Friday, December 26, 2008

Boxing Day Lunch in Korea: Styela clava

As if it isn't bad enough that I am at school on boxing day/family day, I also got the worst menu item at lunch: mi do duk soup.
So what is mi do duk? Mi do duk is also known by it's latin name Styela clava (Herdmann, 1881) or its common English name the 'clubbed tunicate' or 'stalked sea squirt'.
As hard as one tries, NONE of these names sound vaguely appetising but at the same time, none of them can convey the absolute height of unpleasantness one experiences when one has this creature in ones mouth! It is simply horrible.
It is described on the website of the British Columbia Shellfish Grower's Association as follows:
Distinguishing Features:
- solitary ‘club-shaped’ tunicate;
- Tunic (outer skin) is tough, brown, bumpy, and wrinkly;
- Attached to substrate by a stalk (about 1/3 of the total length);
- Two short siphons. closely spaced, with alternate red and tan bands;
- Often overgrown by other fouling organisms. (Other?????fouling?????)
Here are some pictures of this delightful little animal (I guess it's Mother loves it!):

eeeew, who in their right mind would CHOOSE to eat this thing?? Oh well, we're all entitled to our unique cultures.

To the mouth it feels very rubbery and bumpy, but the worst part is when you bit into one of these poor innocent creatures, the last gulp of sea water in took in before it's death is squirted into your mouth, eeeewwwww! yugh yugh yugh.
Anyway, I now know to avoid this soup: it is just not worth it. I feel I have established myself as friendly and open to trying everything in Korea. I am now moving gingery onto the next phase where I admit that I don't like some of their food: enough lying to please everybody now!

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Christmas Good Times

Here are a couple of photos of our celebrations at Christmas.
We had cheese and wine for Christmas Eve with a British friend Emily who's stopping over in Korea on her world backpacking tour.
On Christmas Day we had two of our teacher friends, Devon and Shirley. join us for a lovely roast lunch and home-made christmas hats!

A great time was had by all - as is customary on Christmas, we gorged ourselves on good food but it was so delicious and all in all we had a lovely relaxing day.

Season's Greetings to you all! Love Jess and Jules x


a
In my new Christmas dressing gown - my treat to myself!

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Cheer Up Jessica Teacher!



I had a particularly bad week at school last week and arrived at school on Thursday morning feeling horribly homesick and tearful...as you know by now news about us travels fast and of course in no time at all the whole school knew that I was not feeling well!

I skipped my first lesson and managed to compose myself - after being fed calming tea, soy milk, crackers and fruit - and I did teach the rest of the lessons that day. Everyone was very concerned and I must say my eyes were opened to how much my fellow staff and the students do care about my well-being. It wasn't nice feeling being so sad but they really warmed my heart. The students' whose class I had missed came running up to me and wanted to know why I hadn't been to THEIR class - i.e. they had missed me, what a nice feeling!

The highlight of my day was the last lesson where the students had written me a message on the board, just so cute and kind!
As much as the Koreans sometimes drive us nuts and are a crazy bunch one can't help liking them!
(P.S. Even when trying to cheer me up, the students do add that they "we are always watching you" - at least they're honest!!)

Monday, December 08, 2008

SNOW!

Today was the first time we woke up to a slightly whiter Sangju: there is a thin layer of snow on the ground, it is so beautiful! I decided to take a taxi to school and I'm glad I did: even walking to the taxi on the snowy ground was slippery: I can't imagine how slippery it must be on a bicycle! Especially in light of the fact that Julian formally announced to me yesterday that I am the most clumsy person he's ever met! :) (I have to agree unfortunately...)
The Nakdong river is now completely frozen over in most parts and looks beautiful too.
More on snow and hopefully some pictures soon!
(I am holding thumbs for my first white Christmas!)

Sunday, December 07, 2008

School

Things have been a bit quiet on my blog - apologies! We haven't had that much news and I have been making an effort to work hard at school and not let myself get distracted!
So I think it's about time for a post on school - not a bad idea since that's the reason I'm here at all and I spend a third of the 24-hour day at school!

I teach at two schools in Sangju. My main school is Sungshin Girls' High School. I teach there three days a week, and the other two days a week I teach at Sangju Girls Commercial High School. I get a bonus on my salary for teaching at two schools which is great. And fortunately for me the schools are neighbours on the same property as they are both private schools run by the same trust foundation. Private school in Korea isn't quite the same thing as in South Africa: they still follow the same curriculum as the government schools and the teachers are government employees- like me. They are a bit more expensive and I think in general the quality of education is better and the teachers possibly more motivated than in a public school.

Anyway, so let me start off by telling you abut Sungshin Girls' Middle School. There are 700 girls. They are in 3 grades and there are 6 classes per grade. Usually theer are 35 students per class. I only teach the 1st and 2nd grade students (this is equivalent to Grade 7 and 8 students in the SA school system). This means I see each class once a week for a 45-minute lesson. I teach a total of 20 hours a week (my contract says 22 but for now 20 will do just fine): Of this I teach 14 hours at the middle school and 8 hours at the high school, so I teach 4 lessons a day. In between lessons I sit at my allocated spot in the teacher's room. This is a room where each teacher has a desk and computer. There's a small kitchen and "rest area" with couches and a massage sofa - apparently this is only for the older male teachers to use, because only they really have that much stress!! Damn Korean men, they think they are the bees knees. Feminism has a way to go in this country.

So at the middle school we have lunch at 12:30 and all the teachers and ss traipse over to the cafeteria (shared with the high school) and the teachers can help themselves to lunch. We get a tray with little sections in and in these sections one dishes rice (always bottom right!), soup (bottom left) and the veggies, kimchi and some kind of meat dish. There is usually also some kind of fried meat in a batter or crumbed schnitzel type stuff. The rice is sometimes accompanies by seaweed or beans. Some of the less pleasant food items in the school lunch for me have been cooked seaweed (the dry stuff is palatable but cooked and kind of limp and steaming it just doesn't go down that easily), seaweed soup, funnny squishy sea sponge stew, acorn jelly (in soup and with veggies) and of course rice cake. But I am getting used to the rice cake: it is actually one of the lesser evils! It is more predictable than some of the other food. Another thing I don't enjoy that much at lunch is the barley tea afterwards. It's not compulsory and so I can usually avoid it but some of the teachers feel compelled to hand me a cup if they see me walking out of the cafeteria not having had the barley tea, eew! It just kind of tastes very earthy and brown. Weird. They say in Korea barley tea is like water, very important and good for your health. Oh well. So that's lunch.

I have tried to take some photos of the students in my classes but they are incredibly camera shy. This ties in with the obsession with image in Korea - in fact obe could probably quite safely say that Koreans are vain: there are mirrors everywneher! They are terrified that they might look less than perfect on the photograph. So in most of the photos I've taken they are all trying to cover up their faces, so I've given up. This is the best you'll get! They all agree to having photos taken but then all cover up...oh well. I took these photos at the middle school during the 'superheros' lesson. It was one of my more 'laid-back' lessons and the students were allowed to chat in Korean. They quite enjoyed it and came up with some interesting ideas for their superheroes!

This is Mimi - she is one of my best students. (Mimi is of course her English name, I haven't yet got round to learning their Korean names though I would like to try) She's in the Grade 1-1 class and is very confident and speaks English quite well. I think she's probably one of the students who's parents send her to an English Academy or Hagwon for extra English after school.
These students have such a long day: they're at school from 8 to 5pm and then they go straight to the Hagwon for an hour or two before dinner (the Hagwon sends busses to the schools to pick up the students). Ir's pretty amazing stuff. Koreans are incredibly serious about their careers, making money and being successful. They give their all to get into a good college/university and the parents push their kids incredibly hard to be successful. This really does put a lot for pressure on the kids. It's actually quite sad.

This is the whole Grade 1-1 class in their 'homeroom' classroom which is where I teach them. They're a really great class to teach: chatty and mostly out-going and don't mind trying to speak English even if they're not that good.
Our school is going to be getting a new 'English Zone' next semester i.e. a classroom dedicated to English: I can't wait to have my 'own' classroom!
My co-teachers at the middle school are Lucy (Song Jeung Suk), Mr Park, Mrs Kim and Cathy (Miss Kim). They are mostly good co-teachers and we do our best to communicate effectively in the classroom! (It is hard at times!!)

So at the high school I teach the 1st and 2nd grade students. (=Grade 10 and 11). I see the Grade 1 students once a week and the Grade 2 students once every three weeks! This seems a bit futile...how much can they learn and remember between one lesson and the next?? Oh well, it must be better than them not having exposure to a native teacher at all....well that's what I keep telling myself!

The high school students are generally at a much lower English level than the middle school students. This is most likely because it is a 'commercial' high school i.e. these girls will most likely not be going to University but will go straight into a job. Not the most respected people in Korea the non-university lot. So they are quite unmotivated about school and learning - not surprising as they are prpobably 'looked down upon'by many people in Korea. A bit sad. Anyway, this means they are also a bit less disciplined than the middle school students and I find they have a bit more attitude than the middle school - although this might also have to do with their age.

There is a class in the first grade, the Grade 1-6 class which makes me want to tear my hair out almost every lesson I have with them! They are rowdy and chatty and just keep talking throughout the lesson no matter what I say. Very frustrating because I know they understand so little of what I say but maybe if they tried to listen they would understand at least something! And Mr Kim, my co-teacher in that class is such a softie. He has very little control over the class and just let's them get away with anything. He keeps telling me to be patient, and I just want to tell him that he's being way too patient and the girls are running all over him, aargh! Anyway, I'm sure we'll work out some middle ground sometime...


Mr
I teach with three co-teachers at the high school. This means they are in class with me and help me to keep discipline in class. They also do a lot of translating. The actual language I am teaching I try not to have translated because they should be able to understand that but the instructions and explanations for activities and games usually have to be translated. So I have Mr Kim, Mr Yoo and Mr Kang. Because I don't yet speak Korean and they sometimes battle to understand my accent we sometimes battle to communicate but we do our best and things generally work out OK! Kang was in the US army and his English is great: we get on very well and he helps me a lot at the high school.


Mr Kang and I in the Grade 1-4 classroom. He's a bit of a joker, hence the 'mock-serious' look!



These are the students in the Grade 1-4 class in the high school: also one of my favourite classes. They're a really lively bunch and enthusiastic. But obviously not about having their photos taken, I will stop harassing the girls now. No more photos.

So that's my bit about school and teaching. There is so much more to tell and write. We recently went on an in-service training course to Gyeongju...rather than training it actually just opened up a whole can of worms: it made us realise how inefficiently this EPIK (Government English Programme in Korea) is being run. We have so few guidelines on what to do with the students...and they pay us so much. It's pretty crazy. But more on that another time.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Where do the ducks go?

Sangju is getting cold, really cold!

I experience this most acutely on my early morning and late afternoon bike rides to and from school.

As you know, most of my ride is along the river, which I have found out is the Nakdong river and is quite an important river in South Korea. I have been enjoying this as there are quite a number of birds and always something interesting to see along the river. There have been a lot of mallard ducks on the river and also some wagtails: they look a bit like our pied wagtails in South Africa but the black and white pattern is slightly different, I think they are Black-backed Wagtails (photos courtesy of 'the Internet'). And of course the ubiquitous and vocal magpies!

So this morning for the first time the river has started freezing over: it is not entirely frozen but most of the surface has a thin layer of ice over it, so I was asking myself: Where do the ducks go? I can dress up in my thermal underwear, beanie, scarf, windproof-gloves, layers of jerseys, coat and face mask (Now I know why the Koreans wear them - it's for the cold!) but the ducks can't, where do they go? And where do they sleep? The nights are even colder!


Out of interest, there is a bit of information on Sangju on Wikipedia, take a look: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sangju

Monday, November 10, 2008

Dr Fish

This is one of the stories I've been meaning to share with you for a while. It is not a uniquely Korean experience, from what I have read, but a memorable one nonetheless!

A few weeks ago we went to Gumi - a slightly larger town nearby - to watch a movie. After the movie (Body of Lies: very gory and not the most imagniative story line) we went for a walk down the main shopping street. Gumi's centre has a lovely stylish almost Europen sort of atmosphere: lots of intersting shops, boutiques, restaurants and pubs. I even found the Body Shop, although it is unfortunately horendously expensive :( BUT here;s what this post is all about: Dr Fish. What a find!
Dr Fish is an experience to rememeber! There is a lovely coffee shop which serves all varieties of teas, coffess, ice creams and breads, delicious, and they offer the 'Dr Fish' experience!

They have tanks/baths sunk into the floor where you can sit and dangle your feet in: and surprise surprise a whole shoal of obliging little fishies come running, errr swimming, to eat all the dead skin cells off your legs!! What an incredible experience. Initially it is actually terribly ticklish and tingly but I loved the attention of course and quickly got used to it! The fish are soo cute and just so eager! They can't seem to get ebnough of nibbling at your skin. Jules unfortunately did not get used to it: he held out for a minute or two but it wasn't his cup of tea! (Photo evidence!)

Well, as you can imagine I had lots of questions about the fish, and there ws an info brochure but alas, except for the latin names of the fish, the rest was in Korean. The names mentioned were Garra rufa and Oreochromis niloticus (Nile Tilapia). For those ichthyologically inclined, you will of course wonder about the Tilapia...I've looked it up and there doesn't seem to be any reference to it feeding on human skin so that must be a mistake. But Garra rufa is a species of fish which was first found to feed on human skin cells in natural hot springs in Turkey. Very interesting!
Anyway, so that was Dr Fish, a truly once-in-a-lifetime experience which I really enjoyed, thanks fishies for the scrub! And thanks James and Barbara for the introduction!


Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Bar Snacks

The Korean Food advnture continues: in the bars.

Last Friday we went out for dinner and a couple of beers with some of the other English speakers in town - it was quite fun to sample some Korean night life. We ordered beers in large 3L pitchers to share - the beer here is not as good as in SA but it isn't too bad and is WAY better than Soju: that's just poison! It's purely chemical and tastes vile. Really, it should only be recommended for medicinal purposes.

Anyway, so with the beer always comes a bowl of sweet puffed treats - I mentioned these in the Noraebang episode: they are a bit along the lines of cheee puffs but are rings and are sweeeet - probably best used as pacakging??!

Anyway, the funny thing about these fruit-loops-cousins (hey, that's quite a good description actually...) is that most of them (in one bowl) are a pale brown colour. But there is are always one or two pink ones and one or two green ones. Always in that ratio - very odd (you can see thsi in the pic above). I'll let you know when I figure this mystery out!

Onwards... the other snacks one encounters are peanuts, sometimes cooked in sesame oil - quite tasty, small dried fish and a pack of seaweed sheets. The seaweed apparently goes really well with beer (I am told, but am not sure I agree...yet!) and the little dried fish, well, I think they're quite cute, shame! They're very salty and quite edible too.
We also discovered an 'alcohol analyser' in one of the pubs, great fun. Jules went way into the 'maximum' category with this blow!


This is a sample (below) of the sort of funny English one comes across: someome must've strung these banners up without really understanding them (or after a few 'Hites" to open up their minds! -- "Hite up open mind your open"??

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Gimbap!

On Julian’s birthday we went to Lucy’s (my co-teacher’s) house to learn how to make gimbap and to meet her family.
She lives on the 13th floor of a huge high-rise apartment block in Sangju: She and her husband (Jeong Cher – an engineer) have a lovely big apartment with huge windows and a great view over the rice fields and hills surrounding Sangju.
Lucy claims he sister is a better cook than she is, so her sister was the chef instructor in the gimbap-making lesson.
Gimbap is the Korean version of sushi: it is a roll of rice covered in seaweed and has various combinations of veggies, seafood and meat in the centre. One then cuts this roll into slices. It is of course, eaten with chopsticks, and usually dipped into soy sauce, soybean and red pepper paste or wasabi (hothothot!).

They had prepared all the meat and veg and rice, so when we got there we just had to roll and cut, well, not JUST…

Some of the ingredients: crab strips (pink), ham strips, some brown root vegetablein strips, and fish meal strips (this is a kind of pancake made from fish meal and cooked in soy sauce, surprisingly tastes quite good!) We also sued cucumber, carrots, pickled radish, and (processed!) cheese for the gimbap.
The rolling is a bit challenging: one has to be careful not too make the roll too fat otherwise one can’t get the gimbap slices into the mouth in one bite! And if one doesn’t roll it tightly enough (one uses a bamboo mat, like a placemat) then it falls apart when one cuts it!

The finished product! The children made mini-gimbaps (in the middles), very cute! :)

So we managed to roll relatively good gimbap rolls and cut them up. We then showed them how to cook a pasta dish – seemed so boring in comparison! – and we shared our meals together. It was a really lovely afternoon. Lucy’s family are such warm, open people and her husband and sister both speak relatively good English: Jules and I enjoyed having conversations with them. Jules sat on the couch with the men watching baseball – a big favouriote here, there’s a very serious national league! Lucy’s niece is a real cutie: her English name is Alice (I’m ashamed to say I can’t remember her Korean name!) and she speaks really good English too: she was very excited to show me her room (they live in the apartment below Lucy’s) and she’s got loads of English books and flashcards: lucky girl! And she really seems to enjoy learning English.

Lucy and Alice with our gimbap!

So gimbap is the first Korean speciality which we have learned to prepare ourselves: we are yet to try it out at home, but will do so soon! It’s really tasty and I think probably not too expensive since all the Ingredients are Korean-made. We have found any food which is vaguely western is very expensive: once we have settled in, we will have to start cooking more and more Korean! I’m sure gimbap will remain a favourite.

Lucy and Jeong-Cher had very kindly bought Jules a cake for his birthday - a real beauty from 'Paris Baguette' a bakery which is a chain/franchise all over Korea and very popular for baked goods, especially these very creamy very decorative cakes - which are more beauty than brains ;) But add fun and excitement to an occasion nonetheless!

Noraebang

This is one of those (yup, yet another!) unique Korean experiences which is difficult to share – but I’ll give it my best shot none the less.
Noraebang is the Korean word for a singing room. This is not your regular Karaoke experience, think again, think like this: You have your own room, just for you and your friends, it is conveniently sound-proofed and so you (fortunately!) cannot be heard beyond ‘your four walls’ and cannot hear anyone else at the venue.

The room comes fully kitted with psychedelic flashing lights, comfy couches and two fat files/albums full of songs to choose from, cymbals, a hi-tech, very complicated, all-in-Korean remote control to control the high tech screen on which the song lyrics and very odd and super-kitch Korean-style music videos are shown and of course complimentary soft drinks and sweet treats (you think these are chips or cheese snacks but they are in fact sweet, ugh!).As for the soft drinks, BE WARNED! One deep sip and you get a throat-full of mini jelly cubes, I spat it all out on reflex, thinking I had swallowed a fly! Anyway, the soft drinks are mostly unpalatable, as they are incredibly sweet, full of energy-boosters (like red bull but much sweeter) and highly coloured. Oh dear, that leaves only one option: Maekchu! Beer! In 1 litre canisters! To oil those vocal cords! “Maekchu chuseyo” (beer please), at numerous points during the evening! Oh, and I almost forgot: at the foyer of the Noraebang we were offered all shapes and sizes of masks and wigs, oh yeah!! Oh, and let me not forget, there are of course microphones for you to sing along on.

So we had a ball. This was our celebration of Jules’ birthday, and we went out to one of the many Noraebangs in Sangju with James and Barbara (J&B)(our ‘westerner’ neighbours and new friends) and Brad who is an American also teaching in Sangju. We sang and sang and sang ‘til our voices were hoarse! We had a great time. This Noraebang (according to J&B) is one of the more stylish ones in town, and had quite a large collection of English pop and rock songs. So we had all sorts of old favourites “Do you love me?”(Dirty Dancing – Lol and P!), many a Queen hit, “Hello Dolly” (Louis Armstrong – reminded me of my Granny Affie!) “Eye of the tiger”, BeeGees hits (Dan!) Phil Collins etc etc.

A great time certainly was had by all and we can now ‘tick off’ one more Korean must-have experience...one which I’m sure we’ll tick off many more times! Enjoy the pics!
P.S. Almost the best part of the evening was Jules in a Goldilocks wig, “priceless”! (Beat that, Mastercard!)

Gotta love the ‘regalia’!
Brad – a.k.a. Desmond Tutu? We thought so… (the hair is a wig, he’s actually bald!)

Noraebang!!

As I said, Goldilocks – priceless!

Thursday, October 16, 2008

This little piggy went to market (and took lots of pics!)

I've been meaning to post these photos since last weekend, so here they are! I've tried to place them in some kind of logical groupings or order...the market is such an interesing place! The live fish and eels are the biggest 'weird' thing...but as I was saying to Jules: on street corners in Greytown there are goats tied to lampposts nd chickens in cages being sold so maybe it's not as weird as one first thinks!

Enjoy!


General view of the market: one can buy anything from chillis and broccoli to clothes and kitchenware and blankets here - all at reasonable prices (but nothing is marked: we will have to learn to ask for prices and be able to understand the responses!)

This lady on the right is making 'Korean Pancakes': A 'street-food' speciality: it is a ball of dough (similar to vetkoek) with sugar and peanuts in the middle. This is then placed on a hot oiled plate and squashed down to make a hot yummy pancake oozing fat and sugar!


And now: the spices: LOADS of garlic and chilli, so much! Apparently the chillis grown in our province, Gyeongsangbuk-do, are amongst the hottest in SK, aren't we lucky! We haven't found any of the food too spicy though, fortunately.



Sprouts!
They LOVE sprouts: with anything and everything!



Acorn Jelly! Hmmm, I'm not a big fan of this stuff, it doesn't taste like very much and has a horrible wobbly texture and horrid brown colour. They also love this and put it into lots of dishes!


Ginseng! This is the No.1 natural health product in Korea. SK is famous for its Ginseng. I haven't tried it but I'm sure one day I will. (Don't actually know in what form they consume it)

Mushrooms and more mushrooms! They have so many shapes and sizes of mushrooms: each for a specific dish or purpose.


Now for the LIVE FOOD! These are the eels. They are remarkable in that they are not only sold live at the market, but also eaten alive! You boil themn your table-top cooker and swllow them wriggling! Can you imagine that sensation down your gullet...gives me the shivers!
On the right are sea squirts. These are also live at the market and go down live!

Live Fish: Many tankfuls of these all over the place: at the market, in restaurats, outside restaurants and even in our local supermarket.
So there you have a brief introduction to shopping for food in South Korean markets. One can buy fruit and veg and some fish at the supermarket but it does seem that it is cheaper at the market. So I guess soon I will be grabbing a shopping bag (my Kanga bag - thanks K!) and heading on downtown to experience this!


Everyday is a winding road...along the river to school...


My school is about a 10min bicycle ride away from home. The ride starts when I unlock my bike chain (apparently bicycle theft is one of the few crime problems they do have in Sangju) which is stored in the foyer of our apartment building.
Then I put on my jacket (it is quite cold in the mornings so a breezy bike ride calls for a jacket and in some cases beanie and gloves), tuck my pants into my socks/boots so they don’t get caught in the chain, and hop on. Oh no, what’s that scratching sound?? I forgot to click up the bicycle stand! (I have done this so often in the last week…I really am sometimes a slow learner.)
I then proceed down a little alleyway which connects to the main road nearby. From here on I am on a proper ‘bicycle path’. It is marked by blue lines. I only have to cross a major road once, and the beauty of the bicycle path network in SK is that every time a path has to cross a major road there is a zebra crossing & robot. Thus I am ‘safe’ from traffic as long as I wait for the robot to turn green. This is great as I am still not 100% comfortable/confident on the bike in traffic etc and so I don’t have to worry about that! Once I have crossed this road I ride past a construction site for a bridge and then onto the river section of the bicycle path.
The path along the river is really great the path itself has a rubberized kind of surface so is really easy to ride on, and there are lovely trees along the path. There is a little strip of ‘park’ to the right of the path where there are lots of ‘exercise machines’ I call them e.g. health walkers, pull up bars, sit up seats etc. It kind of looks like an outdoor gym and it looks like it is used mostly by older people – it is freely open to anyone to use. There are signs which say “xxxxkcal”(the rest is in Korean of course) so I presume these tell you how many calories you’ll burn if you do x amount of exercise. Koreans are very serious about health and well-being. Lots of people also go walking-often with small dogs-along this bike path next to the river and at the weekend we saw a woman walking a dog which was dressed to the nines: it had orange ear-muffs on, a little smart ‘jacket’ and wait for it….shoes!!! HaHa! Can you believe it! It was hard not to laugh out loud as we rode past her!
So on the left of the path is the river. It is quite wide (maybe about 70m?) and has lots of concrete weirs and blocks of concrete which serve as kind of ‘stepping stones’ to cross the river.
There are little old ladies standing in the flowing water, bent over buckets collecting snails. And on the edge are (their) little old men fishing! We have been told that the river is quite polluted and one should not swim in it, but it can’t be too bad if thee little old people are spending time in and near the water and catching animals!
I then go under a large bridge and on the other side there is a small sandy road over the river which is still partly under construction (quite treacherous and slidy on a road bike with thin tyres!!!).
The large bridge was beautifully decorated with flowers for the festival (photo). Just after this bridge is my school: Sung-Shin Girls’ Middle School (The large building with the curved blue roof at the back, middle of the photo). I park my bike next to all the probably 300 or so bikes of the school girls along the river edge and then up a steep flight of stairs, cross the road and there’s school! The school garden is very nicely looked after with pots of chrysanthemums everywhere (which seem very popular in Korea, including as a tea!) It still seems to be late summer here rather than autumn, so the gardens are alive with butterflies, bees and dragonflies!