Grad trip - Day 8
The jellyfish is back! This post is about my Day 8 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. :)
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Day 8: Saturday at Taejongdae Park
The fine weather brought both of us to Taejongdae Park in
the afternoon, taking the Busan public bus 30 to our location. Busan’s bus
stops are quite cool in a sense that there is actually a speaker that makes
random announcements such as safety and bus arrivals. I am happy with our own
SG bus stops, some are even nice enough to even put the bus ETAs. =P The Busan
streets are quite nice, we passed by some quieter shop houses, a water body
that looks just like a trading port, schools, etc. 20+ minutes later, we
arrived at our destination. I had actually thought we needed an hour to reach,
but it seems like my estimation had gone way out of hand in a good way. =D This
park is named after a king who spent his leisure time by practising archery on the
cliffs, and thus the place naturally has some slopes for climbing. If a person
is simply lazy, a tram service is available for those who wishes to proceed
comfortably to the lighthouse or other mini attractions up the hills. Perhaps
it’s a Saturday, the upslope entrance is filled with a lot of people, and the
tram ride queue is simply way too ridiculous! Lazy to wait, we started to walk
up the slope to explore the park, treating it as a nice exercise. :D The slope
starts off to be gentle, and isn’t a tiring feat for an unfit person like me.
=P At around 10 minutes later, we reached the first stop which is the entrance
to the cliff. Interestingly enough, the park actually has a vanpool service
that brings people up from the public bus stop area all the way to this part
for 6kW. That’s not a very far distance in my opinion but yet at such a price…
For those who played MapleStory before, does this remind you of the VIP taxis
from the town to a slightly deep dungeon for ridiculous prices? =P If you are,
then it means I am not the only one who felt that! XD
We were technically done for the day, and thus I suggested
visiting the Gamcheon Cultural Village that is accessible from Busan Line 1. SY
disliked the idea of climbing up and down the traditional residential areas and
just wanted to go back. That’s a spoiler, but oh well. =/ He made it up by
suggesting that we get a small snack at Nampo before going back. I got myself a
circular Honey Butter Churros (2kW) which tasted quite salty probably due to
the butter, and wasn’t sweet as I had expected. Quite a weird taste, but then
again I never had such a flavour of churros in my entire life. All along I had
the impression that churros are long sticks of sweet dough, topped with
cinnamon, spices and sugar. Seems like that is a specific-flavour of churros
and does not generalize to the churros population. XD SY had no idea what he
wanted, and ended up going back empty-handed after his search for waffles
without cream failed. Why didn’t he get a meat stick is a mystery to me. We
rested at the accommodation facility until dinner, with SY playing his phone /
watching animes while I watched TV (Gaussian Normalization / Koreans travelling
in Thailand) and documenting the day’s activities. Laundry was also done, facilitating
the packing before we moved out from Busan the next day.
SY is not really full, and suggested that we end of the day
with a hot dog. I was quite surprised by his suggestion as he did not like hot
dogs, but I am definitely with it. So we went back to the same shop, and I got myself
a stuffed-mozzarella hot dog, while SY got himself a normal hot dog. This time,
I added more sauce to my food item to prevent being questioned for adding a
miserable amount of toppings, and agreed for some sugar on my hot dog as that
is their recommended way of eating. The young lady said some Korean words and I
had no idea on what she was saying until she asked po-jang-hae? AHA! That’s the
Takeaway term right? :D Reminded of the takeaway confusion that happened in
Jeju, I happily nodded and said yes. XD Ya la, that term is still used
frequently in Korea instead of the English-counterpart. The staff seemed to be
a bit confused on why I was so happy about that term, and asked SY if we were
from a different country, and SY said we are from Singapore. They smiled and
wished us a pleasant journey as we left the shop. Our evening plan was to have
a night walk around Busan after dinner, but that seemed to be not really a good
idea as our meal was late. >.< I guessed the food-hunting walk should
suffice. SY seemed happy to go back early and nua. =/ Oh well, we had an early
evening of packing and a 2nd round of dinner clearing up all the
unfinished food bought in Busan. That consisted of a ridiculous amount of strawberries
(I had 28 of them) for some super digestion. =P
A nice afternoon of walking, a perfect day of food items, and the enjoyment of the last night in Busan, marking the end of an amazing day 8. :)
It is a long post, but if you are interested to read about my experience, please do so. :)
Day 9: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-9.html
Day 7: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-7.html
Day 7: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-7.html
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Day 8: Saturday at Taejongdae Park
The neighbourhood of our accommodation facility continues to
be appealing for a morning breather and walk, and that attracted me to get down
for an early morning breakfast at a bright and sunny 6.30am. Since more of the
stalls are closed, the best solution is to finish up a half-packet of
walnut-red bean cakes, get a GS25 French toast and a Hershey’s cookies and
cream drink. =D That drink is really special! In SG, we have all these
chocolate / cookie drinks, milk, shakes, etc. This one tastes pleasantly sweet
with a nice taste of milk and I feel that makes up a nice comfort drink! XD
While having a nice breakfast, I wrote down the happenings of the previous day
and watched the random customers coming in to buy snacks and cigarettes. The
on-duty staff was a middle-aged guy, and he was busy packing the store and
recycling the rubbish. The French toast (with ham, cheese and onion) remained
rather cold (and scary) even though I followed the recommended time for the
microwave, but became really hot to even touch after I threw in the sandwich
for another 20 seconds. Such strange physics will never be understood by
myself. =P 7am, it is time to set out for a walk at the Busan neighbourhood.
The temperature is good, not too cold. =P Passed by some F&B shops that
sells various kinds of teas (similar to ShareTea, but starting prices are
higher such as $4+ for a normal medium milk tea), Korean food items such as
kimbap, udon, kimbap (finally found a restaurant that sells items for cheap
prices), bingsu, etc. The Seomyeon Medical Street is a decently long path that
holds quite a lot of pharmacies, therapy centres and consultation clinics for
those who have long term medical conditions and require medical attention, and
well it looks kinda interested if not the fact that they are closed. =/ The
walk is more of an experience that random genres of buildings can be clustered
together in one place (library, medical, office, recreational) and that’s
perfectly fine. =D SG buildings have a more refined clustering structure where
buildings of rather different types will appear in different places. =P
The junction that appeared at the end of the medical street
tunnel turned out to be another line 2 subway station, showing the close
proximity between Seomyeon and this one (Buam) in a crowded area. The walk
continues and this time many random shops appeared (e.g. e-cigarettes, Disney
clothing), and a big building that is owned by LG. XD So Samsung and LG are
Korean brands, and thus their products are supported heavily by their people.
Our accommodations used a lot of these products for all kinds of appliances such
as washers, fridges, TV. The current accommodation in Busan is like a Samsung
home, only a few exceptions are LG, but definitely 100% Korean! =D The building
is still closed as it was still early in the morning, but you could roughly see
the items being sold on the first floor through the glass doors. After walking
a bit more, I felt that it was a good time to go back but realised I am a bit
lost. XD I brought the portable wifi with me, but decided to go against using
it by challenging myself to go back to the facility through an alternative
route WITHOUT any guide. It is not too difficult a task, and thus I walked into
a small street that sorts of heads towards the accommodation facility
direction… Nothing really fascinating about the small routes, except that some
are really narrow and have weird slogans under the overpasses. After walking
for about half an hour, I realised that I was back at the same place
(recognised the street food at the corner) as the previous day! The most
obvious thing to do? Just find a nearest subway station and warp back again. Ah,
SY was still sleeping when I returned. =)
Day 8 is supposed to be a day of having street food,
dedicating some time to visit facilities that sell food items and having an
attraction in the middle of the day. At 11am, we set off to the Jagalchi Fish
Market for a visit. Jagalchi Fish Market is a very large seafood wholesale
market that has stalls both indoors (buildings) and outdoors (umbrella
shelters), fantastic for people who would want to buy the different kinds of
seafood in one place. =D Before the fish market that is near the water, the
main streets of Jalgachi can be seen to be filled with food, fruits and
vegetable stalls. That sorts of complete the ingredient shopping experience for
most people. =P How convenient it is to have a wholesale market in the middle
of a shopping area, imagine a proper market in the middle of Orchard. XD A
significant difference between the fish market and the market of memory is the
amount of space reserved for movement. The fish market walkway is very crammed
(similar or narrower than SG markets) and thus a lot of squeezing is involved
to walk from one point to another, under the comfort of the shelters. It is
thus important not to hang around a stall for too long unless you want to buy
something. The seafood are being labelled with small tags in a huge number of
small baskets, however some of them do not have prices, so I guess maybe there
is room for price haggling? XD Not all stalls sell raw food though, as some
stalls do sell processed food such as fried fishcakes and plain buns similar to
the Yong Tau Foo stalls in SG. SY mentioned the existence of fresh seafood
restaurants in the fish market area, but he did not want to go inside the
indoors area as there is a super strong fishy smell emitting from the inside.
=P The visit to the market ended 20 minutes later, bringing us back to Nampo
station and visiting the DAISO we missed 2 days ago. Similar to the one seen in
COEX, not everything is at 2kW, but the large variety of random products across
three floors still exist. There were sauces, kitchen products, disposable /
recyclable travelling bags, etc. Doesn’t seem to be too different from the SG
version.
Noon, the perfect time for some street food as lunch! We
started to glance through the food items being offered at BIFF square, and have
in mind some of our top few choices. Among the variety, there were stuff such
as cup chicken, waffles, fishcakes, kimbap, coconut, meat sticks, ice-creams,
churros, Japanese noodles, Chinese pancakes and dumplings, etc. Our first snack
came from a stall that sells meat sticks and sausages. For some strange reason,
there will consecutive stalls that sell the same items, but yet some of them
are much emptier than others. We patronized the one that didn’t have any crowd,
which I bought a long sausage with honey mustard sauce while SY bought a beef
stick. The sausage is delicious! It is basically a non-cheese sausage with a
slightly smoked flavour, a bit sweet and chewy on the inside, non-burnt on the
outside with the juice kept intact, topped with a dressing of sweet honey
mustard sauce. Probably because I was hungry, but I felt that the sausage can
be classified as a comfort food when someone is down. =) A 3k won long sausage
seems to be more worth it than some of our cheese sausages in SG. A very nice
gesture about the food street culture is that once you have bought the stall’s
item, you can actually camp near the shop area to have your food instead of
squeezing with the main crowd, and the stall owners will help you to dispose of
your sticks. How nice! I gave the ahjuma a thumbs up and she was quite happy to
see my satisfaction. =D SY doesn’t seem to be too satisfied by his food though.
The second item we had was an egg-cake in a cup, is there a proper name for this item? This egg pastry is done by baking an egg with some flour, topped with some cheese and a strip of bacon / other meat for a 2k won enjoyment. There’s a 1k version but has neither the cheese nor the bacon. The egg-cake is chewy and tasted a bit sweet, which was quite the opposite of what I had thought to be a slightly salty treat. Nevertheless the small amount of cheese made the top delicious to eat along with the bacon strips. These cakes were being baked over a hot pot of heat, and subsequently cut into many pieces before being placed in a cup with a sauce topping. SY mentioned that it is rather difficult to find proper egg items in Korea, and this could be one of the rare ones where eggs are being made the star of the dish. For the dessert, SY suggested having thai ice-cream rolls after knowing that I have never tried one of those in SG. The egg-cake and ice-cream rolls are sold under the same umbrella shelter, and we ordered the dish from the same young lady. The ice-cream must have been a much nicer than the egg-cakes as there was nobody ordering the egg-cake from the start to the end of queueing for the rolls. =P After being asked for two of my desired flavours (chocolate banana), the guy took a bit of each ingredient (the Nutella looks lesser than the amount I spread and only 10% of a banana is taken), mashed them and poured some liquid batter over. The compound will then start to harden, inviting the guy to quickly separate the contents and flip them to solidify the other side too. Finally, the compound will be flattened, separated into columns, rolled up and placed nicely in the cup. Maybe I had expected more of the rolls after knowing the hype of this sweet treat in SG, but seriously the rolls are not that fantastic. Indeed the rolls are kind of creamy, and the taste of Nutella and banana do exist, but that was not too strong, and I feel like I am just simply clearing tasteless cold rolls. These rolls do not seem like my kind of dessert, am I missing some key step in enjoying this item? =/ That sorts of concludes the food street lunch, leaving us a challenge to find a dustbin to throw away our used cups. XD More items could have been tried, but SY looks quite bored of trying out new items, so that sorts of conclude our food street lunch!
The air in this park is definitely much better than
Yongdusan Park due to the directly proximity to the sea. It’s quite high up,
and one has to climb all the way down to see the beach, the cliff walking path
and some eateries below. SY does not feel like climbing back to the original
path for a view at the bottom, and thus we stoned at the scenic view for quite
a while, breathing in the fresh air of this town and soothing our eyes with the
greeneries. =) A toilet is available near the viewing spot, which was located
at quite a random spot in the trees, perhaps that was the concept of a tree
toilet? =P We continued walking the uphill slope and subsequently reached a
mini temple off the main route that looks super isolated and gives me an eerie
feeling… It has an interior area which we didn’t enter, and a very silent dog
at the exterior that did not bark but instead laid down quietly looking at the
environment. =/ Continuing the climb, we reached the South Port Viewing Point
at about 2.15pm (30 mins into the climb), and looked at the big sea depression.
Tourists can choose to have some water from the nearby water coolers, which the
sign stated that the source is tap water. How thoughtful of the management to
state the source, now people can be sure that we are not drinking distilled
salt water from directly below. =P SY enjoyed the walk and preferred a faster
pace of walking, and thus he went quite ahead of me (while carrying his jacket
in the open) while I lagged behind and took some photos for memories. Quite a
number of tourists were heading in the same direction as us, either by walking
the upslope while enjoying the scenery, or seated comfortably in the Park trams
that ascended past us.
The upslope walk continues all the way to one of the main
attractions of the park, the Observation Deck. This facility is considered a
rest spot for tourists where people could either enjoy the sea breeze from an
elevated height at the open air observatory level or take a quick bite from the
bakery / small restaurant at the lower levels. We took a short visit to the
convenience stall and I would say the structure is quite cool, it seems to be
bigger than the normal ones (but with the prices being more expensive too), and
a really long curved table just by the windows for those who see the sea view,
and some other small rectangular ones that are further away. Seems to be an
alternative relaxing place to have meals. I think SG’s attractions do not have
much of these concepts in our convenience stores ya? The observatory level is
naturally crowded with people, and wow it is indeed a really high view from
above! A popular place for taking photos and videos, but more importantly one
must breathe in the fresh air and listen to the sound of the waves and below. In
a near distant lies a very small patch of land named Kettle Island, looks
abandoned but probably got its name from a pole (?) sticking up in the land
mass. After a short period at this attraction, we continued our walk, passing
by a statue of a mother and two children.
Much to my surprise, it turns out that the observatory deck
isn’t the highest point of the park, and our walk continued to be an upslope
version all the way to the park’s 2nd main attraction, the Yeongdo Lighthouse.
The path to that tower is quite elaborated, one has to climb down a flight of
stairs (with some aquatic creatures info) to deviate away from the main nature
path, pass a T junction that leads to the cliff areas, and walk a short wooden
stair-path to the facility. One of the T junction route that leads to a
relaxation area is closed for renovation, but that did not get in the way of
the tourists. =) Along the way, there were many random statues such as
seahorses, faces of past Korean warriors, etc. The lighthouse looks remarkably
similar to an airport control tower, but that should make sense as people who
worked in this facility should have a proper view of the sea. To recover our
fatigue of climbing down the long flight of steps, we rested at the sitting
area right in front of the lighthouse. Visitors could opt to walk a bit further
down to enter the lighthouse and go all the way up for a scenic view of
Taejongdae Park, but we chose not to due to our laziness. XD A short break of approximately
20 minutes, recalling memories of the grad trip, talking about what we are
going to do when get back to SG, taking a picture for SH to see and eating the
grapes chewy candy which SY did not finish. If there is such a place in SG with
this view and some tables, I wouldn’t mind bringing my tutorials there to do.
=P SY mentioned that he will probably crush and throw his tutorial sheet into
the sea. XD I always have weird ideas for places to do your work that’s out of
the norm (libraries, cafes, schools), and these are all hastily disapproved by
SY. =/
At about 3.15pm, we left the lighthouse after the tiring
stairs climbing. Thankfully that lighthouse was the highest point, and our
journey changed to a downhill version. SY seemed kind of tired and so we walked
quietly down and breathing in the fresh air for re-oxygenation. Nothing really
interesting happened until SY noticed a rocky path that deviates from the main
road (with exercise facilities on the side) and suggested that we explore the
facility. I wasn’t very keen as the tree cover makes the place looks kind of
dark, but decided to agree as SY rarely makes any constructive requests. The inner
area consists of a temple for people to pray, and a monument that honours the
soldiers that took part in the Korean War. The layout looks super traditional,
and the air around there is very cold for strange reasons. A very quiet garden
of stone statues and stacked rocks lies beside the dark quiet temple, which we
did not step in for a walk. The area is extended though, as there is a long
downhill that leads to other small temples (?) or other places. Both of us were
not keen on that option, and we decided to go back. A tree-covered downhill walk,
and nothing really fascinating other than taking a quick water break at the
benches in the middle of nowhere. I am quite thankful that we chose to follow
the tram travelling direction of looking at the attractions first through an
uphill walk and followed by a resting downhill trail. The other direction of
the cycle seems to be a bit out of place. We would have been tired enough to
even have mood to enjoy the scenery after walking continuously from the bottom
to the top of the park. =P Near 4pm, we finally arrived at the starting point!
^^ The tram queue is super crowded as usual, and thus we dropped the idea of
taking 1 round with the tram and left the park. The park seems to value the
habit of recycling, as they show the amount of time needed to degrade various
items environment. Recycling should be a main part of Koreans’ lives huh? =)
With that, goodbye Taejongdae Park!
At 7pm, we searched a nice place for our dinner. I was fine
with almost anything, but SY seemed to be a bit bored of the meals. That
resulted in us walking around the market of memory, various streets and roads
for a good half an hour before SY recommended that we had bibimbap at a quiet
restaurant. The decorations, layout and lighting in that restaurant is
definitely not as good as the others we have seen in the past 7 days, as the
area is small and most of diners will be required to face a mirrored wall for
their meals. That was not a problem though, as the hospitality and smile by the
ahjuma made up for it. =) We ordered a bibimbap each, and I took out a packet
of almond seaweed bought the other time to go with the meal. =P The food
arrived shortly after, and we were asked to self-serve the kimchi (the only
side dish) to an amount we desire. Apparently the kimchi are all stored in a
plastic tuppleware, and diners could simply pass around that box to whoever
that wants more kimchi. That kimchi is really spicy, and SY cleared most of it.
The bibimbap is served in a metal bowl, with seaweed, various vegetables, bean
paste and a fried egg (so much for no egg dishes in Korea =P ). Even though the
bibimbap has no meat, the dish is simply amazing! A refreshing fresh vegetable
meal without any heatiness, with nicely cooked rice, and the bean paste tasted
sweet and decent! The proper way of eating bibimbap is to mix everything
together (hence the name mixed rice), but I was happy enough to eat it like a
bento. =P The soup is not bad, although that suspiciously tasted like bean
soup. The serving is rather decent, as we both thought that we were given a big
serving that was worth 4k wons each. In the end the total bill turned out to be
7k wons. After stepping out of the restaurant, we decided to give a 1k tip for
the food and service. So I took the 1k tip, presented to the ahjuma and
commented that the bibimbap was delicious. She kept on smiling, signalled that
there is not a need and said a lot of Korean words. I have absolutely no idea
on what she is saying and just pushed the money a bit more towards her and said
that it’s alright. Alright, she finally took it and said thank you. Her husband
smiled and acknowledged too. That was a simple but absolutely heartwarming
dinner! =D
A nice afternoon of walking, a perfect day of food items, and the enjoyment of the last night in Busan, marking the end of an amazing day 8. :)
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If you would like to read more about my experiences, you may click on the links below. :)
Day 9: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-9.html
Day 7: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-7.html
Day 7: http://jellyunderthesea.blogspot.sg/2017/05/grad-trip-day-7.html
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