Sunday, August 29, 2010

Blackout Korea

As we've said before, drinking is a big part of the Korean culture. You're expected to drink with your school and it's considered inappropriate to refuse a drink. But one thing they don't find inappropriate is public intoxication. We can't even count the number of times we've seen grown men in business suits passed out drunk in gutters, subways, and even in front of church. So someone created a blog of pictures of these grown people completely passed out in public places.

One Saturday afternoon we were in Itaewon (the foreigner's district) and saw a guy passed out in a stairwell with all his belongings beside him. I quickly took a picture so I could submit it to the blog. Well, months later it finally made it up! So here's my picture from the blog...



And here is a link to the blog. Our picture is posted from the the June pictures.
www.blackoutkorea.com

Monday, August 23, 2010

This One Time At English Camp…

School’s out for summer! Well not exactly, unlike back home summer break doesn’t mean a break from school. Korean students are expected to attend English camps and continue studying throughout summer.

The week after vacation, I had the privilege of working a weeklong middle school camp. At first I was not excited about working twelve-hour days with middle schoolers, especially since I don’t usually even teach middle school. But, I got stuck with it so I might as well make the most of it, right?

Turns out it was great! The kids, well teenagers really (15 year olds), were the best of the best from around the island, hand-picked to attend this camp. I was a homeroom teacher (go Class 4!) and a club activity teacher (go Thriller Dance Club!). I was also in charge of five lessons, two book missions, making t-shirts with my homeroom class, mini-Olympics, game show, and writing activities every night. Exhausting isn’t it?!

Each day was basically like this give or take a few changes here and there:
7:00 – 8:00 – Morning Exercise
8:00 – 9:00 – Breakfast
9:00 – 12:00 – Lessons
12:00 – 1:00 – Lunch
1:00 – 3:00 – Class Activity
3:00 – 5:00 – Club Activity (go Thriller Dance Club!)
5:00 – 6:00 – Book Mission
6:00 – 7:00 – Dinner
7:00 – 8:30 – Writing Activities
8:30 – 9:00 – Snack
9:00 – Head to dorms to get ready for bed

The first lesson didn’t go so well. Not that I wasn’t prepared, but it was the first day and I was meeting my homeroom class and to say they were shy is an understatement. My first meeting with my Thriller Dance Club went well, although they weren’t as excited about the dance as I thought they would be. But by the end of the first session they were laughing and having fun and as the day went on all the kids started opening up more and more.

Overall the whole camp experience was wonderful for the students and the teachers. It was such a great opportunity to get to interact with the kids outside of the classroom and to work with kids who actually understood us and who could have fun, joke and enjoy what we prepared. The best part was the scavenger hunts, club activities and all the things they had outside the lessons that gave the students a chance work with us and have fun, but while speaking English.

By the end of the camp, both the teachers and students were sad to see it come to an end. On the final day, after closing ceremonies students were actually in tears about the camp being over. I am sure it had more to do with saying goodbye to their new friends, but we would like to think it had something to do with us too.

Here are some pictures from the camp…


All the kids before the Mini-Olympics


The Thriller Dance Club


Class 4 - AKA "The Fantastic Four"


The Thriller Dance Club was so much fun. It felt like dance team practice all over again. I taught them the choreography and they picked the formation. I hope if I am able to find an art teaching job back home, I can also coach a dance team as well. It was so much fun and made me remember how much I love it. Anyways, here is a video of my kids dancing at the closing ceremony. They did an amazing job, especially with only 8 hours of practice!



Today, I got an email from Rebecca (the girl in front and center on the Thriller Video) thanking me for the camp, telling me she had a great time, that I was her favorite teacher and she loved the Thriller dance. It was really sweet and made me happy that I was able to be apart of the camp.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Hong Kong Phooey

After eight days of relaxing and roughin' it in the Philippines we were all looking forward to our trip to Hong Kong. We were anxious to see another major city and compare it to Seoul, which we have all finally grown complacent with, and we were definitely looking forward to electricity and hot water.


We arrived in Hong Kong at 5:30 in the afternoon and the first thing I did was buy a new camera (mine finally died while we were in the Philippines). Then we unsuccessfully tried to get money out of the ATM before giving up and deciding to head to the hotel to throw our stuff down first. Before we left Korea I found the best/cheapest/most popular places backpackers usual stay and how to get there from the airport. We easily found the bus and headed toward the city. This is the first picture we saw of the buildings of Hong Kong and honestly at first I was little disappointed because it looked so much like Seoul. Little did I know we weren't even close to downtown and the spectacular skyline that was awaiting us.


This is where we stayed, well entrance to where we stayed. This mansion is really just a big building with guest houses all individually owned by different people on each floor. We all stayed in a room smaller than my side of the dorm room with a fridge and a sketchy looking bathroom in the corner. I was less than thrilled but there was air conditioning, a tv, and the lady said they had hot water so we said okay (again, there was no hot water). We tried looking at another place the next day, but it was way more expensive than this place, and we were already a step up from where we stayed in the Philippines so we decided to stick it out and rough it for four more days.


This was our first view of the city from the Star Ferry. When we arrived at the "mansion" we hadn't seen the big skyline yet. So when we got a taxi to take us to the ferry terminal and saw this, it literally took my breath away. The big tall building with the white lights on top is the IFC building, or what we called "the Batman." It's where they filmed the Hong Kong scenes in The Dark Knight.


On the ferry crossing from Kowloon Island to Hong Kong Island. The ferry was cheaper than the buses and the subway with a much better view!


This is the style of the public transit buses for Hong Kong. Since Hong Kong was a British territory for so long they had the double-decker buses and drive on the left side of the road. It was such a strange feeling, I seriously felt like we were going to have a head-on collision a couple of times.


This is the Lan Kwai Fong district. We went because it apparently has some of the best bars and night life in Hong Kong, but turns out it was also the foreigners' district.


The Stanley Street Market could give you souvenir overload but the places seemed more authentic than the stores and stands in the city. We walked the streets for several hours despite the heat. Everything was just so cheap, and we had to stop ourselves from buying everything. We did get a couple of good souvenirs to send home though!


This is on the other side of the Stanley Street Market. The waterfront was lined with cute little shops, bars and restaurants. We stopped and had a beer after battling the heat all afternoon and enjoyed the waterfront. It was such a different vibe from the city of Hong Kong and you almost forgot you were in Asia for a second. Don't know if that is a good or bad thing, but it's just how it seemed.


Next we went to Victoria's Peak. We wanted to make sure to go before dark so we could see the skyline in both the day and night. Too bad it was a cloudy day, but it's still an amazing view. While we waited for it to turn dark, we went inside the shopping center at the peak to eat dinner (there is a mall/shopping center everywhere in Hong Kong). While we were eating, a huge thunderstorm rolled in and we had a front row seat. The storm got so bad we couldn't even see out the windows. I prayed it would stop so I could get some pictures of the skyline at night, after all that was the main reason to come to The Peak.


Luckily it finally stopped raining and we went to the top viewing deck of the shopping center to take some pictures. However it did not stop lightning and thundering. But it was worth it for this view...


...And this was the view with lightning striking behind me and illuminating the whole city.

Loved this picture of us in front of the city. I mean, look at that view, if it wasn't lightning I would have stayed up there all night.


WAR EAGLE, HEY! This was at a bar in the Lan Kwai Fong district. I was so excited I started singing Weagle, Weagle, really loud. Can't believe football season starts next week, everyone better keep us posted!


The view of Hong Kong Island from Kowloon Island. The skyline is so big, I still didn't get everything in.

Looking towards Hong Kong Island on the Avenue of the Stars.


Derek and the Bruce Lee monument on the Avenue of the Stars. They also had celebrity hand prints and names on the river walk kinda like the Walk Of Fame in Hollywood.


This is Hong Kong Park. And, although it was a pain to get to (no thanks to the Lonely Planet) it was a really cool park with ponds, waterfalls, fountains, conservatory, aviary, museum and several restaurants. It was definitely worth the hassle.


At the top of some big tall tower thing they had in the park. It was exactly 105 steps up a giant spiral staircase (it had a sign telling us that, although I had to count to make sure it was correct).


The IFC Building (aka The Batman) at night. We had drinks at happy hour and enjoyed the sunset from the rooftop restaurant they had there.


On Lantau Island in the cable car heading up to see the Po Lin Monastery and the Tian Tan Buddha.


At the entrance to the shopping village before you get to the monastery and Buddha (seriously malls everywhere).


View of the monastery and the Buddha. The monastery is fairly new, founded in 1906. Luckily the monastery and Buddha were a nice distance from the entrance and the shopping village.


The Tian Tan Buddha, the largest seated, bronze Buddha in the world.


Very nice! ...High five!!


This was at the Temple Street Night Market. It was very similar to the Stanley Street Market but much bigger. These people loved to haggle too. Derek talked a woman down $150 Hong Kong Dollars for this really cool mask. We ended up paying about $20 US dollars for it in the end. This is at a restaurant we ate at both nights we came to the market. They had great food and as you can see in the picture, PBR! This was my favorite place we ate while in Hong Kong and it was a great way to spend our last night in the city.


We had to get up really early the next day to catch our 9:00 flight back to Seoul. We weren't looking forward to going back to Seoul after the amazing trip in Hong Kong. It was just so easy in Hong Kong, everyone spoke English, they had all kinds of international foods and beers, great shopping and we knew we would be back to struggling to communicate with everyone and rice & kimchi. We arrived in Seoul safely and luckily all our luggage arrived. By this point Derek and I were exhausted so we bit the bullet and paid for a cab back to the island so we could get home as quick as possible. We immediately crashed for the night. Unfortunately that was all the time we got to recuperate because we both started week long summer camps the next day. But more about that in the next post.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

It's Always Sunny In Philippines

We're going to do this blog a little differently than the others. We had such an amazing time in the Philippines and the post would be so long if we tried to talk about everything, so we're just going to post the pictures and captions of our favorites pictures out of the 800 I took (excessive, I know).


This was at the Manila airport where we had about a four-hour layover before we headed to Palawan. We wanted to get out and see a little of Manila, but the area around the airport looked extra sketchy so we chose to wait it out in the airport. The Manila airport was laid out poorly, and you had about a ten-minute shuttle ride to get from the domestic building to the international building. Also, nothing was labeled and we basically just wandered and asked different people which way to go until finally landing at the correct spot.


This was the "tricycle" that was the main mode of transportation around Puerto Princesa (the capital of Palawan). It's basically just a small motorcycle they built seats around. Luckily, the hotel we wanted to stay at was close to the airport so we were only on them for about 3 minutes.


This is the DeLoro Inn where we stayed the first and last nights on the island. It was expensive by Philippine standards but incredibly cheap to us. They had a nice staff and not only booked a van for us to take us the 7 hour drive to El Nido the next day, but gave us a deal on touring the island as well. For 250 bucks (divided by 4) we got an air conditioned van ride to El Nido, and stops to Sabang beach (lunch included), the Mangrove Rain Forest tour and the Underground River. We thought it was a pretty good deal and honestly we were still trying to get our heads around the currency conversion so we just said yes.


This was what we could have taken for the 7-hour ride to El Nido. The Jeepney is the style of public buses for the island. We saw several broken on the side of the road or stuck in the mud. We were happy with our air-conditioned van ride.




These pictures were from Ugong Rock. A limestone rock formation created thousands of years ago when the island was underwater. The tour guide assured us that it was easy and the flip flops we all had on were fine. We made it out safely, but it sure would have been easier with real shoes. The journey up the cave was a work out. We had to squeeze through cracks in rocks we never thought we would fit through, climb through holes and up rickety wooden ladders but the view from the top was worth it. You can tell in the picture how hot and sweaty we were. Luckily the climb down was easier. We also learned later that the cave was a hide out from the Japanese during World War II. Very cool!



The Mangrove Rain Forest tour sounded cool. When else would we get to take a boat ride through a rain forest right? But after five minutes of looking at basically the same mangrove tree over and over and only seeing one small snake we were underwhelmed. Luckily it only cost us about $4 so we weren't that bummed. The picture on the river is nice though.


This is basically the picture perfect scene I had been hoping for since we decided to go to the Philippines for vacation. This is in Sabang where we stopped to have lunch. The picture doesn't even do it justice. It was beautiful.





The Underground River tour was amazing. It's the longest navigable underground river in the world. Unfortunately we only got to go a mile into the cave but it was still cool seeing all the formations. The highest part was called the cathedral and I think it was approximately 70 meters high (don't hold me to that). We all agreed that the tour was the highlight of the day.


El Nido, finally! It was a long ride up to El Nido, but after only a couple of literal bumps in the road we made it safely. We arrived late at night, so this was the beautiful sight we woke up to the next day.



This was Big Lagoon, the first place we went snorkeling. It was amazing with crystal blue waters. When we first pulled up in the boat we saw a huge monitor lizard on the shore, but by the time we got there he ran away. We hired the boat so it was nice to be the only people there and have our own little deserted island for the day.



Our first sunset in El Nido. I think the pictures speak for themselves.


Day 2 in El Nido. This was what we woke up to, but it didn't stop us from snorkeling...



...Because once we were underwater it didn't matter. Plus, the water was so much warmer than the rain!


This is the cave we had to swim through to get to Hidden Beach...


...Well not really, they just made us cause it was "cooler." Swimming through the cave was the only real highlight of this place. The snorkeling wasn't too impressive but I saw two small Black Tip Reef Sharks so that was cool.


Port Barton! Our final destination on our Palawan journey. Port Barton was small and not as touristy as El Nido. It was more secluded and we only had electricity for about four hours a day, but at least we had somewhat hot water here.


This was the view from our beach bungalows we stayed at. We splurged slightly since we stayed in a horrible place in El Nido. These bungalows were still basic, just a bed and a table, but we had our own porch overlooking the beach and they told us they had hot water so it was a no brainer (for the record it was not hot water).


These cute little girls ran up to us on the beach and said, "Hello, picture." We couldn't understand them at first, then I realized they wanted us to take a picture so they could see it. Apparently, all the kids are used to having their pictures taken by tourists.



The first full day in Port Barton we spent island hoping and snorkeling again. The snorkeling wasn't as good, but the beaches were nicer, with white sand that reminded me of home. I enjoyed laying out on the beach all day. The beach pictured here was called Exotic Beach. It was my favorite in Port Barton.


The second day in Port Barton we hired a boat to the Blue Cove Resort. It was on a secluded island and had a bar/restaurant on the beach and chairs & hammocks on the beach as well. It was nice lounging on the beach all day again, and we all brought books and just enjoyed relaxing on our own little island for the day. We also had a nice lunch of grilled pork and rice.



This was the sunset on our last night in Port Barton. We had some friends from Korea meet us here and we enjoyed the sunset and some nice Pina Coladas on the beach. It was a great way to end our trip in Palawan.


The next day we took a van back to Puerto Princesa were we stayed for the night to catch our early flight to Hong Kong. We didn't do much in Puerto, but went to a nice International restaurant and the boys had a nice steak with blue cheese sauce that they kept talking about. We watched National Geographic and chilled the rest of the night to save energy for Hong Kong. Overall it was an amazing experience, and I don't think I can say enough positive things about the trip and Palawan.

Next post...Hong Kong!