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Bong G – Wine cocktails to go on Gwangalli Beach

http://busan.cityawesome.com
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the exterior of bong g - gwangalli beachIf you’ve ever been to Hongdae in Seoul, you probably know about Vinyl, where you get mixed drinks in vinyl plastic bags. It’s awesome, and it’s a mystery as to why something like that isn’t around more in Europe or places where it’s legal to drink in the street. Amazing.

Bong G is Gwangalli’s poor man’s answer to Vinyl. They sell “wine punch” in the plastic bags that are definitely delicious. While it’s not liquor, it’s still novel and awesome to sip a wine cooler out of a plastic bag as you’re walking down the boardwalk.

Bong G also has coffee drinks and other beverages like iced tea. Beware though – the menu is in Korean. Just say “wine punch-ee” if you can’t read it.

I would really be singing the praises of Bong G if it were open more! Since it’s gotten a little warmer, I’ve been down at Gwangalli at least twice a week. So let’s say I’ve been there eight times this month. ONLY ONCE has Bong G been open! It was on a Friday night at around 9:30. I was there the following week at the same time (a little earlier, actually) and it was closed. I’ve been there on weekend days and evenings, and it’s closed.

bong g wine cocktails in a bag!

It's a bag of wine.

So check it out, and good luck getting there when it’s open!

Directions: Pretty much in the center of Gwangalli beach, between the old Fuzzy Navel and Wa Bar (near Thursday Party). Look for the orange “Bong G” sign.

 



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Bowling in Nampo / Jagalchi

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bowling at abc bowling lanes, jagalchi station

It's weird... everything inside is in black and white...

Bowling at ABC Bowling Center!

It’s pretty much what you think… It’s Bowling! Good ‘ol American 10-pin (aka REAL) bowling. You get your shoes, get your ball, and you’re good to go.

One thing they DON’T have is alcohol. You’ll have to bring that in yourself from across the street at the Seven Eleven.

Prices are cheap. Three games ran our group of five about 10 per person.

the entrance to abc bowling in jagalchi

The entrance. It's in the middle of some clothing stores. If you've gotten to the electronics/appliance store, you've gone too far.

Heads up: both times that I’ve been to ABC, there’s been an old man who walks around with a bottle of oil, lubricating everything he can, including hand rails. So be careful before putting your hand on things… it might be a little greasy.

Directions: Jagalchi metro station exit 1. You’ll see it on your right in the big building (see pic of entrance). Ride up to the third floor. Caution: Elevator doors close randomly and there’s no ‘door open’ button.

 



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Bieumsan Mountain (Jillye Fortress)

Thursday 21st April, 2011

True to her word, Joy rang me at around 11am to say she was taking me hiking around Changwon University. We confirmed the details and I would be waiting for her at 2pm.

In the morning I did a bit of study as I'm completing my TEFL certificates. I ate a good lunch before we left, which was a good idea. When Joy told me we were going hiking, I thought it was going to be a leisurely stroll around nature. But I was wrong. This was a full on, we're-going-to-climb-to-the-top-of-a-mountain type of hike.

The drive to the base of Bieumsan Mountain is about 15 minutes from my hotel. The afternoon was getting a bit chilly but a good temperature to hike. When we arrived there were many other hikers. Hiking in Korea is a major hobby and you see both individuals and groups going on trails. They also have all the right gear to do it. Bright clothing, professional hiking boots, hiking poles- They definately make this seem to be an Olympic sport!
The start of our hike

The start of our hike

Part of the trail

Part of the trail

Resting hut

Resting hut

We started off walking amongst the cherry blossoms, which sat along the rocky trail. We came across the first set of bridges to cross over. In total there are 11 bridges you have to cross in order to get to the base of Bieumsan Mountain. The scenery was absolutely beautiful. You could hear the birds chirping and the sounds of the wind gently breezing past you. The lakes were quite dry as at the moment there is no water. Summer is meant to be the Korean rainy season, so we should see the lakes fill up in the next couple of months.
The first bridge

The first bridge

The beautiful scenery

The beautiful scenery

As we walked along, I started realising how I had underestimated the difficulty level of this hike. My body is not used to do this sort of exercise and I don't think my fitness level is up to what it should be, but I kept going. I wanted to reach the top of that mountain!

I asked Joy how often she does this hike and she told me atleast once a week. She does other hike routes within the same mountain, but they are the easier trails. She wanted to do this one with me because of the view when you reach the top. I was grateful she wanted to show me the view, but I wish there was an easier way of getting there... maybe an elevator?? hahaa

When we stopped at bridge 5 to take a rest, to my surprise I saw a chipmunck sitting on one of the rocks. It looked at us then jumped on the other rocks, until it disappeared. I was lucky enough I had my camera on me at the time, so I was able to take some really good, close up photos. Never in my life had I seen anything like it! It was way too cute! Korea has too many cute animals I've decided.

We were soon joined by a group of hikers, who shared some cucumber snacks with us. They asked us how Joy and I knew each other and why we were friends??? Apparently in Korea, if you are of different ages, you can't be friends. So by Korean rules, Joy and I can't be friends because there's a 10 year age gap between us. I just think this is ridiculous, but anyway! We thanked them for our cucumbers and continued on. As we walked along we saw that there were azaleas in bloom. Their purple colour looked amazing amongst the dull, grey background of the rocks. I loved it. I never imagined this was so close to the city, yet feeling like you were a million miles away.
Chipmunck!!

Chipmunck!!


Trail with azaleas

Trail with azaleas

Stepping stones

Stepping stones


Fellow hikers that shared cucumbers with us

Fellow hikers that shared cucumbers with us

Taking in the view, the trail lead us to a dinosaur fossil site. It was of Triceratops and it's footprints can still be seen marked in the rocks along the lake. I was just amazed that something like this still remained here to this day, undisturbed.
Triceratops lives here!

Triceratops lives here!

Triceratops footprint

Triceratops footprint

We continued on and there were many resting points where a lot of hikers were taking a break and having a snack. Joy turned around to me and said "OK Tahnee. The easy part if finished. Now we go up" and with her hand, showed me how steep 'up' was. I was now committed. The top of the mountain was 800 metres away and it was killing me. I was tired, my legs were feeling stiff and at this stage I couldn't understand why people do this for fun. What amazes me is that older people do this. You hardly ever see young, fit, young adults do this. No. You only ever see 30 year olds and up ages, around 60's I'm guessing, hiking. We finally reached the halfway mark where we took a quick break. You couldn't really see the view as the trees and shrubs were blocking the sight.
Beautiful sight..

Beautiful sight..

Cherry Blossoms...

Cherry Blossoms...


Me and the Cherry Blossoms

Me and the Cherry Blossoms

With a long drink of water, I pushed myself on to finish this. We kept going and as we climbed the last set of wooden steps, we made it. We reached the top of Bieumsan Mountain and the view was spectacular. You could see the whole of Changwon city. I was so glad Joy had brought me here. I would never have seen this if it wasn't for her. I said to her 'I know I whinged and complained, but thank you' We both had a good laugh.
Joy and me before we reached the top of Bieumsan Mountain

Joy and me before we reached the top of Bieumsan Mountain


View of Changwon City

View of Changwon City

Mountain view

Mountain view


I have reached the top of Bieumsan Mountain!!!

I have reached the top of Bieumsan Mountain!!!

View from the top

View from the top

We stretched our muscles and breathed in the fresh mountain air- Life was good. After a while of resting, it was now starting to get late and we started heading down. We went a different direction, but it was a lot easier this time as it was all down hill.

It was now close to 5pm when we reached civilization. The hike had taken a little over 2.5 hours. I couldn't wait to get home to tell Daniel what I got myself into! One of Joy's friends has a little shop hut just before the mountain trail, so before we left to go back home, we went in for a feed. Her friend served us a Korean pizza with a traditional rice drink. It was delicious and exactly what we needed after a long walk.
Joy's friends food hut!

Joy's friends food hut!

Eating delicious Korean pizza

Eating delicious Korean pizza

I really enjoyed the hiking and it's something I've never really done before, so I'm looking forward to going again in the coming weeks. I'm going to be making the most of this hiking business!!!

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Podcasting in Welsh and Kiwi

A strange combination of snark, science, British accents, and GOP weirdness.

SGU #301 got a bit naughty (I’m moist just thinking about it.) and it also got a bit nostalgic about the space shuttles. Steven Novella waded into space policy, but managed to stay agnostic about a public or a private space program. I wish the Rogues would be a bit braver. And then, there’s this “Science or Fiction” item on making oil.

Geologists and geochemists believe that nearly all (more than 99 percent) of the hydrocarbons in commercially produced crude oil and natural gas are formed by the decomposition of the remains of living organisms, which were buried under layers of sediments in the Earth’s crust, a region approximately 5-10 miles below the Earth’s surface.

But hydrocarbons of purely chemical deep crustal or mantle origin (abiogenic) could occur in some geologic settings, such as rifts or subduction zones said Galli, a senior author on the study.

Ben Smith vs. Dave Weigel place a bet, that Donald Trump’s bizarre run for the presidency will end, and it will be Tim Pawlenty vs. Mitt Romney. OK, but the damage, to my faith in anything remotely related to a public spirit, is done.

SeoulPodcast #114: Without Joe, but still one step from being the kimchi press version of SGU. Stafford was a pro with the interview with Greg Dolezal.

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Filed under: bhtv, East Asia, Energy, Korea, Link Dumps, Podcasts, Politics, Pseudoscience, Science, Space, USA Tagged: abiogenesis, ben smith, dave weigel, gop, oil, republicans, seoulpodcast, skeptics' guide to the universe, space shuttle

Damned Tourists *hmph*

Here's an English shijo poems I wrote over the weekend:

Teahouse in Nampodong, B-boy group outside raging tunes
Young to old, we take our photos, turn to traditional ways
Work, shopping, tired to the teahouse, we are all tourists here.
.
I wrote it last Saturday. I went to a Nampo teahouse (green sign 3F), to mark my midterm exams and outside, infront of the Krispy Kreme Doughnut shop, they had a b-boy group (Korean for a group of boy dancers) and several famous singers. I think it was a promotion for the BeanPole Clothing brand as that store was right across from the doughnut shop.

 Heres another I wrote a few hours earlier:

What we write or tell the young ones can only last for so long
Through our lives we work and play, slaves to a moments sensation
Take lovely pictures while ye may; we are all tourists here.

The Korean for the English shijo is as follows:

잚을 이들에게 말하거나 쓴것을 그 한게가 있다
우리는 인생을 통해 일하고 즐깁니다 한 순가의 욕망의 노예가
아름다운 사진을 가능한 찍어보세요 우리는 모두 관광객 입니다.

Translation above by Sung-Yirahn 성이란. Typing by myself so any typos are mine --MWT.
.............
먹을수있는한 김밥을 드새요, 우리는 모두 관광객 입니다.
(Eat kimbap while ye may, we are all tourists here).

A decent substitute for the last line in the English could be:
Eat delicious hamburgers while ye may; we are all tourists here.
(먹을수있는한 맛있는 함버거드새요, 우리는 모두 관광객 입니다).
That last line with hamburgers makes me laugh, especially as I love Thomas Grill in Daeyeon/Kyungsung.

Living in Busan for 8 years I have had alot of time to reflect on what it means to be a long time resident here, versus my being a foreigner, always learning but never to become a true native Korean (caucasian face and race aside). I began to reflect on what it means then, to be a tourist. I realized that I am forever to be a kind of tourist here. But in essence, aren't we all tourists...

I had that final line buzzing in my head for the past 3 months now: Take your pictures while ye may, we are all tourists here. A modern day Carpe Diem kind of thing. In the 2nd poem I changed it to "lovely" to match a common traditional shijo form of 15,15,14 syllables.
Welcome, tourists all, to my blog. MWT.

About the Author

Matthew William Thivierge has abandoned his PhD studies in Shakespeare and is now currently almost half-way through becoming a tea-master (Japanese,Korean & Chinese tea ceremony). He is a part time Ninjologist with some Jagaek studies (Korean 'ninja') and on occasion views the carrying on of pirates from his balcony mounted telescope.

Blogs
About Tea Busan  *   Mr.T's Chanoyu てさん 茶の湯   *  East Sea Scrolls  *  East Orient Steampunk Society

Teaching

I thought I'd drop a little knowledge about our school and teaching requirements.  I mean, we do a ton of fun stuff on the weekends, but we spend most of our time at work just like anyone else.  I think I wrote a bit about our daily grind in a previous post, so I'll go into our actual teaching this time.

When you come to teach English in Korea you have a few choices of setting.  You can teach at the university level, but that usually requires a Master's degree.  You can teach at a public or private school, or you can teach at a hagwon, which is where we are.  Now, a hagwon can mean a few different things, but essentially it means that kids come there after their regular public school hours as a kind of extra activity, similar to instrument lessons or tae kwon do.  This usually means that the students' parents pay for the classes and have a fair amount of sway in terms of what they want taught, different from public school obviously.  This also usually means that your hours are mostly in the afternoon and evening.

In our case, our hagwon is a kindergarten/Montessori school.  Half of the building complex is a kindergarten and the other half is a kindergarten/Montessori school solely devoted to the teaching of English.  We also each teach some after-school classes like I mentioned above, from 330-430.  Then we are done!  The hours are pretty favorable for a hagwon, considering many people teach classes well into the evening at other places.

Our students are all kindergarten age, and our afternoon classes are no older than 9.  Teaching students this age presents some unique challenges as well as some really fun times.  Nikki and I came in with no experience teaching children this age, but we have learned quickly. 

We use a few techniques in class to keep things under control, but for the most part the students follow along with us.  We have a list of the students' names on the board with 3 stars beside each.  If they break a classroom rule, we erase a star.  At the end of class, if everyone has 3 stars we usually play a game or do a coloring page or word puzzle.  I rarely take any stars away, a stern voice or displeased look usually does the trick.  Our rule of no speaking Korean in class is probably violated the most, but I give three chances on that one since it doesn't bother me all that much.  Nikki teaches more classes of younger students aged 5 and 6, and I don't know how she does it.  She has a serious song and dance show going sometimes when I walk past her room.  She'll be able to write a bit more about her style.

One lesson that we have learned is that students this age have an incredibly short memory.  It is useless to have rewards or punishments happen any more than 45 minutes later.  We try to reward good behavior as soon as possible, and quickly address bad behavior as well.  A 6 year old who was drawing on the table and got yelled at by his teacher at 10am will have no recollection of that incident by 1030. 

To my eternal bewilderment, the students are also as thrilled by 5 minutes of playing hot potato or hangman as they are with 20 minutes of playground time, movie time, or bags of candy.  There is really no difference.  If the teacher is excited about a dinosaur coloring page, then the class is too. 

Sometimes we joke about being a traveling clown show.  We move from room to room doing our English routine: singing the alphabet, drawing and coloring pictures, and leading 5 year olds in chants and dances, only to have most of them asking us things in Korean, rolling around on the floor, asking to go to the bathroom, or picking their noses and examining the discoveries instead of diligently learning the finer points of the English language.

Ultimately, it is a great job.  We have to remind each other that we should be just having fun with these kids and not getting to angry or worked up when things don't go well.  If they are talking in class, sometimes I just start singing in a crazy voice or acting ridicuouls and they will be quiet in amazement.  Some days I don't have the energy to do one more routine, but I just go in with a weird and goofy attitude and things actually go by more smoothly.  I think, no one understands me anyway!  What's the point of getting angry?

So, hopefully this post gave you a little look into our jobs each day.  We hang out with 6 year olds and color and teach them words and read storybooks.  It takes a ton of energy and we are beat at the end of the day.  But, the days go by super fast and we are given freedom to teach in our own styles.  If you have any questions about activities we do or other strategies for our classes, please leave a comment!
teaching english in korea. 
blogging here: www.teachingintherok.blogspot.com

Busan e-FM Week 24: Korea and the English Language

The english waves come inAbout 'Open Mike in Busan'

Introduction

Now this probably a very important subject in Korea – especially for Busan e-FM listeners – today’s subject is Korean and the English language.

The Korean English language school

I met my wife in England, where she did some postgraduate studies at the local college and university in my home town. Both were quite popular with overseas students, and perhaps that’s what led to the story of the Korean English language school.

In my job as Student Union President, I spent a lot of time liaising with the university’s management. One day they called me up and asked “Do you know anything about the plan to open an English language school for Koreans here?” Well I didn’t, but the story was this: apparently some Korean businessmen intended buy a building near the university and turn it into a school that would just teach English to people who would come over from Korea. Then the businessmen actually came to the city, met local council leaders, and finished up having their pictures taken, shaking the mayor’s hand, which then appeared in the local newspaper.

And that was the last I heard of it, until six months later, when suddenly the first Korean students arrived. There first question was naturally, where is the school? Exactly. Where, indeed, was it? I knew the building the Korean businessmen said they were intending to buy, and I’d looked at it every time I walked by – and there’d been no visible signs of any activity at all. I had contacts in the local council as well as with the university, and they hadn’t heard anything about it since the businessmen had gone home either. Didn’t the plans work out suddenly, or was it a con from the beginning? I don’t know, but it didn’t look good.

The students had spent all their money in some cases. Some returned to Korea, and some transferred to the local city college. But I specifically remember the story of one girl, who had no money and felt too ashamed to go back home. What I took from this was how important English must be in Korea, and what a big business it seemed. But it didn’t always seem a fair business.

Fusion-combination under fusion-combination environment

And then I came to Korea and saw it for myself. I was shocked by the number of hagwons. Yes, you know there are going to be a lot, but I wasn’t expecting there to be ten within a hundred meters of my apartment. I guess there are thousands in Busan alone. It’s mindblowing. But I can’t help feeling that despite all this it doesn’t really work.

At first – I admit – it was funny to see all the badly written English signs, and all the badly used English, such as the Korea Literature Translation Institude and the restaurant advertising Spaghetti with swimming crap. But soon it made me a little sad because of all the money you can see being poured into it, and it can have consequences.

For example, one wedding album we looked at started off “You will always have a special place in my hear”. Then, under a picture of the bride you’d have the words “with palpitation just like the fist time”, and it finished with what appeared to be a disastrous cut-and-paste failure from Ben E. King’s classic song ‘Stand By Me’, where the main line “Just as long as you stand by me” became “hust as ling as you stand by me”. Well, that’s not a wedding album I can send back to England really, because it creates a bad impression of Korea, and it kind of makes the whole wedding seem like a bit of a joke.

It’s not just companies that end up with odd English. The Ministry of Health and Welfare sent out a multi-language leaflet on the importance of having children vaccinated “in order to ensure our children grow up to be healthy human resources of the future.” Then again, this is Korea, maybe we are all just ‘human resources’ to the chaebol in the end. But my favourite is the Korean Internet & Security Agency. Recently I visited their English page trying to find out why a website I’d tried to visit was blocked. It explains “We need to prepare a counter-measure system against infringements related to fusion-combination under fusion-combination environment.” The page goes on to talk about the need to create “digital warmth” for minimising the ‘dysfunction’ of the Internet. What is ‘digital warmth’? [The whole page is worth reading because it essentially encapsulates so many of the failures that English translations have here - and translations into Korean from English can raise very serious issues too].

The english waves come in [sic]

I became more sympathetic as I struggled with the Korean language, but it’s still surprising though when you see these really big brands using bad English – why don’t they pay for proper translations?

Then I started to hear a few stories from foreigners doing the translations. They were rewording advertising material from a first draft in English done by a Korean, but after they’d corrected it, the company would often go back to the first one, because they said it sounded better.

[I can’t believe they let me mention this on air]. Take the Busan e-FM slogan for example. “The english waves come in” - it’s on the signs and advertising. This is a small issue, but it makes a big difference: there’s an apostrophe missing between the ‘E’ and ‘S’ of ‘waves’. So instead of “The English Wave Has Come In”, instead it really states that the waves come in around the coast of England. 그래서, 영국의 파도가 옴니다, 그리고 나감니다. There’s no capital for the word ‘English’ either.

Working in a Korean business environment is hard [story pending]

So seeing all this makes me think that working in a Korean business environment could be very hard for a foreigner. My impression is that whatever foreigners might say, Korean businesses just plough on regardless. They don’t care.

Whose language is it anyway?

But then I had a revelation, at least about the English language. Maybe these Korean companies don’t even want good English... because they’re not pitching their messages at English speakers, they’re pitching it at people who ‘speak’ English in Korea. And who’s to say they can’t? Perhaps Korean English is a new language like American English [an earlier bastardisation of the original language – although modern British English is in itself arguably a bastardisation of ‘olde [sic] English’]. If people are happy with this new version of English - ‘Korean English’ - then maybe it’s OK.

And really, the way some ‘native’ English teachers write on websites here – what language is that? I call it “native English teacher English”. Maybe that’s a new version of the language – with bad grammar, awful spelling, and a general inability to communicate. My God, I wouldn’t want some of them anywhere near my child teaching English.

To quote the playwright George Bernard Shaw, “Britain and America are two nations divided by a common language.” What he meant by that of course is that you can have two groups, essentially using the same language, but still not communicating well. So maybe this is the problem with English written in Korea – or Korean English, and we can’t necessarily expect it to ever change. And looking at it from a Korean language point of view, perhaps when I reach Korean fluency I’ll still have problems communicating, so the Koreans and I will still be divided by a common language too.

And that might be the world we live in today anyway – everyone’s talking but many people are not understanding what’s being said.

Links
Busan e-FM
Inside Out Busan

Air date: 2011-04-06 @ ~19:30

Busanmike.blogspot.com
 
Twitter:  @BusanMike
YouTube: /BusanMikeVideo
Flickr:  /busanmike
 

Brush with Celebrity, a K-pop Moment

Or, as Shane remembers it, the-time-Rose-nearly-got-us-trampled-by-preteen-girlsThis little tale happened all the way back in December, but please don't hold the tardiness against me. 
                                                                                                              
Myeon-dong Neighborhood
In Seoul while on vacation, we devoted a couple hours in Myeong-dong, a neighborhood well-known for its shopping and especially sought out by us for the H&M, where I knew clothes in my size could be found. After shopping, we headed back toward the subway. Suddenly, we found ourselves in the throes of a teeming mass blockading the sidewalks.          


                                                
The walkway holds temporarily.
         
I couldn't resist-- maybe it'd be a free giveaway, maybe something else. We were ushered into lines, an invisible barrier creating an aisle among us. This aisle held up pretty well, until the door of the dark windowed SUV cracked open even a hair. Then all bets were off. The crowd surged forward, cameras poised, voices excited. The door closed. Security guards again formed the aisle through the mostly young, mostly female crowd. The door opened. The aisle collapsed again.                                                                                       
The cycle repeated for about twenty minutes, until at last, out stepped... drum roll..... JYJ, a K-pop band that enjoys a huge following in Korea, Japan, and beyond. For those of you looking to expand your music repertoire, here's a sample: Ayyy Girl. Wowza.


Two of the three members of JYJ.




For those of you looking for the adrenaline rush of nearly being trampled by fervent fans, here's a video summary: 

atek teachers’ fundraiser

yesterday, we had a bake sale/rummage sale/sports day/pillow fight to raise money for the association for teachers of english in korea’s volunteer teachers. we raised almost 300,000 won ($275) for the teachers to buy materials for the orphans they tutor once a week. a few of my favorite students came down, and i got to play with them in a beautiful park all day. i tried to teach angel how to play badminton.

she wasn’t all that good at it, but she did see to overcome her fear of dogs. so much so, that we borrowed someone’s pooch for a walk. having no pets of her own, she was fascinated by the dog’s ability to poop. “can i show jenny when she gets here?” she asked.
“what, like show her the poop?”
“yeah!”
“well, sure, angel, if you think she’d like to see it…”
i did not photograph the remarkable poo.
actually, i didn’t photograph much. the photos from the day were mostly taken by matthew teacher.

but i did finally get to shoot the bitchin wizards of busan on their motos.

bitchin’ matthew.

bitchin’ eric.

bitchin’ jeff.

and bitchin’ rhylon, attended, as always, by his guard shark water gun.

album drops 12-21-2012.





 

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