Itaewon is an intriguing place--especially on a Friday night. All of a sudden, I am in a diverse city again, with people that speak English--military, Koreans, Africans, Middle Eastern people, Muslims, Americans. You even see some foreign kids in Itaewon. It's the place in Seoul for foreigners, sometimes seedily so. But I like it.
The Sauna I stayed in was nice, but I was surprised and a little disappointed by the price vrs. the facilities. That said, a sauna is a sauna and it's relaxing no matter how many different types of saunas there are. I just laid there and sweat out the week, and then went into the bath and scrubbed myself so clean you would have thought that I was a newborn baby. I ate some ramen noodles sitting on a bench in the dressing room (there seemed no other place to do so) and then I crashed out on a mat in the sauna area for a couple hours. There was a man in the room who was having night terrors, and he kept rolling around and hitting himself and making strange noises. It was a little odd, but I gave it a giggle.
Bright and early at 5:30am, I was out and about in Itaewon again. At 5:30, it kind of looks like a dump--there's advertisements all over the ground, and the tape has come up, and they look more like trash. People that could be servicemen, or just buff dudes, are wandering home--plastered--proclaiming how fantastic the night was. It's still dark, and the only establishments open are the bars (still--and they will probably remain open until 9am). Even the coffee shops haven't opened yet, and what is usually a street of market stalls and neon strangeness, now just looks like a deserted, boarded up trashy part of town--which Itaewon was, about twenty years ago.
Anyway I met up with my fellow travelers, a group of teachers and one student, and we got onto the bus. I passed out for the majority of the bus ride, and when I awoke it was time to eat lunch--at about 10am. We were at a tiny restaurant, nestled into a mountain for all that I could tell. It was quite traditional, and there was nothing else around, just road, mountain, and bare trees. The place was heated with a wood stove, and I deliberately sat right next to it, because I'll tell you--it was cold in there. We ate bibimbap, a delicious rice and vegetable and egg dish that I lovelovelove, and then sleepily climbed in our bus the rest of the way to the mountain base camp.
Climbing a mountain in Korea is a communal event. It is not all rustic and epic like one might imagine. The trail is wide and paved, and occasionally cars go on it. (Stephanie and I encountered taxis, even, in Gongju, likely delivering the elderly grandmother to the top of the mountain, because the Chuseok picnic simply couldn't happen with out her--but she certainly couldn't climb the difficult trails.) The point isn't necessarily to be a part of wilderness. The point is to get to the top with others. Of course the view is spectacular as well.
Though, don't imagine that because the way is a road that it is not hard to climb. The angles are quite deceiving on these trails, and what looks like a simple hike, actually turns out to be a 50 degree up hill climb for miles. But, even just a little way up the trail, the work pays off. This is the view from the first lookout point.
Sometimes the pictures simply speak better than I can. There was a lot of mystery in these hills, but the communal nature of the mountain peak made me overlook it. We were all together, and the Koreans on the peak were all together, and the mystery in these mountains seemed slightly buried under the fun that was being had in the act of hiking. I didn't think much of it then, but as I was riding back in the bus, I remember the mystery hitting me with a bit more force.
Anyway, that's the mountain for now. I need to hurry up and get out of my house, because I need to transfer money for my next excursion--Jeju! Since this trip was a success, I decided to pay for a Jeju trip over Christmas, to keep myself social during that possibly difficult holiday. Jeju is like the Korean Hawaii, the ultimate honeymoon and vacation spot. In the winter, it's quite cold, but I think it will be an excellent experience--and one that not many tourists have had. Jeju in the winter!
Wow. You are something, kiddo. And those mountains ARE gorgeous.
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