Monday, October 27, 2008

Nick setting up the route for the rest of us


Christine and Nick (wall in San Cheong)


Tong Yeong


Yongseo Falls


Tong Yeong Wall/Sunset

Alec stretching it out (Yeongseo)

Thats me up there!
A syracuse hippy

Wes digging in
New camera feature!

Day II brought many more people


Coco is on fire!

Yeongseo Falls

Loads of Amphibians at this place

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Autumn Leaves

The sun is over the hump and settling in at late angles. 
The third season is settling in after a day of rain. 

The autumn air seems to ignite more reminiscent memories. It must be the smell of dying leaves. The wind reminds myself of days tumbling down 'front yard hill.'

So with the exchange rate I bought rock climbing gear in American Dollars. Lucky to have some I guess. Harness and Shoes! Its great. 

Rock climbing is a creative process of interacting with nature, and also a physical sport. 

It's beautiful to lay on your back and look up on a rock wall and decide your day in this fashion. The season is beautiful. If each of our lives were as pure as nature, dying would be this beautiful also. 

Last weekend we climbed at Yeongsu Falls which is this beautiful rock cathedral with a waterfall at its center. Being the dry season the waterfall is just a trickle now. No matter, the lazy spray was a refreshing surprise on your forehead. 

The climbing community is great. Loads of Koreans and Foreigners from all over converging in nature. Camping. Jokes. The right way. 

This weekend we did artificial outdoor walls in Tong Yeong and just today in San Cheong. Its great. I've never felt better honestly. Spending time with good people outdoors. 

This coming weekend there is a big gathering up country in the East among the KOTR community for halloween. You have to dress up and climb in your costume. It will be one of the last outdoor climbs of the season so I'm looking forward to it.  Obviously you need to think practical. I'm planning on being "Fan Death." Fan Death is a Korean myth (widely understood as fact) about sleeping with a fan in the room and dying of asphyxia.  I think ill just paint my death face and string a fan around my throat. 

Enjoying this exercise and discipline. Getting out of my town and bar scene. The people I love of course, but no offense, starting to feel like a weekly high school reunion. 

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Lantern Festival and Temple Stay

Turtle!

Robot during the day


Wet rat alert!!!


Each lantern is dedicated to a families ancestors, for 10,000 Won

Oh Liberty...

Lanterns from around the world

This flag is made from flowers...cool:)

The poor lantern that has to be the garbage can:(

View from atop the lookout at the temple

Festival at night


The year of the rat

Fire breathing dragon lantern!

Girim-sa

Jackpot turtle

More turtles....they never stop coming!


Mmmm..wouldn't it be cool to sled down one of these hills;)

Mike talking to Gabriel





Golgulsa


King Munmus' Tomb...not very exciting


Who doesn't hang their squid to dry?

Fall fashion for Golgul-sa

What do I do with these crazy tiny pieces of technology?!?!?


That was tiring

A new blue setting I found on my camera!

Riding up in the pickup truck:)





Last Friday I started on a jaunt down to the Lantern Festival to take some photos.  I had my camera and Mike's which was good because my camera was out of batteries.  It was so beautiful all lit up and not nearly as crowded as the first Friday night.  I just sauntered about taking photos of lanterns breathing fire and as many turtles as I could.  

Saturday morning we headed to 경주 (Gyeongju) for our temple stay at 골굴사 (Golgulsa).  It was about 3 hours by bus and then 30 min by taxi, so we headed out early afternoon to try and get there by 4pm.  Our friends Shawn and Stacey had headed out earlier in the day to try and get some site seeing in so they met us at the bus terminal when we arrived.  The taxi dropped us off at the bottom of a very steep hill that we started walking up.  A man in a pickup truck spotted us and somehow knew we were there for the temple stay and gave us a ride in the back of his truck!  We checked in, put our stuff in the rooms and wondered about a bit before dinner.  At dinner the men sit on one side of the room the women on the other and the monks in a curtained off part of the room.  You have to finish everything you put on your tray otherwise I think you have to do some bows, that was hard for me and Mike because our eyes are bigger than our stomachs, but we finished all the food.  After dinner we had some more free time and then we had to go to 슨무도 (Sunmudo) training.  Sunmudo is a martial art form that is practiced by the monks at this temple, it is the head training center, they have gyms in some other cities around Korea.  At the training we were introduced to a french man named Gabriel who has been there for a year studying and training.  We learned some great stretching moves but didn't do too much kicking because we were all beginners.  After training everyone sits in a big circle around the room and meditates.  Meditating is really hard.  After training was pretty much bedtime because you have to be up at 4AM to be at 4:30AM chanting and meditating, the lights have to be out by 10PM.  They wake you up in the morning with an alarm that is just them hitting a wooden block.  It was cold in the morning, when we arrived at the room there were two dogs sitting in the back of the room on pillows ready to meditate with us.  One of the dogs is the head monk's and we were told she is 18 years old and still quite active.  After chanting and meditating we did some group stretching which is a nice way to start the day.  We had a little while after that before breakfast.  Breakfast is a special ceremony, everyone gets to sit in one room, foreigners on one side Koreans on the other, the monks, 5 of them, in the front of the room with the head on the biggest pillow in the center.  You receive 4 bowls, 1 napkin, 1 placemat and chopsticks and a spoon.  You have to lay everything out in a certain order and place.  One bowl is strictly for water to clean out your other bowls after the meal.  First, you receive the water, then rice and soup, then a tray of side dishes are put in front of you that you can choose from, again you have to finish all of your food.  You set aside one piece of sturdy kimchi to clean your bowls with after the meal.  The monks eat super fast, they finish in about 6-7 minutes so you have to be finished as well, warning warning don't take too much food.  After the food is gone you scrape the bowls with your piece of kimchi then rinse them out with the water.  Then they give you more water to rinse with and then they collect that water and it's supposed to represent the dirtiness of your mind, if it's too dirty you have to rinse again or something.  After breakfast we hiked around the area and chilled out then had a tea ceremony with one of the monks.  We went on an outing to a couple of different sites after that, the underground tomb of king Munmus, Girim-sa (temple) and Gamunsage pagoda site.