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Tuesday, April 30, 2013

The Jecheon/Chungju/Seoul Marathon

So today is Wednesday, May 1st. It is my first scheduled day off so last night I celebrated by drinking iced coffee and painting toy models until 3AM, then sleeping in until 9AM. Yes, that's right, I said 9AM. That's sleeping in now. But I did mosey around the house and thought about going out to do "something." Then I realized I haven't posted about the past weekend on my blog like I had promised. The photos were disappointing but they did happen. I know our friends took some and as they appear on Facebook and through email I will share them.

Friday Night. 

Megan and I went out to Mega-box to see Iron Man 3 in 3D. We ate at one of our favorite Korean Chicken chains, then got some Hoddeok. Imagine a pancake with the filling from a cinnamon sugar pop-tart, then deep-fry it. Hoddeok is really good.

Corn HoTteok big1 Street Food: The Famous Insa dong HoDdeok

A good explanation of the lovely little morsels. Photo and link credit to the site linked below.
http://zenkimchi.com/FoodJournal/featured/street-food-famous-insadong-hoddeok/

My most important lesson Friday evening, movies are BYOB. I believe my response was "I can bring a 40 into the movies?"  when the group of young men were sitting in front of me with straws.

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When we got home we told our matriarch, Debbie, that she should go see the new Iron Man. As she is surfing movie times she informs us that Iron Man 3 is not in theaters in the USA yet.

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So we hop in the taxi and go home to bed. The next morning we have a wedding outside of Jecheon to go to.

Saturday

It's everything I wish weddings were in the USA. Short, requiring only business casual attire, and the food is more delicious than it is pretty requiring no vest-wearing-servers to bring it to you. The wedding started at 1PM.  I was back home in Chungju and then on a bus to Wonju by 5PM. Lovely, memorable, and painless.
Megan's cousin and her new husband.

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Our reason for heading to Wonju was "Megan's cousin" (you will see a trend in future posts, I will make an acronym for this phrase when I see it fit) Ton Gue was invited to come to Seoul with us on Sunday. He is a bit younger than us, but his English is pretty good making him a welcome addition to our travels while navigating Seoul. By the end of the day on Sunday he will have saved our dumb-waygook-bums multiple times in the maelstrom of Seoul's public transport system. Our contribution to him: a burrito, some french fries, and some impromptu English lessons while riding the bus. I felt quite inadequate in our gratitude for his help. Nevertheless, we stayed with Megan's uncle and associated family in Wonju before leaving for Seoul in the morning. We ate takgalbi and drank beer for dinner. It was delicious.

Ton Gue, Ryeong Hae, Me, Megan
Sunday

We rise from our food-baby-induced-slumbers and slowly make our way to the bus station. From 11AM until approximately 1PM we ping-pong from bus to subway to train to taxi before finally arriving at the iParkMall. It is jawdroppingly intense. Coming from Scranton, PA, USA anything with more than two flights of stairs is a large building. The iPark Mall is an 8FL city block of toys, electronics, designer boutiques, restaurants  and even a an open air courtyard centered on the 4FL. There are marble and slate steps that go on like a hiking trail. (Insert Rocky theme music.) After running up and down stairs like an old Italian boxer, we settle on the fact we need food. After a 15 minute stroll around the 3FL food court we decide on burritos. Yes, they have burritos in Korea, along with milkshakes, Coke, and french fries and they are all delicious. But the stairs have become the most noticeable daily difference for Megan and I to handle. Stairs in Korea do not follow rules. They are slippery, covered in jagged metal boot catchers, and have no problem  having unequal sizes mid-stairwell. That disgusting feeling when you over shoot the top of the stairs....every goddam day in Korea. I swear that the escalators may even be out to kill us. And the stairs never stop in the iPark Mall.

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THE TAMIYA STORE

But my main mission in going to Seoul was going to the Tamiya PLAMODEL store. In the USA I enjoyed playing with "real" cars. In Korea, the necessity to own a car is non-existent. I can go wherever I want and never touch a set of keys or a gas pump. But.... I do miss my tools, and I do miss "my car".

Me and my car :(
Yey! New Toys! 
 So currently I am playing with 1/24th scale plastic models. The Tamiya Company make some amazing products and the chance to see an original manufacturer dealing in Seoul was enough to justify the day trip.  I bought 3 models and some paint and as I was leaving the man at the counter hands me a NERF gun and says in very mono-tonous English... "Follow me please." He points me at a spinning wheel and gestures for me to shoot at it. I'm an American and you have just given me a handgun in a shopping mall? I'm 26 years old buying toy cars, and to show me your appreciation for my business you give me a handgun that shoots Styrofoam projectiles so I can get something more for free! Hell yeah! Sign me up. I nailed the shot and got a free RC car. (Nailing the shot is creative license. I actually unloaded on the wheel until the man's straight face turned to a slight bit of worry as I'm smiling looking at the gun making sure it's empty.) As we go to the lower floor Megan finds a stationary super store. FACEPALM. So her cousin and I mosey around the mall like we're interested in the giant rack of markers while Megan buys "ALL THE THINGS!!!"

IDK WTF THIS IS, BUT THEY SELL THEM NEAR MARKERS
After leaving the iPark Mall Megan decides that she thinks we should try to see "THE Bronze Mirror" in Korea while we are here.(I will allow Megan to insert an edit later on to state her case.) I acquiesce and we all jump back on the train to another part of Seoul. We arrive at a Christian university to find it unsurprisingly closed on a Sunday. While we are there we bop around the campus taking pictures with the sculpture and taking Lindor truffles from the evangelists. That's right they give out chocolate with their pamphlets here. "Hey talk about Jesus as long as you want...just give me another hazelnut truffle!"

Me and a horse sculpture at the university.
What you don't see is the park benches she climbed to get here and evangelist's
yelling at Megan for climbing a wall to sit on the art. Such a vandal!
Megan's disappointment wearing off after missing out on "THE Bronze Mirror."

Finally we head to the bus station to go home. (Cue the disaster music) There are no tickets out of Seoul to Chungju until 11PM. This means we wait to get home until 1AM. Megan's cousin, through whatever Korean magic, gets us on a bus at 8PM and we are safe and sound at home by 10PM.

Weekend Marathon Tally
Wedding, bus-rides to two new cities, seeing the biggest shopping mall of my life, and I got to get some toys. Mission success.

3 comments:

  1. I love it! Btw. Those little doll things are hella creepy!

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  2. I agree with Deanna, I think those little dolls are hella creepy but I kinda like em at the same time. I love the picture of Meg sitting on the statue, and of course the one of you riding air horse infront of the horse Statue. I miss you guys! This is such an awesome blog I feel like I'm there with you guys now. You should continue to make posts themed Korea vs Usa.. that's hysterical.

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