Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Muuido Island










This past weekend was a jammed-packed weekend, filled with gulbi (Obviously), seafood, a beach, and
beach huts.


The Plus Academy retreat day we had with our school a few weeks back lead to a second place victory for us (Which we all know should have been first place, *cough*) and we were given a stack of cash to spend with the Korean teachers at our school. Friday night was the night we chose to spend it on indoor gulbi and Noreabanging. It was Ian and I'd first time having indoor gulbi and it was delicious! We ended up staying out pretty late at the biggest Noreabang (singing room) we have been to yet and then had to wake up Saturday morning bright and early for the trek to the beach.

To get to Muuido Island Beach, we had to take a bunch of public transportation. We took a cab to the bus stop, the airport limousine to the airport, a bus from the airport to the Ferry, the Ferry to the island, and another bus to the beach. However once we reached our final destination, our eyes were widened and we were ecstatic. We travelled to the beach with B-Rod, Saveena, Leah and Andy, and met up with Anne and Colin, and Mark and Julia. We made some other friends there too, some who had also made the trek from our very own neighborhood and stayed in some huts right on the beach. Talk about a fun, jam-packed weekend!

Links to pictures:

Island Pictures: http://wluca.f8.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2091285&l=48384&id=187905622

Noreabang and Gulbi Pictures: http://wluca.f8.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2090809&l=5275d&id=187905622

Monday, June 18, 2007

Lost in translation

We get essays and diaries to correct & grade a few times every week, and they vary widely in their skill level, humour, and oddness. Here are a few choice selections:

Joey, a bright 10-year-old in my grade 6 equivalent class:

Ian is handsome
Ian is tallest than my class
Ian is thinest than my class
Ian is genius
Ian is smarter than world
Ian is very very kind
Ian is perfect!

From one of Kelly's kids in the same level:

Kelly teacher!!
Your looks like angel!
Because your very kind and you is pretty more than me!
and sometimes your cute...so I think your is perfect!
So I like you teacher...bye!

I forget who wrote this:

Jesus, it's raining!
I really hate rain.
because it makes my soul d(r)own.
It was such melancholy day!

From one of Kelly's classes:

Summer is starting.
The weather is getting hot.
I have sweat.
My body smells for sweat.
I don't like summer.
(Kelly's suggestion, as noted at the bottom of the page: Maybe carry a towel around with you)

From the agenda for the workshop/recreation day I wrote about a few weeks ago:

15:00 ~ 16:00 Some kind of recreation gamaes.
16:30 ~ 18:30 Taking group photos and dinner with Boasting of our skill at songs.
(I means doing kareokee)

There will be many more to come.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

"We was robbed"

As many of you may or may not have heard, Ian and I were robbed. We came home from school on Wednesday night, the bars on the window had been broken and the door was ajar. We entered our house and ran to our drawer to ensure our passports were still there. The strange thing is, nothing of value was stolen. Our cameras, computer, DVD players, TV, ipod speakers, passports and credit cards were all in tact and left behind. The insanely creepy thing is that the robber(s) only took a few things: Canadian money and some of my undergarments. I am completely disgusted and am now going to be extremely cautious from now on. It is so hard to believe this happened to us because South Korea is supposedly very safe.

New bars have been replaced on our window, which is great. And it is also reassuring that police take something like this very seriously, as our house was swarming with about 6 police officers, two building security guards, and Mr. Jong from Plus Academy within 5 minutes of calling Andy who reported it to Mr. Jong immediately.

Just a little update to let you know we are okay and have survived the most intense Korean experience thus far!

*Check out the link to see the cops dusting our apartment for prints! We pretty much felt like we were in CSI or Dick Tracey!*
http://wluca.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2089809&l=1579f&id=187905622

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Another weekend, another adventure

Everything is great here in South Korea. This past weekend was an enjoyable weekend, as usual. We hung out with Leah and Andy on Friday night, made some pottery and chilled outside on Saturday and Saturday night consisted of going to meet a bunch of our friends from home at a Canadian bar called "Rocky Mountain" in Itewan. These friends were our good old buddies from Laurier; Marois, Josh and Marois's buddy Eamon from Aussie. It was a great time and the three story bar was really cool because it was a taste of home. There were license plates from every province and territory bordering the walls of the bar, Canadian sports jerseys hanging from the ceiling, a rooftop patio and a band playing on the second floor. Ian and I even got a "Montreal style" poutine and every bite was amazing!

Sunday we went with 10 friends to a Korean baseball game. We were with Leah and Andy from our school, some mutual friends from Laurier, and some other Laurier people; Susie, Vern, Marois and Aussie Eamon. The game was so much fun, we were out of our seats cheering the entire time for our favourite team, The Doosan Bears. An "inspirational" quote flashed along the screen several times throughout the game, reading: "Doosan Bears is my life." Hilarious. Anyways, the game was so much fun and it was great to have such a large group of people together so we decided to head to Itewan again. I am not sure if we have described Itewan other then calling it the "Foreigners District", but there is a U.S military base there so there are lots of North American goodies. I was SO exicted when I found cans of Diet Pepsi to buy on the side of the street. There are rumours we can find Kraft Dinner there as well! There are tons of different kinds of bars and ethnic restuarants and you can even get pitas there.


So this time we went to a bar called "The Bungalow". It was a wooden, three level candle-lit bar with sand on the floor, Muskoka chairs, Jacuzzis, tons of private areas as well as a rooftop patio. (It was awesome! I will post the pictures soon!) I was also really excited because I bought a wool shawl and a necklace made of bone from the street vender's.

We are hoping everything is great, wherever you are reading this from! Stay tuned for more adventures and please drop us a line! Cheers!


*Pics: http://wluca.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2089806&l=5c6bc&id=187905622
and:
http://wluca.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2089809&l=1579f&id=187905622

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Anne's Birthday





Last night we went out for our new friend Annes birthday. Anne and her boyfriend Colin have been here for 11 months and leave in 4 weeks. It is such a small world though, and since they went to Western, we have a few mutual friends!

Since today (Wednesday) was Memorial Day here, we met up after work, expecting a late night since today we don't have to teach. A bunch of us met at a really cute restuarant in Hyehwa. The food, company and drinks were great and the night was just beginning.

After several bottles of wining and dining, the atmosphere shifted as we decided to walk the streets in search of liquor, beer and a Noreabang. The Birthday Girl ended up doing a karate chop at a streetside stand along the way and then we headed into a pretty nice Noreabang with a large statue of a Native Indian outside of it.

The night was great and we ended up singing until the sun came up. Leah, Andy and I all took a cab home and decided on a healthy McDonalds breakfast once we got back into our neighborhood. Glass was broken, and that is all you need to know. (Pictures to come, wait for the link!)

Today was uneventful and consisted mostly of sleeping, however Ian and I did make it to see Shrek the Third. Good times here in So-Ko!

Pictures: http://wluca.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2088195&l=4379f&id=187905622

and

http://wluca.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2088198&l=7484e&id=187905622

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Plus Academy recreation day

All of the teachers from the 3 Plus Academy schools were invited out for a team building day this weekend, to a little place known as Dream Island. We were treated very well by the owners and president as we were fed 3 meals, rewarded generously for our work, fed an unending supply of booze, and divided into 5 teams to participate in a bunch of games.

The day started at 8:45 as we boarded buses in front of our school and were immediately handed a Gimbop, a bottle of water, and a beer. Bop is the Korean word for rice, and a Gimbop is rice wrapped in seaweed with whatever flavour you choose in the middle. This one was tuna and I didn't eat it (I unwittingly cooked myself a few too many mini bakery pancakes after Kelly started reacting to them), but there really is nothing like a heavy rice dish washed down with a beer to start a day of fun in the sun. The beer I drank. Still have a little Canada left in me.

2 hours and several U-turns later we arrived at the Island, which was really nice. Surrounded by mountains covered in evergreens, with a little river running through the edge of the property, it was as picturesque as we've seen since being here. The soccer field was dirt, but that's the stardard here for whatever reason. They don't have a rain shortage so it's unclear why grass fields are non-existant, but I digress.

The day started with a little meeting (we had an English speaking one while the natives were motivated by the owner Mr. Kwon, who's a great dude and really enjoys a high five after he makes a good play in soccer) and then some lunch. The spiciest stuff since we've been here, but still good.

Then came the events! We had strategized a little before the event so we had all our teams in order at the start of the day. There was a cash prize for the winners so people were taking it pretty seriously. First event was the simplest - in a designated area laid about 100 pieces of bristol (sp?) board, 1 side white, 1 side purple. Get in there and come out with the majority facing your colour up. We were white, so we needed 51 white pieces face up at the end of the event to win. We dominated 3 straight matches. Brad, Tina, Leah, myself and a Korean teacher tore it up and got us blue-shirts off to the early lead.

Next 2 events lacked excitement, at least for us as we lost pretty handily in soccer baseball and a balloon popping game.

The 4th event, however, was controversial. A 6 person relay, with 3 men and 3 women. The men scheduled to run, Mr. Park, Mr. Lee (2 administrators from our branch) and myself, went out for time trials earlier that week and I posted an impressive 18.78 seconds to run the perimeter of some small park near our school. I have no idea how far it was, but neither of them broke the 20 second plateau so I was riding high. It was so strange, they called me out in the hall of the school, talked a little racing strategy, then beckoned me into the evelator for no real reason. It was when I noticed Mr. Lee's sneaks in a grocery bag that I finally clued in.

Mr. Lee was talked into officiating that day, so Brad took his place as our 2nd. The first 5 runners did a half-lap, and the anchors had the privelege of finishing off a full lap to make it interesting. Kelly got off to a hot start, getting the inside track and tossing a few 'bows to make sure she kept it. Our team did a good job keeping the lead, especially Brad, Tina, and Yoon (a Korean teacher...you'll notice I didn't mention Mr. Park) getting the baton to me with an advantage. Coming around the final corner I could feel someone trying to sneak by on the inside, but that obviously wasn't happening and we ended up winning by a full stride.

The controversy that ensued circled around Kelly and another runner getting tangled up after the baton pass and the other runner falling. They were upset that they were unfairly penalized, so Mr. Lee, being the nice man that he is (even though he's on our team, techincally) granted them an odd re-race. 2 men, 2 women, running straight lines so nobody could get in each others way, back and forth across the field, so you had to pass the baton to someone standing still and facing you. Even with a baton drop on 1 exchange, it was a photo finish and I think Mr. Lee gave it to the other team just to seem impartial. Frustrating thing was that the complaining team finished a distant 4th, and the winners were the ones we were competing with for 1st place. Either way, Kelly and I were both amazed at how well we could sprint considering neither of us had done it since elementary school. We kept in shape sporadically and still played sports, but both of us were the class of our heats. I don't want to toot my/our own horn here....but HONK HONK!

After that was soccer, and the first half was nearly as bad as my initial Korean soccer experience on no sleep. I dropped back to midfield for the second half, and playing a 2-4-4 with some great strikers made for an exciting half. I played infinitely better, getting the steal that led to our lone goal, yet we lost 2-1. I swear, if we had 5 more minutes we would've tied it. They had never experienced pressure like that, I tells ya.

A little free time after the game allowed for a nice cold shower and some chillin before dinner and some awards. Mr. Lee was speaking in Korean, I imagine giving thanks to those who came and to those who paid for everything, when suddenly I heard my name called into the mic. It seems I was 1 of 2 MVPs (or VIP to most Koreans) for the day! I guess my soccer skills were perceived to be a little better from the sideline, because I certainly didn't think I was doing anything special. I received a nice 100,000WON (pronounced 'on' with a W in front) gift certificate to the Hyundai department store, which I was told is quite upscale. So that was cool. Kelly also won a raffle prize of some Elizabeth Arden perfume, and our team (5th floor of the Junggye school) finished 2nd and took home 300,000WON which we're using for a party next week. Good times!

The night finished with some galbi, mekju (beer), soju, and a kareoke contest (they LOVE karaoke in this country, there are noraebangs, or singing rooms, all over the bloodly place) then we boarded the bus and headed home. Kelly and I are being treated very well around the office now as we are kind of celebrities since we are such a drastic change (with Brad and Tina too) from the previous couple who complained constantly and finished their last month with a multitude of screaming matches with coworkers and bosses. Things are going great around the office, everyone's getting along great and enjoying their time at work.

The day itself was a blast, met a lot of teachers that we didn't know, got some exercise (man are we paying for that these last 2 days though, groans every time we stand or sit), got some sun and had a lot of fun. The owners must've spent at least $5000USD equivalent on the day, paying for buses, renting the resort, buying many drinks (Gatorade, water, beer, and soju flowed), meals, 17 raffle prizes at a $30-40 average, and at least $1000 in cash prizes. The price tag was hefty, but they really seemed to enjoy everybody enjoying themselves, and it was obvious that everyone was grateful. Not the mention the numerous "up tops" that the owner received during the soccer game.

Links to pictures:
http://wluca.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2087836&l=37d40&id=187905622

http://wluca.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2087875&l=19500&id=187905622