How to even begin my first post in 3 months?
There are lots of reasons I haven’t posted. I’m lazy, I’ve
been spending all my free time practicing yoga, I’ve got a routine now and a
life and it doesn’t include writing (unfortunately…) but primarily the reason I
stopped posting was that life here became, for lack of a better word, normal.
Things, while still exciting and challenging, are less overwhelming, and less
new.
That being said, it is winter now. My first winter in 5
years. The initial adjustment was difficult, dare I say bordering on
traumatizing. But thankfully my 18 years in New England came through for me and
I adjusted and am fine now. Buying some thermal leggings and knock-off ugg
boots helped as well. But god damn it was awful at first. Los Angeles, I hope
you realized how very blessed you are.
Aside from trauma and freezing cold feet, winter does have
its benefits. Primarily: SKI SEASON!!
Yes there is tons of skiing in Korea. Like, tons and tons of
it. This whole peninsula is covered in mountains so it makes sense that they’d
cut some trails into a few of them. I’ve been skiing 2 times so far, in fact
the last 2 weekends!
The first weekend I went to a smaller resort in western
Korea. For those who do not know, let me take this time to illuminate for you the
geography of Korea.
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Map of Korea with Taebaek Mountains in Red (wikipedia) |
In its western half
Korea is more “flat” which by Korean standards means peppered with small
mountains. Then as you drive east the mountains get bigger and bigger and you
enter the Taebaek Mountain Range. In there the towns are smaller, you finally
lose sight of the army of huge apartment buildings that cover this country, and
the landscape becomes breathtakingly beautiful.
So the first weekend I went skiing in the west. The resort
was tiny, 6 trails and about as many lifts. Only one real expert slope, and to
be honest it was an east coast (of the US) blue square. Still, I had a BLAST
and in 3 hours of skiing I got in so many runs and was exhausted the next day.
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View from the Top of the smaller Resort (Western Korea) |
By the way, skiing in Korea is ridiculously easy. Many resorts
have free shuttles to and from Seoul, you can rent all your kit for less than
$30, and you can rent pants, a jacket, and goggles if you need. It’s really
absurdly easy. And Korea is so crowded and overpopulated that they are GREAT at
dealing with crowds. Even at a small resort there are almost more lifts than
trails, so you never really have to wait in a long lift line. And you can buy
lift tickets for just 3 hours, instead of purchasing a whole day and wasting
half of it in the lodge!
So then this past weekend, I made a longer trip out to a
resort in the Taebaek Mountains in the East called High1 Resort. I stayed in a
hotel nearby that was really nice. Check out the view from my 11th
floor window!
I was lucky enough to have a friend at work take my only
Monday class, so I stole a 3-day weekend for myself. I traveled on Sunday, and
skied in Monday, so there was almost no one at the resort!
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Me rocking rented jacket and goggles |
The lodge of the resort was located in between 2 mountains,
and there were lifts going up both and trails coming down on either side of
this valley. On the one side were some advanced and intermediate trails, and
that lift was slightly crowded. But on the opposite side there was a lift that
only accessed 3 expert trails. They weren’t very long but they were super
steep, wicked fun, and there was nobody on the lift! I almost had the trails to
myself!
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View of the other mountain, from the top of the expert zone |
I spent the entire day on those 3 trails, only going on the
other side once, decided it was boring, and went back to my private expert only
zone. It was amazing!
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Like a Boss. Have I bragged enough? |
I’m looking forward to getting as much skiing in as possible
during the rest of this winter. There are organized trips every weekend and
they are relatively cheap. I really want to be sure to check out the resort
that will be hosting the 2018 Winter Olympics.
Alright so there is a recap of my skiing experiences. I have
one more story to relate. High 1 Resort is also the location of Kangwon Land: the
one and only Casino in Korea that lets in Korean Nationals.
That’s right.
There are casinos all over Korea, but they only allow in
foreigners like me.
Except at Kangwonland. So of course I had to check it out.
First shocking fact: no alcohol. So in Korea, you can drink
to excess, and you can gamble, but you cannot drink to excess and gamble at the
same time. I even had to blow into a breathalizer before they let me in!
Once inside, no pictures allowed. So unfortunately I have no
pictures for this part of the post.
The atmosphere inside was kind of dark and tense. Picture
hundreds of Koreans all packed around tables looking really intense and losing
all their money. If you know Koreans at all, you know that they are really
tight with their money. It makes sense when you think about it; the nation only
became wealthy recently. This is a people who are used to poverty and hard
times. So they all seemed angry or at least upset, but at the same time… they
weren’t cashing out.
Then on top of that, I was the only foreigner in the place.
I was traveling with a Korean. My daily life includes people staring at me everywhere
I go. It has become normal now and I don’t really notice it anymore. But being
in this Casino was like my first week in Korea all over again. Every time I
turned my head I made eye contact with a curious and possibly hostile Korean.
But the upside of this strange experience was that I gambled
for the first time in my life. I played a slot machine and won the equivalent
of $5. So ha ha, Korea, I win.
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A picture of me in an indoor garden. Because why not? |
I hope this satisfied a small portion of your curiosity
about my life. I miss all my friends in America, but life here is great. I’m
happy, adjusted, and rapidly approaching the 6-month mark of my time here.
Till next time (which hopefully will be in less than 3
months)
Megan xx