Grad trip - Day 7
The jellyfish is back! This post is about my Day 7 out of the 12 days grad trip in South Korea! ^^
It is a long post, but if you are interested to read about my experience, please do so. :)
Day 8: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-8.html
Day 6: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-6.html
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Day 7: Busan Aquarium Day
It is a long post, but if you are interested to read about my experience, please do so. :)
Day 8: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-8.html
Day 6: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-6.html
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Day 7: Busan Aquarium Day
A good morning to Busan on a bright and beautiful Friday
morning. =) While SY is still sleeping, I took the idea of going out for a
morning walk before SY is awake, and set off to see the Busan area in the early
morning. With my cap and jacket on, I set off to walk around the morning market
at 7.30am. The market is very near the accommodation facility, and is really
big in my opinion! The markets are structured in a way such that different
varieties of ingredients are placed in different areas of the building. For
every area, the stalls are all placed place in parallel sides, with a 1-lane
road for vehicles in the middle. Thus if a supplier / collector would like to
drive in and order some items, he could do it with great convenience. Since
kimchi is a representable food in Korea, white cabbage is definitely abundant
in the market and can be found in almost every vegetable stall. =D The market
is very busy in the morning, and the road could attract a lot of honking if
there is a vehicle blocking the way. In the meat section, there is a lot of
meat and seafood being sold. Unlike SG markets, the area is surprisingly
cleaner and drier (the smell is still there though). Some dried food such as
mushrooms and spices were also sold there. The market is called the Market of
Memory for unknown reasons. Is that supposed to be a market from the past? XD I
actually intended to walk back to the accommodation facility right after the
market visit, but realised that I was lost and have no idea where was I, until
I saw an underground shopping entrance and thus went inside, hoping that I
could at least find Seomyeon station. That was a good choice! =D I went through
the underground of closed shops (mostly fashion) all the way back to Seomyeon.
Apparently this underground shopping tunnel connects several train stations
together, and thus people who only have to travel 1 or 2 stations could simply
walk in here, saving some money along the way. After exiting the correct way, I
bought a fresh cheese toast with egg, ham and onion from a bakery that has just
opened for business (8am). 2k+ won, absolutely worth it. =D
SY woke up later than usual, but it’s alright since we are
not rushing for time. At about 9.45am, we set off for the Busan Aquarium
located near Haehundae station (10+ stops from our accommodation facility).
Busan subway jingle is very different from Seoul, and I find them quite nice
too! After quite a while of riding, we reached the station and proceed to walk
to the aquarium. The road is undergoing some construction and thus the traffic
is quite messy. More small food shops (not really cheap) and fast food along
the way, but we didn’t have any of it. On the corner of a junction, there holds
an area with LOTS of claw machines! It’s damn cool! The only thing bad is that
there was nobody inside playing. After my bad experience in the Jeju Mini Land,
I skipped playing with any of them. =P The end of the road features the
beautiful white sand Haeundae beach. What greeted us was an array of beautiful
sand-sculptures that were mostly undergoing construction. Not sure what they
are for, but they definitely looked more professional and are protected by a
barrier. What happens if there is a sudden heavy downpour? Nobody knows. The
Busan Aquarium (SEA Life) is right on the edge of the beach, and so we entered.
At first, I thought the entrance is going to be rather big and grand, but it
turns out otherwise. We queued for a while, and paid for our tickets at 29kW
each. Among all the attractions I have planned, this is the most expensive one
and is considered a definite outlier as compared to the others. XD After
getting the entrance tickets, we entered the facility through a down escalator.
The staff told us that an entrance ticket granted us to have a photo taking
session, so we gave a slight smile to the camera. =P
The aquarium seems to be a slightly dark area, with a
temperature cosy enough for the visitors and the marine life residing in that
facility. Are aquariums supposed to be this dark? I actually expected some
bright place with exhibits similar to style like the Wisma Atria Aquarium 10
years ago, but it seems like I am wrong. XD The area of every exhibit is scaled
to the size of the marine creatures, and so you can see all kinds of different
sizes sea life in a themed area. The first area features some of the tropical
creatures, and so there were tropical fishes, piranhas, stingrays, pirarucus,
etc. SY seems very fascinated by those bigger creatures. For me I am like, hmm
ok that’s a fish, ah alright that’s another fish. Just like the Botanic
Gardens, there is seriously so many different species of fish and so it is
unwise to just simply label every fish as the freshwater / sweater type. XD The highlight of this area is the penguin
exhibit, where there is an elaborated design of rocks and water. That is
supposedly big as it features the penguin feeding show. Since we were near to
11.30, we camped around that area by looking at other exhibits first. The aquarium
was not quiet though as a beautiful Friday like that attracted various
childcare to hold an excursion for the kids. =P The children’s enthusiasm are
definitely higher as they point at various creatures and shouting random Korean
words, such great learning energy should be preserved! :D At 11.30, the show
started and a staff came to deliver the presentation by entertaining the kids,
alongside with another staff dressing up as a gigantic penguin. =D How cute is
that! The accustomed penguins also started to zoom across the waters to and
fro, attracting laugher and cheers from the kids. It is a bit of a spoiler that
we do not understand what the staff is saying in Korean, but nevertheless we
continued to be entertained by watching the penguins. =) Minutes into the show,
the feeding staff appeared in the exhibit with a bucket of fish, and OMG the
penguins are amazing! Usually, we would expect that the zookeeper will throw a
decent amount of food, and the animals will start to scamper for the food. Over
there, the penguins will QUEUE up for the food, literally! So they get in a
line, the staff hands over a food item (probably small fish), it goes off and
then the next penguin steps up and receives the food with its cute hands. =P
While the queue is not empty, the first penguin in the queue will receive the
food, and then it will be de-queued. Did the penguins do a small bow when they
receive their food? It would be cute if they had. <3 The penguin show must
be really nice, to the extent that some kids even cut across out front view by
climbing the rocks, only to be taken down by their kindergarden teachers. XD
After looking at the feeding, we left the area and proceeded to the next
section. I tried to wave around in front of the visual sensor to see the
movements of an emperor penguin, ah didn’t work that well. Shall we dance with
the emperor penguins? XD
The second part of the aquarium features a conservation
awareness campaign. It is a small dark area showing photos of past conservation
efforts by SEA Life staff, information boards of certain species becoming
extinct or has died due to illegal poaching. There are activities for kids such
as mini-games, interactive models to show the creature saving-freeing process,
etc. A kid coloured a dolphin hideously but had forgotten to free it, Jeff
completed the favour by throwing it out of the screen, and that’s saved. =P After
that conservation part, there’s another small part that showcases the turtles
which the aquarium has kept, followed by a mini rock pool where you can
actually put your hands inside and feel the creatures! There were small
starfishes, hermit crabs, etc. I didn’t touch them, but rather took some
photographs and left. A staff is there to watch over the exhibit and introduce
these creatures. The aquarium also provides a ride on the water where people
could sit on a small boat and look down at the creatures swimming directly
below them for a price of 7kW. SY is not very keen on the ride (limited
travelling area), and thus we skipped it. I actually thought that the boat goes
around the whole aquarium, but that does not seem to be the case. =/
Going down another escalator, we visited the third part of
the aquarium that features the “night SEA Life”, where creatures can be seen
due to their natural glow-in-the-dark nature such as jellyfishes. While SY
started to walk around the exhibit, I was pretty amazed by the “night beach
walk” feature where you get to see the ripple effect when you step on the “sea
water”. It feels kind of realistic, and is definitely romantic if this kind of
scene actually happens in real life. XD The area indeed has a large number of
jellyfishes, but they seem to be of a different colour due to the lights being
shone on them. An octopus was also shown, but it looked extremely sian and nua
at the side of the tank. I feel puzzled by the rubiks cubes being placed in the
tank with it. Is there any lin between an octopus and puzzle solving? O.o
Probably it is trying to illustrate the point that a person solving a rubik’s
cube is like an octopus with many hands. LOL ok that is a lousy guess! XD What
I like about this area is that there are a bit more interactive items to play
with instead of just looking at the creatures swimming about. There is a VR
zone where people could wear some glasses, and walked around as if they are in
the water. Once again, an unenthusiastic SY suggested that we skipped it. -_- A
“touch screen” wall shows the type of creatures that live in the depths of the
water, and something about fishes being baits for sea predators. O_O What else?
Ah, there is an arc where after you walk through a sensor in a certain
direction, there will be a visual wave appearing in the air. Kudos to the small
visual effect! It is really damn cool! :D
Then here it comes, the heart of the aquarium! The fourth
part features a variety of large creatures such as sharks, stingrays, gigantic
fishes, etc. A tall pink colour tank of various sea plantations and related
creatures welcomes us, but it seemed like a really popular spot for
photo-taking. So we just took a look and went off. Nothing too magnificent
about it actually. A mini gift shop is also there for people who wish to
purchase some merchandise on the spot. We sat near a gigantic tank near the
stingrays, watching them swim around and weaving in and out of other fishes.
The glass must be extremely thick to support such water pressure. =P Nearing to
12+, we passed by a stingray feeding show. That was extremely crowded as many
people were still standing behind the curved seating area. 2 staff were the
emcees, and once again we could not understand what they were saying. All the
children are happily cheering and laughing though, it must be an entertaining
show. XD The aquarium also built an underground water tunnel that is similar to
the one in the Underwater World 15 years back, except that there is no
travellator. Benches are offered to visitors for a rest while looking at the
creatures above and around you. If the lighting was brighter and there were
tables, I wouldn’t mind bring tutorials here to do. Such a nice environment! =P
Before exiting the aquarium, I requested to go another round as I had dedicated
some time to taking photos and thus not enjoyed fully. SY granted the request
and we went through the place for one more round. =D The maintenance cost of
the place must be damn high, with all the temperature regulators, water
purifiers, glasses and food for the creatures. I wonder how on earth does the
staff takes care of the large creatures. Won’t they find the job dangerous?
Kudos to their skills. =)
After leaving the underground tunnel, we reached a bonus
exhibition spot that highlights the importance of camouflaging in the marine
world. I played around with the visual-interactive exhibits by waving my hands
to discover hidden fishes. There’s another one which allows me to blend in with
the surroundings, and so after being in the hidden state, only my cap appears
in the screen, but the rest of my body and hoodie cannot be seen on the screen.
How cool is that! =D WIth that, we ended the tour around the aquarium and
proceeded to the gift shop. It is a rather large gift shop, but with nobody
customers inside. I bought a few souvenirs (whales and keychains) for memory
sake, and we proceed to have some dessert before lunch. The bingsu sold in SG is
considered quite delicious, and thus Korea should be better right? So we
visited an ice-cream shop which features all kinds of ice-cream, smoothies,
bingsus, sundaes, blizzards, etc. We got ourselves a small pat-bingsu which
turned out to be a total disappointment. =/ Well it is not really shaved ice,
but rather some normal ice flakes like the ones we have in our SG dessert
shops. The toppings are not so bad, with cornflakes, red beans, canned tropical
fruits. Ok la, it cost about 3k+ wons, I guess we shouldn’t complain too much
about the quality ya? From that experience, we aimed to find another proper
Bingsu for the remaining of the trip! :D I planned to visit the aquarium for a
longer time, but I think the kids crowd and the lack of reading the information
boards brought our trip much shorter than expected.
Shortly after, we left the aquarium and proceeded to find
some lunch. At 1.45pm, SY found a Korean shop which he was quite interested in.
The restaurant turned off the air conditioner as the air outside is cooling
enough, and we sat at one of the random tables nearer to the window. The waiter
is a young guy and unlike all the other hospitality we have received for the
past meals, he doesn’t smile at all! The greetings are still there though
(without a bow), and we were like woah ok. Emo guy. >.< There was a lunch
set promotion where a main dish was at 6kW each, and we both went for the army
stew. I originally wanted some omelette fried rice, but decided against it as
the army stew looks not bad too. ^^ So while the chefs were preparing, we
helped ourselves to the side dishes at a dedicated corner “self-bar”. The side
dishes look very nice (much nicer than the ginseng chicken one)! There were
beansprouts, chopped lettuce, spring onions, caramelized pickles, sour pickles
and roasted sesame dressing! XD Naturally, I had a lot of the lettuce and
sesame dressing as the taste is sweet. =P Nothing was wrong until we realized
that the spoons were missing and we started searching the restaurant’s common
area for the cutleries, and that is when the emo guy came to our table, open
the side drawer near SY and pointed to us that the spoons were there. That is
simply amazing, he knew what we were looking for without us telling him
directly! Again, he did not smile and simply gave a nod to us, airing an aura
of coolness around him. 8) Our army stew came thereafter, and we started
digging in. It’s a standard army stew of sausages, ham, luncheon meat, baked
beans, rice cake, kimchi and cheese. Ok, it is not bad. The cheese made the
stew much saltier towards the end, but overall it is nice enough, the food is
chewy. SY also ordered a special mixed rice where the aim is to hand-make your
own rice balls (not kimbap rolls). So how is this done? First, the ingredients
and rice will have to be mixed really well. Apparently the key to having sticky
rice balls is that there is a genuine mix of items as a biased distribution of
ingredients will allow the rice ball to easily crumble. Second, scope up a
correct mixture with your hands (with gloves of course), and that has to be
rubbed to allow the rice to stick together to a greater extent. Third, the
mixture has to be shaped into a ball and hopefully as round as possible. My
first few balls were alright, and I gave some of my creations to SY. In the
end, we sort of giving up making the balls and just ate from the mixture
directly as the taste is already good enough. :D That’s a very nice lunch, and
we gave 1k tip to the waiter, and he looked extremely stunned when he received
the extra money. He still didn’t smile, but wished us to have a pleasant
journey ahead. That’s an amazing guy, I guess he don’t receive tips because he
doesn’t smile, not because his service is bad. =P
After the lunch, we proceeded to visit Centum City at
2.45pm. Apparently that location has a super big department store and it turns
out that the honour still remains with Lotte. That place is huge! The lowest
shopping level is at B2 (with carparks to B5), and it extends up all the way to
the 10th floor! The building has its usual shopping items like
clothes, shoes, etc. However, it also has extra stuff like books, cinemas,
playground facilities all under the Lotte brand! Some common items are
expensive such as eggs, they must be organic or something special as 10 of them
cost 8350 wons. >.< The usual tidbits, sauces and spices in any
supermarkets. We walked up the various floors but passed by them rather quickly
as we did not intend to buy anything there. At the cinema level, we saw various
posters of Korean movies, some being international (Boss Baby) while some are
obviously Korean love stories. A movie ticket cost something like 11k, and SY
doesn’t seem to be interested in watching one. =/ The self-buying system is
interesting as you can choose your seats, see the price, declare the cards /
codes you have for discounts, and then get the tickets instantly. SG cinemas
may have implemented those already, but I don’t use it often. Before going up
to the rooftop, a girl with a donation box approached us, and spoke some Korean
to us. After SY told her we are not Koreans, she asked if we could speak
English and oh well, there’s no escaping the fate of a simple donation! We gave
1k each, and were quite thankful we didn’t say anything bad in English. =P
Actually I didn’t notice that she was calling us, until SY stopped when the
girl called her oppa. There’s such a cute term! When the girls called out oppa
in Korean shows, the guys will naturally be happy~ If the girl called me oppa,
I think my heart will also melt, hahaha. XD (If SH calls me oppa, wa heart melt
totally =P but too bad luh, it’s weird to call your boyfriend as oppa XD) The
rooftop has some kids’ playground, several small fish tanks, some animal
statues, a small pond and figurines (the yellow one looks like a Bumblebee,
SY’s favourite transformer). A very cool item is the showcase of a small-scaled
flying device that was used in the past, with the cogs and gears shown to
present the design. SY applied his MAE skills to analyse the design and explain
how the parts worked together, damn cool. =D
Nearer to 4pm, we went to visit other buildings near the
Lotte Mall. BEXCO (Busan Exhibition and Convention Center) is a place we passed
by and each architecture looks really big! There were only 2 buildings there,
but each of them should be like approximately twice the size of each SG Expo
hall. We cannot go inside as the doors and gates were closed though. =/ The
bridges and roads passing by BEXCO led us to the Busan Museum Of Art, with art
paintings and figures along the way. We were wondering how artists actually
manage to sell some paintings (that are hideously ugly) at ridiculously high
prices. Do the buyers really appreciate them or is it merely a gesture of
showing off? A hypothesis was that the descriptions are the ones that increase
the price of the items, and we tried our skills out on some of the extremely
simple items. It is much more difficult than we thought, and SY had a really
tough time to smoke something out. That was simply hilarious. XD The Busan MOA
is a small white building with some artistic sculptures on the exterior area, a
very pleasant place for resting. The interior is not that fantastic though, as
a lot of floors are undergoing construction and one of the floor requires a
paid ticket to go in. We walked into the paid area by accident, only to be told
by the curator that it was restricted and she apologized for the inconvenience.
=/ We went to the only floor (on the top level) and saw some paintings that
commemorate a 100-year old artist (that is dead?). Most of the artwork are
abstract, and I simply could not get the meaning no matter how hard I tried. =/
An example would be a ship, with a pole in the middle that represents an
abstract idea. How complicated. Nearer to the exit of the MOA, the open-area
galleries feature the artwork of kids on their impression of Busan in 2030. I
must admit some drawings are really nice (and even more informative than proper
artists), most gave an idea that Busan is going to be highly developed, well
equipped with technology, automated society, while some highlighted the
importance of protecting the environment or the consequence will be a polluted
future. That’s what I call a simple but good artwork, a picture speaks a
thousand words. =D We then sat outside the MOA to rest and chatted about our
school education as we are talking about kids, and talked about some of the
policies that could be improved for future generations.
Nearing to the evening, we visited the Gwangan beach to see
the sunset. It turns out that we had too much time (we reached there at 6.15)
and SY doesn’t feel like walking any further. We found a nice spot near the junction
and rested down there. The proximity between the urban area and the beach is
literally just on the opposite side of the road. Since it is a Friday evening,
it is a common sight to see couples and families hanging out there, having
picnic mats under the open sun or the shelters. SY mentioned that the Korea culture
for school students is to work hard on Mondays to Thursdays and then rest completely
/ partially on Fridays, effectively compressing the work week to have a pseudo
day off. I find that concept pretty cool, but come to think of it many students
in NTU have also planned their timetable in a way so that there is a day off.
=) For slightly more than an hour, we chatted about a lot of random stuff (e.g.
Is living in Seoul better than Busan?), played with our phones and observed the
people walking past. A good thing is that there is no need for a jacket as that
area is not really cold. ^^ If the air there was as cold as the one in COEX, I
will leave immediately. =P Nearer to 7.10, the sky starts to get a bit darker,
and the lights came in about 10 minutes later. There are purely normal white
lights, but the lighting effect on this beautiful arc makes it really pleasant
to view against a body of water. As time goes by, the metropolitan city starts
to light up, night buskers start to share their musical art, and a random boat
starts to set off firecrackers. An amazing sunset. ^^ SY seemed to like the
view too, and took some photos on his own. Glad the beach viewing made up for
SY’s Han River disappointment in some way. =)
I initially planned for a BBQ during the 5th
evening of Jeju after the hiking trip but SY doesn’t seem to have the mood for
that the other time. As such, SY suggested having BBQ on the very evening and I
agreed to it. Dinners on Friday evening can be very crowded especially in such
a crowded area. Nevertheless, we managed to get a seat at the back of the
restaurant seated beside a table of ahjumas. The ahjumas were nice and said
hello when we walked in, thus we simply smiled and bowed at them. =) The BBQ
style in Busan is very different from the ones in SG. In SG, our BBQ are all in
buffet style where you just take whatever amount you want and you will still
pay that full price. This is unlike Korea where you order the portion you want,
and pay the proportional amount too. Although SY likes meat, he does not seem
to be really familiar with the words on the menu and thus I took out my KLP
notebook and guide for a reference. The waiter (a bit plump and cute) patiently
waited for our order, and we ended up ordering 3 servings of pork belly after
knowing that chicken isn’t an option in the restaurant (how strange is that). The
ahjumas asked us where we were from, which SY replied Singapore and they went
like oh… Singapore! Not sure if they have heard of this small country before,
but they certainly gave us another approving smile after hearing the reply. =D
Shortly after, the side dishes were served and that was a simply enormous
amount of vegetables! We have things like seaweed, garlic, fruit salad, brown
radishes, a big plate of western style coleslaw-salad, some onions, green
chilli, etc. I think a person can be full just by eating all the vegetables. =P
The meat came thereafter, and the waiter helped us to cut the meal and placed
them on the cooking pan. Nothing too interesting about the BBQ, except that
when the ahjumas (6 of them) were taking a photo, I accidentally looked towards
their direction and thought that it would be funny to just photobomb for once.
True enough, they laughed and looked at our side after viewing their photo. XD
I didn’t disturb their next take though. The pork belly tasted ok, not too
burnt as we took them off before they get crispier which also led to a juicer
taste. It is quite boring to eat just pork belly, but I guess the vegetables and
white rice made up for it. For some strange reason, they do not have water in
the restaurant, but rather beer is the drink that goes along with the meat.
That’s fine with us as we had more than enough on our table (the water will
make the meal fuller), I ate more meat in that dinner as compared to the sum of
meat for quite a lot of meals in Korea! Come to think of it, I ate much more
vegetables in Korea than what I usually do in SG. Even SH does not eat that
much of vegetables for her daily diet. =P At about 8.45pm, we left feeling
satisfied and paid up a total of 26kW. The ahjumas said a goodbye with a bow
after I left the table, which I politely bowed back and said goodbye too. How
nice of these ladies to say greetings to a foreigner. =) This kind of treatment
will almost never happen in SG. =/ We went back to the accommodation facility
thereafter for a night’s rest, and I had a large amount of strawberries and
orange juice to neutralise the meaty effect from the dinner. It’s a really
exciting day 7 and I really enjoyed myself on a day in Busan. XD
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If you would like to read more about my experiences, you may click on the links below. :)
Day 6: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-6.html
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