Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Weather

It has rained more in the last 24 hours than I have ever seen.  Ever.  My walk home from work yesterday felt like wading through a really long river; the water was almost to my knees in some places.  Apparently it's the most rain Seoul has had in a really long time:


SEOUL/CHUNCHEON - The heaviest downpours in a century pounded Seoul
and its surrounding areas on Tuesday and Wednesday, triggering
multiple landslides, urban traffic chaos, power outages and flooded
streets, roads and residential areas.

And my poor husband is in the field.  Stuck in the field, actually, since the roads are covered in water and many of them are closed.

Praying that we make our flight back to the U.S. tomorrow...

**Update**

Mike made it back to Dongducheon!  The trip that usually takes 45 minutes took over 5 hours (and we owe the Sergeant who came out to pick him up BIG TIME).  Kyoungmin Unnie called me around midnight to ask whether Mike made it back--right around the time they finally got back to base.  Unnie said that half of the base is flooded--she had to leave her car and literally swim home from work.



**Update #2**

It took Mike a couple of hours to get from the front gate of base to his office:

"turns out when I called you we were only through half the battle... the front of Casey was flooded... water level up to my shoulders.  They wouldn't let anyone cross the intersection to the front gate (there were floating cars = crazy!)... I was somehow at the right place at the right time (God's grace) and the Korean rescuers gave me a ride on a kodiak boat... weird."

Monday, July 25, 2011

Summertime, and Getting Dirty

I haven't posted in a while, I know.  Since we've been back from our Pusan trip at the beginning of the month, I just haven't had much to talk about.  Work hasn't been very much fun, but I've been doing a lot of it; my sweet husband has been in the field a lot; it's hot, and monsoon season's effects are definitely being felt--I think we had 21 rainy days in a row.  Highlights are few.  Here's one--I have been enjoying these:

"kwa-il bing su" (although this is a picture of a "buh-loo-bae-ri bing su"--they're not usually this purple or this sno-cone-ish looking).  The original treat is "pat bing su", but I prefer to have mine minus the "pat"--sweet red beans, so I usually go with the fruit (kwa-il) option.

Anyway.

I finally have something fun to share.  This past weekend, while my poor husband was in the field--again, I went to the Boryeong Mud Festival with Kyoungmin Unnie and a few of her friends.


The area is famous for it's mud flats, which appear along the beach at low tide.  The mud is supposedly good for your skin, and maybe your health in general if you believe the tourism website.  I was happy to discover that the city processes the mud before it sets up the festival, so it's "clean" mud--not chunky or mixed with rocks or sand.  There were a bunch of activities set up--you could paint yourself with mud, race a friend in mud (with the winner getting to pour a bucket of the stuff over the looser), slide around in mud, or play a group version of a game the kids at the school next to my apartment play on their fun days--the caller will yell, "5 people in a group!" and everyone tries to get in groups of five, or "two girls and one boy!" and so on; anyone who can't follow the instructions and get in an appropriate group goes in the middle after the turn, where everyone splashes mud all over them. 

Needless to say, it wasn't too long before we all looked like this:


I don't know if my skin was improved or rejuvenated, but I am happy to report that it is not sunburned--mostly because every time my mud started to dry out I made sure to reapply.

When we'd had enough of the mud, we joined a whole lot of other people in the beach area and ventured into the chilly water to wash off.


It was really a great weekend.  The festival itself was a lot of fun, we had a bunch of good food, and the weather was even pretty nice.  The best part though was spending time with Unnie.  I feel really lucky that I'm getting to hang out with her while we're in Korea, and I'm really glad she invited me along for the weekend!

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Busan

We had such a great time in Busan last weekend.  It was our first weekend really getting out to another part of Korea, and the city was fun, but what really made it a great trip was spending time with family.  We drove down with Komo, Kyoungmin Unnie and Jeunie; I also got to meet Mike's aunt--"Kun Komo" (Korean for "elder aunt on the father's side"), and her husband "Komobu" for the first time, since we stayed at their house in Busan.  They are truly wonderful.  Kun Komo met us at the curb with a huge smile, and I don't think she stopped smiling the whole time we were there, except maybe to eat.  Despite my still-embarrassingly-pitiful Korean, I really felt like part of the family.

I regret not taking more pictures!  I don't have a single picture of Kun Komo and Komobu, or of Komobu's awesome barber shop, which looks like I imagine it did 23 years ago when Komobu started work there, or even a good picture of Jeunie.  I'll do better next time.

Here are a couple of shots of our adventures at the aquarium, Haeundae Beach (which we couldn't really see because of the fog), and the fish market.