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Mudfest - After the Mud

No muddy pictures to see here

..... yet.....

daytime photos will appear after I visit the cute couple at the camera shop.
_______________________________________________________


Last weekend I dragged the new girl onto a very tacky pink bus at 7am where we spent the following 6 hours with drunk girls who passed out in stranger's laps, boys who peed in bottles, and far too many chain smoking waekookins - all this we endured for the chance to spend a day and a half running around some small Korean seaside town in the middle of nowhere dousing ourselves in mud.




It looked a little something like this .....
Photo thanks to the lovely Fran.

After we rinsed off all the mud we ran into some familiar faces ...




.... while the West Virginian shot some guns....



.... then sang songs .....



I gave it a go .... but trying to sing Blondie when the lyrics are written in Korean .... there are some things even short shorts can't do.




After twisting and shouting and dancing and singing some of the wild ones went out for a little late night skinny dip. I - being the square that I am - stayed behind and had my own little dance party on the beach. Then these guys showed up with a girl wearing bright yellow Chucks and pulled the balloon down from the sky.







Things started to get a little strange when we crashed the second noribang party.
Our new friends weren't so much fans of clothing ... or in some cases underwear ....








Good ol' Rhylon kept the party PG.




No night of drinking is complete without soju and loitering outside the FamilyMart ... and on this perticular night the new friendly face we met belonged to the tallest man in Korea, who also happens to be one of the nicest.




Night over.
Time to sleep on the floor (there were no beds...just floors).
Next day back to the bus ... the never ending bus ...
Poor new girl was all tuckered out.












Daegu Day2

14 Jun 2009, My morning in 대구 Daegu is spent at the zoo and seeing a rare elephant, so rare in fact that every zoo needs one.

Day 1, 80 miles, Oswego to Geneva



















Despite not having a cyclecomputer (which actually merited another rider rolling his eyes at me), I was able to finish the first day of riding with Anchor House today without needing the SAG (support and gear) wagon to come and scrape me off the side of the road.

Perhaps tomorrow.

I must admit to not training as much as I should have. OK, I didn't train at all, unless you count the sporadic ride to the bank or through Veterans Park training. I also smoked a bunch of
cigarettes with Erin three days ago. Bad influence. Yet, despite these impediments, here I am, alive, though I wonder if I will even be able to sit on my bike seat in the morning, let alone ride another 73 miles to Ithaca, NY.

Today was a 75-mile route, from Oswego, NY, along Lake Ontario, to Geneva, NY. Someone along the way said that its actually only 25 miles from one to the other, which means we rode about 50 miles out of our way. When I got lost about 53 miles into the ride and added another five miles to my total, I wished they had just let us take the bus.

Perhaps a cyclecomputer isn't such a bad idea, after all (he says, rolling his eyes).

I have met some good people so far and have eaten some decent meals. You see, despite riding about 500 miles in a week, no one really loses any weight on this thing. Because when we're done for the day, the last anyone wants to do is watch calories. Though I did get the baked chicken at dinner tonight instead of the deep-fried, sausage-infused "Eggplant Luigi" tonight, which looked ridiculously good. But, I did order a tiramasu.

More tomorrow. It's time for bed.


—John Dunphy

Korea's Golden Moments

This little post deals with Korea, gold, ripping people off and getting ripped off.

 

Let’s start with the 1988 summer Olympics. In this instance it was the Koreans doing the ripping off and future pound for pound boxing great Roy Jones Jr. getting ripped off. After Jones beat the crap out of Korean Park Si-hun for four rounds, the judges gave the gold medal to Park, and Jones went home a loser.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJYBV9BXQNY&feature=related

 

Fairness aside, and seeing that Roy Jones has done alright since, it’s hard not to be impressed with the audacity of South Korea during that time.

 

About ten years later another big gold rip-off took place in the land of the morning calm and this time it was the Koreans getting fleeced. During the IMF crisis South Koreans were in desperate need of foreign currency reserves. To deal with this the government organized a gold collection campaign so they could sell the gold in exchange for foreign currency. Families lined up to sell gold that had been in their families for generations. All in all, the gold collection campaign netted 2000 tons of gold which was in turn sold for 20 billion dollars worth of foreign exchange. The gold collection campaign is still heralded as an example of how Koreans can come together as a nation to overcome great difficulties. The downside is seen if you look at the gold price in late 1997/98 which was roughly $300 USD per ounce. Now, 11 years later the price is well over $900 an ounce with many analysts expecting the price to move to $2000 an ounce over the next few years. So that 20 billion dollars in gold that was sold would now be valued in the area of 60+ billion. I don’t suspect Roy Jones knows much about this but if he read about it might make him feel better especially if he’s still harboring some resentment about the gold medal.

 

Now to the present, as of late May, the Bank of Korea had only 14.3 tons of gold, just a little more than Cyprus. Check out national gold reserve statistics here. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_reserves

 

On July 4th the Dong-A Ilbo reported the following, http://english.donga.com/srv/service.php3?biid=2009070411578

Chang Min, the head of the Korea Institute of Finance’s macroeconomic research division who worked at the central bank until late last year, said, “The central bank has long considered several alternatives such as buying gold to diversify its foreign exchange reserve portfolio, which is heavily focused on dollars. It needs to secure more gold to diversify its investment.”

Kwon Sun-woo, the head of macroeconomic research at Samsung Economic Research Institute, said, “The Bank of Korea`s gold reserves are far less than enough. It should have bought more gold. Given the instability of the greenback, it needs to buy more gold."

 

The article also said,


The bank has said nothing officially, simply saying, “We have made no decision on the purchase of gold and cannot say if we have considered it." It will finalize by November its plan to manage foreign exchange reserves for 2010, but experts forecast that the bank will have no choice but to buy gold soon.”

 

 I think it's safe to assume that the paper/electronic currencies of today, particularly the US dollar are expected to start unraveling. It also seems that most countries are going to try to get more gold as secretly as they can, not wanting to cause a 'rush for the exit' from the US dollar. And when it comes time to reset the financial system any country wanting to be a player in the new financial order is going to need gold, lots of gold.

 

On this last note, I hope that South Korea can use its audacity and its people’s ability to rally around a cause to get some of that gold back, securing themselves for the coming financial chaos.

 

 

 

 

Brain Heart Infusion

Working in a bacterial lab, one soon develops a wider appreciation for these not-so-furry critters. There are ten times more bacterial cells living in and on your body, than your own cells. That means that if your body was a completely democratic organism, yourself would be the minority and you would be making bacterial-centric decisions. The kinds of activities that bacteria would likely vote for include never using soap, keeping a warm body temperature and spending most of the day wallowing in a sugar bath.

While many bacteria don't mind what they eat, some of the more exotic bacterial species are quite picky. In the photo above is Brain Heart Infusion, a delicacy for some of our more opulent guests. It's made from dried calf brains and heart, which is then blended into a powder.

It sounds like a kind of herbal tea.

If you are a molecular biologist (or 'molly-bolly', as my old lecturer used to say), this is the kind of photo you see a lot of. It's basically a slab of gelatine, with DNA loaded into little holes at the top. When you put electricity through the jelly, it moves the DNA. The individual DNA pieces will move more quickly or slowly, depending on how big the pieces of DNA are. So we can use this to figure out if we're looking at exactly the same piece of DNA, or different pieces. This is important when you are trying to identify different genes.
With this particular photo, I was expecting most of the lanes to be identical or similar. But there are some different patterns in there, which warrants some brow furrowing and internet-based procrastination. That's why I'm blogging now.

The living allowance for most Korean doctoral students is around $250 per week. It's enough to get by, and a lot higher than what most of the world survives on. But it does force the development of a certain amount of frugality. The photo above is of the community toothpaste tube in the lab that everyone uses except me. They don't throw it away until every last atom of paste is squeezed out. Quite admirable really. Although it gets to a point where I wonder whether the effort required to extract the remaining traces of paste uses more money in terms of calories than what it's worth.

I use my own toothpaste because I don't like the flavour of this one. The name of the flavour is 'Bamboo Salt', and it tastes just like it too. Salty toothpaste is common in Asia, and I have always been of the Minty Toothpaste persuasion.

Heather's uncle works at the same university as me, and we went to visit him at his house recently. Meeting Heather's family always involves eating Korean food, listening to a lot of Gyeongsang dialect and later eating fruit and drinking tea.

Near her uncle's house is this rather nice natural waterfall. Humans feel naturally comfortable around the sound of running water, partly because the primordial instinct to linger close to fresh water still lurks in the more ancient parts of our brain.

Then we went off to Itaewon. Copyright law in Korea has been strengthening recently, but a lot of trademarked names are openly used by other vendors. I don't know where I stand on the idea of copyright yet. On the one hand, it's a good way for customers to recognise quality merchandise, but on the other hand I do think that the idea of trademarking has gone a little too far these days.
Like this 'Yahoo' store that sells belts and ties, I often find myself walking into places called something like 'The Hyundai Grocery Store', and thinking "Something tells me this isn't affiliated with Hyundai at all..."

And then there are store names that no-one would be interested in copying. This is what happens if you ask an inebriated English teacher to name your shop.

The streets of Gangnam are busy throughout the week. I've developed my list of hangout places in Seoul now. The first is Itaewon, then Gangnam and then Sincheon. I always like to have fun, but there's also a lot of lab work to do.

That means less sleep.

Heather and I went to a Japanese sake bar in one of the sidestreets. I like the fragrance of warm sake and I also like Japanese food a lot. In the photo above is some roast duck and tofu. It reminded me more of Chinese style cooking and was really good. Above the dish are two glasses of warm sake.

The wooden boxes that the sake glasses came in had this email address on them. I was explaining to Heather that the 'g' in 'liguor' is supposed to be a 'q', but it isn't. Heather thinks it's actually a 'q'.

Most definitely not, say I.

Heather's personality is an interesting mixture of wisdom, humility, warmth and cheekiness. She's good at convincing parents to enrol their students in English classes, but she also likes to tickle me when I'm resting.

The truth is, I'm not really ticklish. I just pretend to be ticklish to entertain her.

See how nice I am.

Sometimes the subway trains in Seoul get so full that if you're the last to get in, your face gets pressed up against the window of the door. It's always entertaining to watch and reminds me of my overflowing wardrobes when I was a teenager.

Bondaeggi are baby silkworms that are a delicacy in Korea. You can even buy them in cans. I guess it's kind of like canned baked beans. My dad would probably eat them on toast. They're quite similar to the Witchetty Grubs of Australia.

They taste alright, but it's hard to get the idea of eating a bug out of your head when you're munching on them.

In the picture above is white wine and French style steamed mussels. Even though I don't have money, I still have a strong affinity for finer foods. That means that I'll often be eating something nice on the weekend, and then getting through the weekdays on more meagre rations. I often like to entertain the idea that eventually I'll be able to eat this sort of food everyday.

But if I get to eat this kind of thing all the time, I'll probably end up craving more simple foods.

Why we humans are so difficult to please, I know not.

This is jjajjangmyeon, a Korean interpretation of Chinese food. It's nice once in a while, but I end up eating it here a little too often. If you take only three dishes off the menus of Chinese restaurants in Korea: jjajjangmyeon, tangsuyook (sweet and sour pork) and jam-bbong (spicy soup), you'll find that there's not much else left. Korea is still rather naive in terms of foreign foods, and it's one of the few negative aspects of living here. You have to search extensively just to find a place that can do good fried noodles. I've been here for nearly three years, and I still haven't found one.

But what they lack in food variety, they make up for in spelling errors. Most of the toilets here say 'Man' and 'Woman', rather than 'Men' and 'Women', but I think this one was going for the more correct plural form. Although they could actually have meant 'Meme', which is a unit of memory. But that would still be missing the 'e' on the end.

Regardless of the intention, there were urinals inside. As Shakespeare once said "A rose by any other name, would smell as sweet."

And taking us out today is this rather nice sunset seen from my laboratory window. Back when I was in the Scouts, we had a poem:

'Red sky at night, shepherd's delight.
Red sky in the morning, shepherd's warning.'

It's a reference to the weather in the near future, although I'm not sure if it's scientifically sound. Meteorologists are probably more trustworthy than poets, but then again meteorologists don't give us useful phrases that are easy to recite.

That's all from me this time. See you soon!

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