Friday, December 24, 2010

Merry Christmas!!

Merry Christmas everyone!!!  Hope everyone has a happy holiday and I hope Santa brings you everything you wished for.

Jeff and I thought this time of year would be the hardest for us in Seoul, but we have had plenty to keep us busy.  Of course we miss family, friends, snow, Christmas cookies and all the holiday cheer, but we have also found ways to bring Christmas to us...Baileys and coffee, Christmas music and movies, friends, shopping, Christmas parties, Baileys and coffee, presents and did I mention Baileys and coffee (Christmas just wouldn't be the same without it).  We even have our own little Korean-size Christmas tree.
Enjoying Caribou coffee while listening to Christmas music by the fire and playing cards on a Sunday afternoon!!!

Gifts from home:)



Christmas with Megan!

Christmas shopping was a lot of fun this year.  We went to some of the tourist areas and bought some souvenirs and traditional Korean gifts to send home.  We even have Skype dates set up with family to open Christmas gifts (Jeff and I already opened ours...Dec. 12 as soon as the package arrived!!  We just couldn't wait!)

We have been busy at school getting ready for Christmas.  We had a party on Christmas Eve and Jeff got to be Santa!  The kids have been learning Christmas carols and all about Christmas.  Many people here don't celebrate Christmas, and if they do, it's much different from the USA.
Jeff's kindergarten class

Some of my sweet girls



SANTA!!!!


Merry Christmas from my afternoon class!



We are getting excited for our trip to China!  We will be leaving Monday, December 27 for Beijing, and we'll be spending 5 days there.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!!!!!

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Seoul Livin'

Happy Thanksgiving!!  I can't believe we have already been here for 1 month...time has flown by.  We are kinda wishing we were enjoying Thanksgiving dinner with everyone this week, but we aren't missing the snow that Minnesota has been getting.  We will have Thanksgiving with the other teachers from school this weekend, so that should be fun!

There is a lot about North Korea in the news right now, but I honestly have heard much about it here.  I have heard more about it from people back home than I have heard here.  I don't know if that is a good or bad thing, but people here don't seem too worried about it.

Here is what we've been up to lately...


Jeff and playing video games with one of the other teachers.

This is the "Night of Too Much Soju".  The guys singing karaoke at a noreabong.  You just rent out a room and you can sing karaoke with your friends instead of making a fool of yourself on stage.


My heart skipped a beat when I saw this!  A little piece of home right here in Korea.

Out for a coworkers birthday.


So my friend Megan met up with us last Sunday.  She took us to our favorite part of Seoul yet!  It's called Insadong.  There are lots of temples and palaces here to check out.  There are lots of cool shops with handmade souvenirs.

Gifts for Buddha







Then, Megan took us across the street to a neighborhood that had some of the more traditional housing.  There were also TONS of really cute coffee shops.  We went to a cute coffee shop and hung out for a few hours and had some coffee with Baileys!  Yum.


We stopped here for coffee.

I knocked but no one was home.

Some neighborhood streets.



Tigger class!  My kindergartners minus two!  (Tommy is my favorite, he's the one in the very middle with the green shirt)


We also had time to book a trip for our Christmas break!  We are going to Beijing December 27-January 1!  Can't wait to explore another city!

Thats all for now.  Will post more later!   Hope everyone has a great Turkey Day!  Eat extra for us.




Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Mountain Climbing and Tea Making

So, we made it through our first week of school!  We have settled into our apartment, and we are starting to get the hang of things at school.

We went on our first trip this past weekend with a travel group called Discover Korea.  Even though we have only been here a week, it was nice to get out of the city and breathe some fresh air!

We left Friday night and took a bus to a little town in the mountains.  We stayed at a minbak, which is a cheap place to sleep!  We crammed 9 people to a room, where we slept on a heated floor.  Not my idea of comfort, but it was definitely an experience.
We woke up early and headed toward the mountain.  It took us about 6 hours to climb up three peaks of Naejangsan Mountain and back down again!  I could definitely feel the burn after that, but it was well worth it!  Although it was foggy, the view was amazing.  The leaves were starting to change, so the trees were beautiful.  







Koreans were having picnics everywhere on the mountain.  They ALL involved alcohol!  They love their booze.



I climbed that!  If you know me and my fear of heights, you know that this was a BIG deal.  You can't see it here, but there is one spot where you have to walk across a little bridge that is hundreds of feet off the ground!


Lanterns at the Naejang
san Temple

You could write a wish to Buddha on these slates.


Saturday afternoon we headed to Nagan folk village.  This was an old village where the people lived like Koreans did 100 years ago.  They had straw roof homes for us to stay in.  We slept on the heated floor again, but this one was much nicer.  The villagers did have electricity and running water, but they did their dishes outside and lived a very simple life.  The men worked in the garden or repairing their roof all day, while the women cooked and cleaned.

The cute little Korean lady we stayed with.


Kimchi pots!





Happy birthday Soju for Jeff!

Sunday morning we left the folk village and headed to a tea plantation called Bosung Tea Making Farm House.  It was a pretty small plantation, but they were famous for their tea.  A box of tea sold for $1300 in China!  They are the only tea plantation in the world that uses gold dust to make their tea.  

We provided free labor for them.  No, not really, they let us take home all the flowers we picked to make our own tea.

This was a $20 cup of tea.  I had four, since they were free for us!

Me, Jeff, Megan and our tea biscuits.

After leaving this tea plantation, we went to a huge green tea plantation called Bohyang Dawon Green Tea Field.  We had green tea lunch and green tea ice cream here.




We had an awesome trip and learned a lot over the weekend.  Here are a few things we learned:

1.  Koreans love to share with foreigners.  They would chase us down the mountain to make sure we got
     one of their oranges, crackers, rice wine, etc.

2.  Koreans like to take pictures of foreigners.  We were in the background of many photos that were set
     up, specifically, with us in the background.  We were in the convenience store and a girl was
     snapping photos of us with her cell phone.

3.  Koreans love their alcohol, especially the men.  Any night of the week you will see business men out
     to dinner with many empty bottles of Soju on their table.  They also smell of alcohol pretty bad.

4.  You will get a million side dishes with every meal, and kimchi is always one of them.

5.  You can have a full meal just by taking samples at the grocery store.  They are also "all you can eat."

6.  Koreans are very flexible.  They can sit on the floor cross-legged for hours at dinner.  My legs fall
     asleep after 2 minutes.

I'm sure we will continue to learn a lot more over the next year.  I'll keep you posted.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

We made it!!

Well, we made it to South Korea, finally!  I'll update everyone on what has been going on with us since we left.

We left early Wednesday morning from Minneapolis, stopped in Denver, made another connection in Los Angeles, then, finally, boarded our plane to Seoul.

At the Denver airport.  We were very tired!

Finally, on the plane to Korea!

24 hours later, we arrived in Seoul and crashed at our hotel (which we are pretty sure was a "love hotel").  We got to our shady hotel around 9:30pm and had no internet or phone to use to let everyone know we made it safely.  No one spoke English at the hotel, and we were alone.  Scary!!  Paris Baguette came to the rescue!  A little pastry shop a few doors down had free wifi, delicious pastries, and they spoke a little English!!  We ate there 3 times over the next two days, just so we could use there internet.

Friday we went to school for our first, and only day of training.  The other teachers we work with are all really friendly and helpful!  The school is a private English school.  Our first class is kindergarten.  Jeff has 4 and 5 year old for the first 3 hours and I have 5 and 6 year olds.  They are sooooooo cute!  These little kids can read and write English at about a 2nd grade level!  It's pretty amazing.  Kind of puts us Americans to shame.  The teachers took us to lunch where we had our first real Korean meal.  It was delicious!  In the afternoon we have kids who are a little bit older (6-9ish).  They come to our school after they get done with Korean school.  

Saturday morning we met up with one of my best friends, Megan!!!  She helped us move into our apartment and showed us the ropes!  She introduced us to lots of food, and she helped us go to the Target of Korea, which is called E-Mart (does not compare to Target!!!).  We went to dinner at a Korean bbq.  We sat on the floor while they brought out hot coals and put them in a pit at our table.  We cook the pork right at our table, then roll it into lettuce wraps with lots of other fixings.  It was so good, but really, everything here is delish!  


Trying the crab.

Sunday we cleaned all day.  They moved us into our apartment before it was cleaned, and the girl who lived here before us had a cat...enough said.  We went down to a little restaurant right below our apartment and got take-out for lunch.  We were so proud of ourselves for going to dinner by ourselves and ordering without pointing to a picture.  We are VERY slowly picking up words here and there.  We can say "Hello," "Thank you,"  "two," and a few different menu items.  Hopefully, we will continue to learn more and more so we don't have to walk around smiling at people because we don't know what they are saying.

The top is Kim-bap and the two on the bottom are Mandu.

Living area

Our "kitchen" is behind the cabinet doors.  Above the kitchen is our bed.

The kitchen/laundry room

Jeff's throne

Our bedroom that was made for little people.  I think the ceiling is only 5 ft high!

View from the bed.

The view out our window to the east.

View out our window to the west.

Walking down the street.