school to agree to it.  It's not very far from our current place, just a couple of blocks and up and down a couple of hills.  The other tenants just moved out yesterday (Thursday), so we started moving our stuff in last night.  Let me tell you, if you're ever planning on moving all of your stuff yourself without a vehicle, don't plan to do so during monsoon season.  It has been raining pretty much non-stop this whole week.  So we've been running back and forth with big heavy suitcases at times when the rain has let up a little.  Not fun.  The main problem with this new place is that it is unfurnished, so we're still trying to find a bed.... looks like we'll be sleeping on the floor tonight!

Anyway, I posted some new photos from the past couple of months, too.  Check 'em out here  July has been a busy month and it's not slowing down yet.  More to come after Japan....


Jul 8, 2008

Mud, Mold and Sabuk


Well life on the other side of the world has been a little crazy lately. Fun and stressful all at the same time.  Allow me to explain.

Two weekends ago, Jason and I visited the small mountain town of Sabuk to spend some time with Jason's cousin, David, and David's Korean wife, Joy. Sabuk is the town that Joy grew up in and spent most of her life in before she moved to the US six years ago. Her parents and one of her brothers (there's 4 siblings in all) as well as her nephew all live there in the house she grew up in. 

Before going to Sabuk, I didn't know exactly what to expect, but kind of imagined a little farming village. But, in all actuality, it is a ski town. The town itself is really small with not much to it, and there is a big ski resort (okay fairly small, but big for Asia, supposedly one of the biggest in Asia) and a casino, all set in picturesque, rolling mountains covered in dense forests. We spent our time there eating a lot of tasty new Korean food- Joy's family owns a restaurant- and exploring areas around the town and resort. We also went to a beach town about an hour 1/2 away with clear blue water.

It was interesting spending time in such a small town and with a Korean family. We got to see some more of Korean culture that we don't experience in Seoul very often. Joy's parents were there, but we really didn't spend much time with them or get to know them. It is difficult because of the obvious language barrier (they speak NO English), but also just the culture is very different. Joy said that her parents are old country people and don't talk a lot, don't show a lot of emotion. But even though they didn't spend a lot of time around us, they always made sure we were enjoying the food and had everything we needed- all of this was done through Joy, of course.

This past weekend, Jason and I got to partake in a "Mud Festival" in a beach town called Boryeon, about 2 hours south of Seoul. It's a small town, known for the mud that it produces that is rich in minerals and is supposed to be really good for your skin.  Foreigners and Koreans alike flock to the town and pay jacked up prices to stay cheap hotels, and bathe themselves in mud during the festival. Everyone was covered from head to toe in mud, it was pretty funny to see. They had mud painting, a mud bath, mud slides, mud jail (if you're caught without mud on you, you're thrown in mud jail and mud is then thrown on you), massages, facials, pottery, etc.... We panted ourselves in mud, went down the mud slide, got massages, made mud people out of clay, and just had a generally muddy and good time.  The beach was great, too, supposedly the nicest one on the west coast of Korea.  So we got in some sun and just had a really different, fun weekend.

And the mold.  Around a month or so ago, we discovered that there was some mold growing on the wallpaper in several rooms of our apartment.  We researched how to clean it, and figured we would try to fix the problem ourselves before involving our school (the school pays for the apartment).  We cleaned it, but after a few weeks it all grew back... even worse than it was before.  

So we told our school about a week and 1/2 ago and we've all been trying to figure out what to do ever since. In the few days after we told our school, we discovered that it was much worse than we realized.  We looked in our closets, and found that they were covered in mold.  And then, we started finding some of our things were covered in mold as well.  The worst was a pair of Jason's shoes that had been sitting under a bed.  They were COMPLETELY covered in grey, green, white and yellow mold.  It was truly disgusting.  So that's when we decided that we need out pronto.  

Since last Sunday we have been sleeping at a coworkers house (about a block away) and spending as little time as possible at home.  It's kind of a bad deal for everyone involved.  Our landlady is trying to fix the problem, but she's no mold expert, so I don't think it's doing much.  We've been arguing with the director of our school trying to get out of our apartment and find a new place to live.    It's kind of stressful and not fun and unhealthy.  Hopefully we'll find a new place this weekend.

Sorry so long, like always.  Oh, and we head out to Japan in about a week.

Trivia:
  • What is the only inanimate sign in the Zodiac?
  • Who is the Greek god equivalent for the roman god Athena?
  • Finish this line: "Hello, my name is Inigo Montoya.  you killed my father,..."

Jul 3, 2008

Quiz Night in the HBC



Random Korea Photo of the day: Beomosa Temple, Busan


We have quickly developed a weekly tradition here in Seoul.  Every Tuesday, Jason and I and a few of our coworkers head down to a local bar in our neighborhood of Haebangcheon for Quiz Night.  There are a few foreign restaurants and bars, ya know, places where you can only find a menu in English and there aren't any Koreans in sight.   Makes you feel like you're back home, or maybe England with all the Brits around.  

But back to the trivia.  We have gone to Quiz Night almost every week since we arrived, except maybe 2 or 3.  We have won the 1st place prize of a $50 bar tab twice (the most recent time being this week, thank you), and a pitcher of beer for 2nd place, once.  Some weeks we are dead last and others we are far above the rest.  It all depends on the line up for the week.  There is one team that is there every week as well, who I believe has won every week that we haven't.  I have no clue how they do it.  There have been some seemingly impossible questions.

And that brings me to why I'm writing about quiz night: the questions.  I decided that since I have learned so much random trivia since I've been here, I might as well share some of it with you nice people.  So every time I post I will try to add in a question or two from trivia.  Feel free to post the answers in the comments if you know them.  But no Googling the questions.  Cheaters.  

  • What was Ozzy Osborne wearing when he was arrested for peeing on the Alamo?
  • How many people are on a Hurling team (and yes, I meant hurling with an 'H', not curling)?
  • What title were Courtney Love's diaries published under? 
  • What is a device for measuring latitude called?
  • Who has scored the most goals in the history of the Premier League, and how many?
  • Who is the president of South Africa?
Those are just a few I can think of off the top of my head from the last couple weeks.  Have fun, and I'll come up with more later.  

Hope everyone enjoys the 4th of July weekend, I'm sad I won't get to participate in any good ol' USA celebrations for the 2nd year in a row.  We live right next to the US army base, so any bars that are having parties for the 4th will be packed with drunken GI's.  No thanks.  Also, Jason and I are taking a trip to the countryside this weekend.  His cousin's wife is from Korea, and they are currently here visiting her family.  So we're going to escape from the big city life to her small hometown for a night.  

More to come...