Thursday, August 2, 2012

Andong: Part 2

Well Tausha told you a little bit about our visit to Andong, but I just want to add in a few things that she forgot about.Once we arrived at Andong we decided to get something to eat. We were drawn in to one particular restaurant because of the aroma that we smelled from half a block away. The restaurant had a picture menu so we thought that we would be alright. We ordered some fries and what seemed to be pork of some type. We waited patiently for our food, but were skeptical once the food arrived. I was brave enough to try the meat (which Tausha didn't try) and found the meat type to be indiscernible!  I'm guessing that it was some type of squid of octopus, but the only way that I can describe the sensation was that it was both chewy and crunchy. The taste however, was similar to a ball of rubber marinated in the chili-sause and the cook's gym sock!
After that we grabbed a popsicle to get rid of the taste and went back to our hotel. The hotel was nice the first night, but the the 2nd night's motel was even better. It had nice showers and a big screen tv, so I was in heaven. Tausha already spoke of the bus ride to the Hahoe Village, which was when I envied any sardines in a can. We did see a Mask Museum as well that was pretty cool though. It had a collection of masks from all over the world. Andong hosts a mask festival every September that that is supposed to be quite the spectacle. Tausha and I thought that it was interesting that Halloween masks made the stage next to the Venician and. African Masks. 
Once we decided to head back to Pyongtaek we found that all of the seats were taken from our transfer city to Pyongtaek. (a 3 hour train ride). We got some tickets, but we either stood or sat on the floor for the three hours. We did manage to get into the back of the cart, where we had slightly ghetto private seats.. Overall, we faced 95+ degree temperatures, bad food, and crowded transportation, but we had the time of our lives doing it. 





This was our super awesome motel on our 2nd night

This is me forging the river. I thought the umbrella was pretty flattering

This was our private train compartment. It's pretty fancy I know, but
 it's only the best when we're on vacation!
Mask Museum #1

Mask Museum #2

Mask Museum #3

Mask Museum #4: Watch out behind you!


Mask Museum #5


Mask Museum #6: My new buddy


Looks like plumber butt was a still a
problem 600 years ago.


Traditional-style Korean home.  The homes in this village are over 600 years old.
5-story pagoda

Andong chicken.  It's not the greatest picture, but it gives you an idea of how huge the plate was!

Our school has a week off for summer vacation so we decided to go to Andong.  It is a city where there are traditional style homes that are about 600 years old.  We took a train there and we had to transfer in Dong-degu.  So the screen on the train says "next stop Degu."  We got off the train and started looking for our next transfer.  We couldn't see it on any of the screens so we showed a worker our ticket and asked him what track we needed to be on.  He looked at our ticket and showed us that we were at Degu station, not Dong-degu.  At that time, we had about 15 minutes until our next train would leave at Dong-degu.  He told us to take a taxi and it would be about 10-15 minutes.  
He motioned us to follow him and we started sprinting through the station.  He took us outside to the taxi stop and told the taxi driver where to take us.  The driver looked at our tickets and kept laughing at us.  It was the kind of laugh that said, "Wow you kids are never going to make it.  You're crazy."  We were laughing with him because we couldn't believe we got off at the wrong station.  He showed us where the station was on his GPS.  We were stuck in traffic and thought we'd never make it.  We started making plans to just spend the night in Dong-degu and catch another train to Andong in the morning.  
The cab driver pulled up to the station at 1:57 and our train was going to leave at 1:58.  We flew through that station and found the right track.  Luckily, the train was delayed three minutes so we made it just in the nick of time.  Just barely.  
We made it to Andong and got a lot of maps and pamphlets from the tourist station.  We got a hotel and the next day we went to the folk village.  There is only one bus that goes to the village, and it only leaves every hour or so.  It was VERY packed.  But we got to the village and it was cool!  They let you stay in the old houses, but we decided not to because it didn't look like they were air conditioned.  And it was super hot. We had to keep sitting down in the shade.  I think we ate around 5 popsicles each for the couple hours we were there.  
We tried the Andong chicken.  I guess it's a big deal in that part of town.  I think you were supposed to share the meal with about 6 people though because it came out on a gigantic plate.  It was chicken, potatoes, vegetables, clear noodles, and a spicy sauce.  Pretty good!  
It's been awesome not having to go to work.  We've been working on decorating our apartment and it's actually starting to feel like a home now.  We got some picture frames and hung a couple pictures up.  And we got a little couch so we don't always have to sit on the bed.  The apartments here have a recycling area where people put their old furniture.  You can just take whatever you want.  It's kind of a cool idea because there's no way we'd be able to buy a couch here.  We don't know where to buy one and if we did, we'd have to take it home on the bus.